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| Oil on canvas, Boris B. Gordon, 1932, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
HAWLEY, Willis Chatman, a Representative from Oregon; born on a farm in the old Belknap
settlement near Monroe, Benton County, Oreg., May 5, 1864; attended the country
schools and was graduated from the academic and law departments of Willamette
University, Salem, Oreg., in 1888; principal of the Umpqua Academy, Wilbur,
Oreg., 1884-1886; president of the Oregon State Normal School at Drain
1888-1891; was admitted to the bar in Oregon in 1893; president of Willamette
University 1893-1902 and was professor of history and economics for sixteen
years; engaged in numerous business and educational enterprises; member of the
National Forest Reservation Commission; member of the Special Committee on
Rural Credits created by Congress in 1915; member of the Commission for the
Celebration of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of George Washington;
elected as a Republican to the Sixtieth and to the twelve succeeding Congresses
(March 4, 1907-March 3, 1933); chairman, Committee on Ways and Means
(Seventieth and Seventy-first Congresses); co-sponsor of the Smoot-Hawley
Tariff in 1930; unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1932; returned to
Salem and resumed the practice of law; died in Salem, Oreg., July 24, 1941;
interment in City View Cemetery.
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