H. R. Gross | |
|---|---|
Official portrait,c. 1969 | |
| Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromIowa's3rd district | |
| In office January 3, 1949 – January 3, 1975 | |
| Preceded by | John W. Gwynne |
| Succeeded by | Chuck Grassley |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Harold Royce Gross (1899-06-30)June 30, 1899 Arispe, Iowa, US |
| Died | September 22, 1987(1987-09-22) (aged 88) Washington, D.C., US |
| Resting place | Arlington National Cemetery |
| Party | Republican |
| Spouse | Hazel E. Webster |
| Relations | Joe Gross |
| Children | 2 |
Harold Royce Gross (June 30, 1899 – September 22, 1987) was aRepublicanUnited States Representative fromIowa's 3rd congressional district for thirteen terms. The role he played on the House floor, objecting to spending measures and projects that he considered wasteful, promptedTime magazine to label him "the useful pest."[1]
Gross was born on his parents' 240-acre (0.97 km2) farm nearArispe, inUnion County, Iowa.[2] He was educated in the rural schools. In 1916, after completing his sophomore year in high school inCreston, Iowa, he concealed his youth in order to enlist in the military service, where he first served with the First Iowa Field Artillery in thePancho Villa Expedition.[3] During World War I he served in France with the United States Army from 1917–1919.[2] After the war, he briefly attendedIowa State College in its electrical engineering program, before transferring to theUniversity of Missouri School of Journalism inColumbia.[3]
He was a newspaper reporter and editor for various newspapers from 1921 to 1935. One such newspaper was the publication of the Iowa Farmer's Union, theIowa Union Farmer, which he edited from 1929 to 1935.[3] He began as a radio news commentator forWHO (AM) inDes Moines, Iowa, in 1935. One of his fellow on-air broadcasters at WHO was a youngRonald Reagan.
He met Hazel Webster while he was a newspaper reporter covering the Iowa statehouse and she was the secretary to the Iowa Attorney General.[3] They were married in 1929.[3] H. R. and Hazel Gross raised two children, Phillip and Alan.[2]
In 1940, Gross challenged Iowa's sitting Governor,George A. Wilson, in the Republican primary, running what newspapers called a "sight-unseen" campaign. Gross confined his campaign to radio addresses, declined all personal appearance invitations, and made no platform speeches.[4] He lost the primary by only 15,781 votes out of over 330,000 cast, in the closest primary race in Iowa in nearly thirteen years.[5] His campaign was haunted by a statement he had made seven years earlier, while writing and speaking for theFarmers' Holiday Association, that appeared to approve of an episode of mob violence against a judge to stop a foreclosure.[6]
Following his defeat, Gross joined an Ohio radio station and later moved to Indiana.[5] After World War II, he returned to Iowa and became a radio newscaster atKXEL inWaterloo.[5]
In 1948, Gross ran against an incumbent House member of his own party, RepublicanJohn W. Gwynne. He wrestled the nomination away from Gwynne in the Republican primary without the help of the party organization.[2] In a 1948 general election in which Democratic PresidentHarry S. Truman surprisingly carried Iowa and Iowa DemocratGuy Gillette ousted RepublicanGeorge A. Wilson from the U.S. Senate, Gross won his first ofmany landslide victories. In his most narrow victory, he was the only Republican member ofIowa's U.S. House delegation to survive the 1964 Democratic landslide. He was re-elected twelve times before choosing to retire rather than run in the 1974 election. He served continuously from January 3, 1949 to January 3, 1975.
In the words of his successor,Charles Grassley, Gross earned "a legendary reputation as watchdog of the Treasury."[2] He rarely missed a roll call vote and often remained in the House chamber between roll call votes, listening carefully to speeches and scrutinizing the details of pending bills, especially spending bills.[1] He denounced, among other things, theMarshall Plan,[7] the funeral of PresidentJohn F. Kennedy (including the appropriation for fuel for the eternal flame),[2][7] the size of the White House security detail,[7] thePeace Corps,[7] the U.S. Space Program,[7] and foreign aid.[8]
Gross also refused to go on taxpayer-funded congressionaljunkets. AsEd Rollins recalled, "When he retired, his fellow members chipped in and bought him and his wife Hazel, who managed his office for no pay, a round-the-world trip. With tears in his eyes he took one last shot at his pals. 'Wherever we go, I am sure I'll see you all on your taxpayers' junkets!'"[9]
In the early 1960s he took an early stand against the practice of retired service personnel getting a military pension and another federal paycheck. He opposed restoring former PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower to his generalship unless Congress stipulated that he would only receive his Presidential pension and not a general's salary also.[1][2] Gross admitted to having only one regret about his entire career: voting "present" rather than "nay" on theGulf of Tonkin Resolution, explaining that theVietnam War ended up costing too much.[7]
Libertarian theoristMurray Rothbard hailed Gross in theLibertarian Forum, pointing out that the congressman had the best voting record from a libertarian standpoint. Before Gross' retirement from Congress, Rothbard had written "It is pleasant to take this opportunity to hail the Grand Old Man of theOld Right H. R. Gross of Iowa, a marvelous and flinty character almost out of the storybooks"[10]
Gross was also known for his independence, so much so that then-House Minority LeaderGerald Ford remarked that "there are three parties in the House: Democrats, Republicans, and H.R. Gross."[7] Shaking off the Eisenhower Administration's pressure to support a foreign-aid economic-development measure, Gross quipped, "I took my last marching orders in 1916–19."[11]
Gross's personal lifestyle reflected his fiscally conservative views. He lived frugally and rarely attended any parties or social functions common to the life of a congressman. Gross was remembered as an outsider who preferred to sit in his townhouse and watch professional wrestling on TV.[1][7]
In 1966, at the height of theVietnam War, with many American soldiers dying, an extravagant White House ball ran on until 3 A.M. Disgusted by this callousness, Gross recitedAlfred Noyes' poemThe Victory Ball in Congress in protest; the poem condemns the hedonism of a British Armistice ball and contains the line "under the dancing feet are the graves".[12]
He was also among the few who opposed theUniform Monday Holiday Act in 1968, moving all federal holidays (other thanIndependence Day,Veterans Day,Christmas Day, andNew Year's Day) to the nearest Monday. He argued that it would rob retail workers of their holidays because retail stores would remain open.
However, even his targets could speak warmly of Gross. LongtimeHouse Armed Services Committee ChairmanCarl Vinson, whose defense spending bills often incurred Gross's criticisms, said of Gross that "there is really no good debate unless the gentleman from Iowa is in it."[1]
Gross voted in favor of theCivil Rights Acts of 1960 and1968,[13][14] as well as the24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,[15] but voted against theCivil Rights Acts of 1957 and1964,[16][17] as well as theVoting Rights Act of 1965.[18] Despite his staunch fiscal conservatism, Gross was supportive of amendments for Social Security, theCeller-Kefauver Act, public housing, theRailroad Retirement Act, theEqual Rights Amendment of 1971 and theOil Pollution Act of 1973.[19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]
When Gross was in Congress, a special exception was made to the practice that bills offered in the House were numbered consecutively. The number H.R. 144 was reserved each session for one of Representative Gross's bills (because 144 equalsone gross, making its title the arithmetical equivalent to his name).[28]
Gross married Hazel E. Webster. They had two sons.[2][29] He was a resident ofArlington, Virginia, until his death in a Washington, D.C. Veterans Hospital on September 22, 1987, due to complications fromAlzheimer's disease.[2] He was buried inArlington National Cemetery.[30]
| U.S. House of Representatives | ||
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| Preceded by | U.S. Congressman for the 3rd District of Iowa 1949–1975 | Succeeded by |