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| Photograph, 1925-1929, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
HOUGHTON, Alanson Bigelow, (grandfather of Amory Houghton),
a Representative from New York; born in Cambridge, Mass., October
10, 1863; moved to Corning, N.Y., with his parents in 1868; attended the public
schools, Corning (N.Y.) Free Academy, and St. Pauls School, Concord, N.H.; was
graduated from Harvard University in 1886; took postgraduate courses at
Gottingen, Berlin, and Paris from 1886 to 1889; commenced the manufacture of
glass at Corning, N.Y., in 1889; vice president of the Corning Glass Works from
1902 to 1910, when he was elected president of the company; president of the
board of education of Corning; became trustee of Hobart College in 1917;
elected as a Republican to the Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh Congresses and
served from March 4, 1919, to February 28, 1922, when he resigned, having been
appointed on February 10, 1922, by President Harding, as Ambassador to Germany,
in which capacity he served until April 6, 1925; appointed by President
Coolidge as Ambassador to Great Britain on February 24, 1925, and served in
that capacity until April 27, 1929; unsuccessful candidate for election to the
United States Senate in 1928; resumed his interests in the glass manufacturing
industry; died at his summer home in South Dartmouth, Mass., September 15,
1941; interment in Hope Cemetery Annex, Corning, N.Y.
BibliographyMatthews, Jeffrey J. Alanson B. Houghton: Ambassador in
the New Era. Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources Inc.,
2004.
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