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| Photograph, 1910-1914, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
KENT, William, a Representative from California; born in Chicago, Ill., March 29,
1864; moved to California in 1871 with his parents, who settled in Marin
County; attended private schools in California and Hopkins Grammar School, New
Haven, Conn., 1881-1883; was graduated from Yale University in 1887; returned
to Chicago, Ill., in 1887 and engaged in the real estate and livestock
business; member of the city council 1895-1897; president of the Municipal
Voters League of Chicago in 1899 and 1900; returned to Marin County, Calif.,
in 1907; elected as a Progressive Republican to the Sixty-second Congress;
reelected as an Independent to the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses and
served from March 4, 1911, to March 3, 1917; was not a candidate for
renomination in 1916; appointed a member of the United States Tariff Commission
March 21, 1917, and served until his resignation March 31, 1920; writer on
political subjects and natural science; died in Kentfield, Calif., March 13,
1928; remains were cremated in Oakland, Calif., and the ashes returned to the
family.
Bibliography Nash, Roderick. John Muir, William Kent, and the Conservative
Schism.
Pacific Historical Review 36 (November 1967): 423-33;
Woodbury, Robert L. William Kent: Progressive Gadfly, 1864-1928. Ph.D.
diss., Yale University, 1967.
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