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Senate Years of Service: 1911-1917 Party: Republican
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WORKS, John Downey, a Senator from California; born near Rising Sun, Ohio County, Ind., March 29,
1847; attended private schools; during the Civil War served in the Tenth Regiment, Indiana
Volunteer Cavalry, of the Union Army; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1868 and commenced
practice in Vevay, Ind.; member, State house of representatives 1878-1880; moved to San Diego,
Calif., in 1883 and continued the practice of law; judge of the superior court of San Diego County
1886-1887; associate justice of the supreme court of California 1888-1891; moved to Los Angeles
in 1896; president of the city council of Los Angeles 1910; elected as a Republican to the United
States Senate and served from March 4, 1911, to March 3, 1917; was not a candidate for
renomination; chairman, Committee on Expenditures in the War Department (Sixty-second
Congress), Committee on Fisheries (Sixty-second Congress); resumed the practice of law for a short
time; died in Los Angeles, Calif., June 6, 1928; remains were cremated and the ashes deposited in
Inglewood Cemetery.
BibliographyWorks, John D. Mans Duty to Man: A Study
of Social Conditions and How They May Be Improved. New York: Neale Publishing Co.,
1919; Works, John D. Whats Wrong With the World? Boston: Stratford Co., 1922.
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