John Hamilton | |
|---|---|
Hamilton opening the 1933 Republican National Committee meeting | |
| Chair of theRepublican National Committee | |
| In office June 22, 1936 – July 8, 1940 | |
| Preceded by | Henry P. Fletcher |
| Succeeded by | Joseph W. Martin Jr. |
| Personal details | |
| Born | John Daniel Miller Hamilton (1892-03-02)March 2, 1892 Fort Madison, Iowa, U.S. |
| Died | September 24, 1973(1973-09-24) (aged 81) Clearwater, Florida, U.S. |
| Political party | Republican |
| Education | Northwestern University (LLB) |
John Daniel Miller Hamilton (March 2, 1892[1] – September 24, 1973[2]) was aRepublican politician from theU.S. state ofKansas.
Hamilton was raised inTopeka, Kansas, where his father was general counsel of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. His elder brother was actorHale Hamilton.[3] Upon graduation from preparatory school in 1913, he stopped in Chicago to see his father's friend, Dean Wigmore, who promptly invited him to enroll inNorthwestern University Law School.
Hamilton went on to become Speaker of theKansas House of Representatives for the 1927 Session and 1928 Special Session. He lost the Republican Governor primary election to Clyde Reed in 1928. In the 1930 Republican Governor primary he was the campaign manager for Frank Hauke who defeated incumbent Governor Clyde Reed, but lost in the general election. As Hauke's campaign manager, Hamilton was also made Chairman of theKansas Republican Party from 1930 to 1932, In November 1932, following the death of Kansas Republican National Committeeman David Mulvane, Governor Alf Landon had Hamilton elected as the new Kansas Republican National Committeeman for Kansas, a role he filled from 1932 to 1940. In 1936, following the nomination of then-Governor Alf Landon to run against President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Hamilton was appointed chairman of the Republican National Committee. His picture was onTime's cover on September 23, 1936.[4] Landon lost the election in a landslide, but Hamilton continued as chairman of the Republican National Committee until 1940, due in large part to the considerable help of a freshman Illinois congressman, Everett Dirksen, whose eloquent support turned back several efforts to replace Hamilton.
Hamilton personally visited 3,000 GOP county chairmen during his four-year term, and, in the process, eliminated the huge Landon campaign debt. Hamilton presided at the 1940 Republican National Convention that nominated Wendell Willkie to run against Roosevelt. When, according to well-established custom, Willkie picked his own national party chairman, Hamilton retired from active politics.
In 1940, Hamilton at the age of 48 resigned from the RNC and two days later marriedJane Kendall Mason, 30, who a month earlier divorced George Grant Mason Jr., member of the Civil Aeronautics Board in Tampa, Florida. According to former first ladyGrace Coolidge, Jane Kendall was "the most beautiful debutante who ever entered the White House".[5]
At the urging of members of Philadelphia's Pew family, he came toPhiladelphia, rather than return to Kansas, and joined thePepper Law Firm. Even in private practice, he remained an active and shrewd observer of the political scene. He was a consummate raconteur of political stories, and in the days before timesheets, partners and associates drifted into his office for impromptu gatherings where they heard Hamilton tell tales of political lore.
Hamilton received national and international attention in 1950, when he was appointed to representHarry Gold, a Philadelphia chemist and confessed courier in theJulius and Ethel Rosenberg network that passed atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. In 1955 he became chairman of the Pepper Law Firm and resigned the position in 1964.
| Party political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Chair of theRepublican National Committee 1936–1940 | Succeeded by |