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Senate Years of Service: 1927-1949 Party: Democrat
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WAGNER, Robert Ferdinand, a Senator from New York; born in Nastatten, Province Hessen-Nassau,
Germany, June 8, 1877; immigrated with his parents to the United States in 1885
and settled in New York City; attended the public schools; graduated from the
College of the City of New York in 1898 and from New York Law School in 1900;
admitted to the bar in 1900 and commenced practice in New York City; member,
State assembly 1905-1908; member, State senate 1909-1918, the last eight years
as Democratic floor leader; chairman of the State Factory Investigating
Commission 1911-1915; delegate to the New York constitutional conventions in
1915 and 1938; justice of the supreme court of New York 1919-1926; elected as a
Democrat to the United States Senate in 1926; reelected in 1932, 1938 and 1944
and served from March 4, 1927, until his resignation on June 28, 1949, due to
ill health; chairman, Committee on Patents (Seventy-third Congress), Committee
on Public Lands and Surveys (Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth Congresses),
Committee on Banking and Currency (Seventy-fifth through Seventy-ninth
Congresses); author of the National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act), that
created the National Labor Relations Board in 1935; delegate to the United
Nations Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods in 1944; died in New
York City, May 4, 1953; interment in Calvary Cemetery, Queens, New York City.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography;
The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law; Bryne,
Thomas. The Social Thought of Senator Robert F. Wagner. Ph.D. dissertation,
Georgetown University, 1951; Huthmacher, J. Joseph.
Senator Robert F. Wagner and the Rise of Urban Liberalism. New
York: Atheneum, 1968.
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