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Senate Years of Service: 1925-1935; 1935-1947 Party: Republican; Progressive
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| Library of Congress |
LA FOLLETTE, Robert Marion, Jr., (son of Robert Marion La Follette),
a Senator from Wisconsin; born in Madison, Dane County, Wis., February 6, 1895;
attended the public schools of Madison and Washington, D.C.; attended the University of Wisconsin
at Madison 1913-1917; private secretary to his father 1919-1925; elected as a Republican to the
United States Senate on September 9, 1925, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father,
Robert M. La Follette; reelected as a Republican in 1928, and as a Progressive in 1934 and 1940,
and served from September 30, 1925, to January 3, 1947; unsuccessful candidate for reelection as a
Republican in 1946; chairman, Committee on Manufactures (Seventy-first and Seventy-second
Congresses); a champion of organized labor, La Follette gained national prominence between 1936
and 1940 as chairman of a special Senate investigating committee, commonly called the La Follette
Civil Liberties Committee, which exposed techniques used to prevent workers from organizing;
author, economic-research consultant, and foreign aid advisor to the Truman administration; died in
Washington, D.C., February 24, 1953, of a self-inflicted gunshot wound; interment in Forest Hill
Cemetery, Madison, Wis.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Auerbach, Jerold. Labor and Liberty: The La
Follette Committee and the New Deal. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1966; Maney, Patrick
J. Young Bob La Follette: A Biography of Robert M. La Follette, Jr., 1895-1953. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1978.
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