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Senate Years of Service: 1881-1899; 1903-1906 Party: Democrat; Democrat
GORMAN, Arthur Pue, a Senator from Maryland; born in Woodstock, Howard County, Md., March
11, 1839; attended the public schools; appointed a page in the House of Representatives in
1852; transferred to the Senate through the influence of Stephen A. Douglas, who made him his
private secretary, and subsequently served the Senate as page, messenger, assistant doorkeeper,
assistant postmaster, and finally postmaster; removed from his Senate office in September 1866;
immediately appointed collector of internal revenue for the fifth district of Maryland 1866-1869;
director and later president of the Chesapeake Ohio Canal Co.; member, State house of
delegates 1869-1875, serving as speaker for one session; member, State senate 1875-1881;
elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1880; reelected in 1886 and 1892 and
served from March 4, 1881, to March 3, 1899; unsuccessful candidate for reelection;
Democratic caucus chairman 1890-1898; chairman, Committee on Printing (Fifty-third
Congress), Committee on Private Land Claims (Fifty-fifth Congress); was again elected to the
United States Senate in 1902 and served from March 4, 1903, until his death in Washington,
D.C., June 4, 1906; Democratic caucus chairman 1903-1906; interment in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Bibliography American National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Lambert, John. Arthur Pue Gorman. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1953; Sanderlin, Walter S. Arthur P.
Gorman and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal: An Episode in the Rise of a Political Boss." Journal of Southern History 13 (August 1947): 323-37.
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