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Senate Years of Service: 1922-1957 Party: Democrat
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GEORGE, Walter Franklin, a Senator from Georgia; born on a farm near Preston, Webster County,
Ga., January 29, 1878; attended the common schools; graduated from Mercer
University, Macon, Ga., in 1900 and from its law department in 1901; admitted
to the bar in 1901 and commenced practice in Vienna, Ga.; solicitor general of
the Cordele judicial circuit 1907-1912 and judge of the superior court
1912-1917; judge of the State court of appeals from January to October 1917,
when he resigned; associate justice of the State supreme court 1917-1922, when
he resigned; elected on November 7, 1922, as a Democrat to the United States
Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Thomas E. Watson; reelected
in 1926, 1932, 1938, 1944, and again in 1950 and served from November 22, 1922,
to January 3, 1957; was not a candidate for renomination in 1956; served as
President pro tempore of the Senate during the Eighty-fourth Congress;
chairman, Committee on Privileges and Elections (Seventy-third through
Seventy-sixth Congresses), Committee on Foreign Relations (Seventy-sixth,
Seventy-seventh, and Eighty-fourth Congresses), Committee on Finance
(Seventy-seventh through Seventy-ninth Congresses and Eighty-first and
Eighty-second Congresses), Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation
(Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses), Select Committee on Case Influence
(Eighty-fourth Congress), Special Committee on Foreign Assistance
(Eighty-fourth Congress); President Dwight Eisenhowers special ambassador to
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization until his death; died in Vienna, Ga.,
August 4, 1957; interment in Vienna Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Mellichamp,
Josephine. Walter George. In
Senators From Georgia. Huntsville, Ala.: Strode Publishers,
1976: 230-39; Zeigler, Luther. Senator Walter Georges 1938 Campaign.
Georgia Historical Quarterly 43 (December 1959): 333-52;
Fleissner, James P. August 11, 1938: A Day in the Life of Senator Walter F.
George.
Journal of Southern Legal History 9 (2001): 55-101.
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