|
 |
| Matchbook (detail), 1930-1956, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
WIGGLESWORTH, Richard Bowditch, a Representative from Massachusetts; born in Boston, Mass., April
25, 1891; was graduated from Milton Academy, Milton, Mass., in 1908, from
Harvard University in 1912, and from the law department of the same university
in 1916; assistant private secretary to the Governor General of the Philippine
Islands in 1913; admitted to the bar in 1916 and commenced practice in Boston,
Mass.; during the First World War served overseas as captain, Battery E, and as
commanding officer, First Battalion, Three Hundred and Third Field Artillery,
Seventy-sixth Division, 1917-1919; legal adviser to the Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury in charge of foreign loans and railway payments, and secretary of
the World War Debt Commission 1922-1924; assistant to the agent general for
reparation payments, Berlin, Germany, 1924-1927; general counsel and Paris
representative for organizations created under the Dawes plan in 1927 and 1928;
elected as a Republican to the Seventieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused
by the death of Louis A. Frothingham; reelected to the Seventy-first and to the
fourteen succeeding Congresses and served from November 6, 1928, until his
resignation November 13, 1958; was not a candidate for renomination in 1958;
United States Ambassador to Canada from January 28, 1959, until his death in
Boston, Mass., October 22, 1960; interment in Arlington National Cemetery.
|