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Senate Years of Service: 1938-1947 Party: Democrat
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MEAD, James Michael, a Representative and a Senator from New York; born in Mount Morris,
Livingston County, N.Y., December 27, 1885; moved to Buffalo, N.Y., with his
parents in 1890; attended the grammar, technical, and evening schools of
Buffalo, N.Y.; employed as a water boy, lamplighter, spike mauler, and
switchman on various railroads; member of the Capitol police force in
Washington, D.C., in 1911; served on the board of supervisors of Erie County in
1914; member, State assembly 1915-1918; elected as a Democrat to the
Sixty-sixth and to the nine succeeding Congresses and served from March 4,
1919, until his resignation on December 2, 1938; was not a candidate for
renomination in 1938, having become a candidate for Senator; elected on
November 8, 1938, as a Democrat to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Royal S. Copeland; reelected in 1940, and served from
December 3, 1938, to January 3, 1947; was not a candidate for renomination in
1946; unsuccessful for the gubernatorial nomination in 1942 and for election as
Governor in 1946; member of the Federal Trade Commission 1949-1955; director of
Washington office of the New York Department of Commerce 1955-1956; moved to
Clermont, Fla., in 1954 and operated an orange grove until his death in
Lakeland, Fla., on March 15, 1964; interment in Oakhill Cemetery, Clermont,
Fla.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Maher, Sister
M. Patrick Ellen. The Role of the Chairman of a Congressional Investigating
Committee: A Case Study of the Special Committee of the Senate to Investigate
the National Defense Program, 1941-1948. Ph.D. dissertation, St. Louis
University, 1962; Mead, James M.
Tell the Folks Back Home. New York: Appleton-Century, 1944.
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