|
Senate Years of Service: 1913-1937 Party: Democrat
 |
| Library of Congress |
ROBINSON, Joseph Taylor, a Representative and a Senator from Arkansas; born on a farm near
Lonoke, Lonoke County, Ark., August 26, 1872; attended the common schools, the
University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, and the law department of the
University of Virginia at Charlottesville; admitted to the bar in 1895 and
commenced practice in Lonoke, Ark.; member, State general assembly 1895;
presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1900; elected as a Democrat to
the Fifty-eighth and to the four succeeding Congresses and served from March 4,
1903, to January 14, 1913, when he resigned, having been elected Governor;
chairman, Committee on Public Lands (Sixty-second Congress); Governor of
Arkansas from January 16 to March 8, 1913, when he resigned, having been
elected Senator; elected to the United States Senate in 1913 to fill the seat
vacated by the death of Senator Jeff Davis; reelected in 1918, 1924, 1930 and
1936 and served from March 10, 1913, until his death; minority leader
1923-1933; majority leader 1933-1937; chairman, Committee on Expenditures in
the Treasury Department (Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses), Committee on
Claims (Sixty-fifth Congress); unsuccessful candidate for Vice President of the
United States on the Democratic ticket in 1928; died in Washington, D.C., July
14, 1937; funeral services were held in the Chamber of the United States
Senate; interment in Roselawn Memorial Park in Little Rock, Ark.
Bibliography
American National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography; Weller, Cecil E. Jr.
Joe T. Robinson: Always a Loyal Democrat. Fayetteville, Ark.:
University of Arkansas Press, 1998; Bacon, Donald C. Joseph Taylor Robinson:
The Good Soldier. In
First Among Equals: Outstanding Senate Leaders of the Twentieth
Century, edited by Richard A. Baker and Roger H. Davidson, pp. 63-97.
Washington: Congressional Quarterly, 1991.
|