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and at least get credit for integrity on your side." He remarked that this method might be politically dangerous. I asked for more particulars. He said that he had received some rumors of irregularities, centering around Smith, in connection with cases in the
Department of Justice. He had followed the matter up and finally sent for Smith. After a painful session he told Smith that he would be arrested in the morning. Smith went home, burned all his papers, and committed suicide. Harding gave me no information about what Smith had been up to. I asked what Daugherty's relations to the affair were. He abruptly dried up and never raised the question again.
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770:. Daugherty had known Harding since the autumn of 1899, when he had been prominent in Ohio politics and Harding was a 35-year-old upstart. It would not be too many years before these roles were reversed, however, with Harding elected to the state senate in 1901 and appointed Republican floor leader in that same session. Harding was an eloquent speaker and a skilled negotiator of political compromise and emerged as one of the top leaders of the Foraker faction.
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they did, killing five rioters and wounding fifteen others. The mob still failed to disperse and fears grew that an armed assault would be launched by furious local citizens on the militiamen defending the jail. Around 2 am a second volley was fired by the defenders, this time over the heads of the rioters, with the gunfire finally having its desired effect of breaking up the unlawful gathering.
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981:. Daugherty, hired because of his closeness to Taft, and promised a fee of $ 100,000 if a pardon were obtained, advanced the scheme by repeatedly telling Taft's secretary that Morse was near death, even stating at one point that Morse would not likely survive another 24 hours. In fact, after receiving the pardon, Morse lived another 21 years.
783:, giving Daugherty its full support. Both were politically ambitious and while they enjoyed one another's company, they were not intimate personal friends. Harding managed to win election to the Senate in 1914. Daugherty ran for the Republican Senate nomination in 1916, campaigning against former Senator
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One day after lunch when we were a few days out, Harding asked me to come to his cabin. He plumped at me the question: "If you knew of a great scandal in our administration, would you for the good of the country and the party expose it publicly or would you bury it?" My natural reply was "Publish it,
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Governor McKinley also named
Daugherty as his floor leader in the House of Representatives, keeping party members in line behind the governor's legislative agenda. Over the next two years McKinley and Daugherty forged a close political friendship, working together closely and frequently sharing meals
511:. Forced by the logic of the situation to switch alliances rather than risk being cast into political oblivion, Daugherty abandoned Foraker in the final contest of the Ohio Republican caucus on January 2, 1892, joining 52 others in voting for Sherman, against 38 for the insurgent campaign of Foraker.
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on August 2, 1923. Harding's death did nothing to quell the tide of emerging scandals revolving around his Ohio clique, with the news dominated by the story of Teapot Dome bribery and allegations of wrongdoing in the Office of the Alien
Property Custodian, the Veterans' Bureau, and the Office of the
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Charges of Hon. Oscar E. Keller
Against the Attorney General of the United States: Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, Sixty-seventh Congress, Third and Fourth Sessions on H. Res. 425, September 16, 1922, and December 4, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 20, 21, 1922: Part 1
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After taking testimony on the matter the pair cleared
Daugherty of wrongdoing, their final report indicating that the Attorney General had neither been aware of the fraudulent oil contracts nor had he taken any bribes related to the affair. This very specific absolution did not mean that all was on
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against the progressive
Republicanism espoused by Roosevelt. Daugherty was a key figure on the ground in Ohio in behalf of the Taft campaign, issuing a major address on May 18 which was so well regarded that it was reproduced as a pamphlet by the Taft organization. Although Daugherty's machinations
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at
Columbus. That evening a mob gathered and began a siege of the jail, attempting to batter down the jailhouse doors so that the prisoner could be removed and violently killed. Commander of the National Guard forces, Colonel Alonzo Coit, ordered his troops to fire upon the enraged lynch mob, which
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On
October 9, 1894, a black man named William Dolby was accused of assaulting a white woman named Mary C. Boyd in her home at Parrett's Station, a small settlement near Washington Court House. Dolby fled but was soon arrested and taken back to the jail at Washington Court House, where signs quickly
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The following year
Daugherty was elected secretary of the Fayette County Executive Committee, where he earned a reputation as an intense and astute young political activist. He was selected as one of five delegates from the Fayette Country Republican Party as a delegate to the Ohio State Republican
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Over the next five years
Daugherty skillfully built political influence in the Ohio Republican establishment by dealing with leaders of both of the party's major factions. Daugherty maintained considerable influence with Republicans in the state legislature, who had known and worked with Daugherty
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In 1898 conflict emerged between Daugherty and Hanna over the slow payment of thousands of dollars of legal fees incurred by then-U.S. Senator Hanna in defending himself against a Senate investigation of electoral bribery charges. While Daugherty's insistence upon being paid had made for a tense
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Coolidge was loath to believe that such things were possible. He greatly delayed the removal of Daugherty from the Cabinet. From this man's long-time character, he should never have been in any government.... Coolidge had a high sense of justice and asserted that he had no definite knowledge of
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The 1892 Senatorial campaign marked the formal attachment of Daugherty to the dominant Sherman-Hanna faction of the Ohio Republican Party after the better part of a decade as a trusted adherent of the rival Foraker faction. The move broadened Daugherty's political possibilities, and he was made
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lines, with Senator Sherman and former Governor Foraker leading rival groups of party activists and political functionaries. Foraker was determined to challenge Sherman for his Senate seat and sought assurances from Daugherty that he would continue to support him when the matter came before the
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Daugherty was elected to a two-year term on the city council in the election of 1885, serving from 1886 to 1887. He was elected as chairman of the Fayette County Republican Central Committee in 1886 but spent most of his time helping to establish a law practice. After practicing alone for three
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Investigation of Hon. Harry M. Daugherty, Formerly Attorney General of the United States: Hearings before the Select Committee on Investigation of the Attorney General, United States, Senate, Sixty-eighth Congress, First Session pursuant to S. Res. 157, Directing a Committee to Investigate the
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Daugherty was instrumental in helping his ally Burton win election to the Senate in 1908 but was once again relegated to a key backstage role instead of himself standing for election to high office. Daugherty's position as a political boss rather than a public politician had once again been
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Not daunted by his loss, in 1896 Daugherty announced his desire to win election to Congress. An advisory primary election was held among Fayette County Republicans in March 1896, in which Daugherty narrowly won a bitterly fought race. The actual nomination was to be made by the 7th District
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In the aftermath of his failure to win a seat in Congress, Sherman offered Daugherty a political appointment as Assistant District Attorney in Columbus. Daugherty ultimately decided to decline this position, instead opening a new law office in that city, while still remaining a resident and
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Government Prosecutions under the Espionage Act: Letter from the Attorney General, Transmitting in Response to Senate Resolution of January 25, 1922, Additional Information Regarding Persons Prosecuted by the Government under the Espionage Act or for Conspiracy to Violate War-time Laws ...
452:, Daugherty emerged victorious in November, winning election to the Ohio House of Representatives by slightly more than 800 votes out of 5,100 ballots cast. Although Daugherty won his race, his close political ally Joseph Foraker lost his bid for a third term as Governor and the
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Having achieved power, Harding gathered around him a group of political cronies, including factional friends from the Ohio Republican establishment like Daugherty and others of like mind from other states, a group known colloquially as the "Ohio Gang." Critics such as Harding's
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parties were his greatest relaxation. The stakes were not large, but the play lasted most of the night.... I had lived too long on the frontiers of the world to have strong emotions against people playing poker for money if they liked it, but it irked me to see it in the White
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The establishment of primary elections for the U.S. Senate in 1914 greatly reduced the power of political bosses such as Daugherty. He remained fully engaged as a political operative in spite of this major change, however, attaching himself to a powerful state senator named
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in the incident. McKinley then called upon Daugherty to shoulder the politically unpopular job of defending Coit at trial, in the face of a wrathful Fayette County citizenry which sought his conviction. Daugherty accepted the Coit case, and on March 5, 1895, won his
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broke a sensational story about a secret bribery scheme involving oil company kickbacks to government officials in exchange for the granting of extraordinarily favorable oil extraction leases via single-bid contracts. The next day Democratic Senator
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for years. His political rehabilitation was only partial, however, for as long as Foraker and Hanna remained the top factional leaders of Ohio Republican politics there remained a very real ceiling beyond which Daugherty could never hope to rise.
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chairman of the powerful Corporations Committee and named a member of the Judiciary Committee. In 1893 Daugherty was chosen as chairman of the Ohio Republican State Convention which nominated McKinley as the party's candidate for Governor.
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relationship, the actual parting of their ways came in 1899, when Daugherty again sought the Republican nomination for Governor of Ohio. Neither Foraker nor Hanna supported Daugherty for the position, with Hanna lending his support to
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minister, but the prospect of life as a clergyman held no appeal for him. Instead, after graduating from high school in Washington Court House, Daugherty studied medicine for a year before taking a position as a cub reporter for
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charged that Daugherty and fourteen other Ohio legislators had changed their support from Foraker to Sherman based upon "intimidation, threats, promises, and actual purchase" and accused Daugherty by name of having accepted
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Despite his status as a key political leader of the Ohio Republican Party from the 1880s to the first decade of the 20th century, Daugherty was only briefly a statewide elected politician by serving just two terms in the
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when Harry was just four years old, as did one of his brothers, leaving his mother as the sole provider for the household. Harry and his older brother, Mally, were forced by economic necessity to take a variety of jobs
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During the 1912 party split, Daugherty and Harding forged a political friendship working on behalf of the Taft campaign, with Daugherty filling the role of Ohio Republican Party chairman with Harding's newspaper, the
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Several of Harding's Ohio Gang associates lost no time enriching themselves at the public expense. Soon rumblings began to be heard over possible malfeasance in various government departments, including Daugherty's
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about his time in the Harding administration. In the book he claimed that Fall had become Secretary of the Interior by forging Daugherty's signature, and that Smith, his close friend, had killed himself because of
1157:. Like the real life Daugherty, the character is portrayed as Warren G. Harding's 1920 campaign manager and later as his Attorney General. He also faces corruption charges and his relationship with Jess Smith and
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wires so that they could obtain game information in advance. Initially successful, this ethically shady activity was ultimately discovered and exposed by local gamblers puzzled by the brothers' uncanny success.
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to help with the family's living expenses. Daugherty's mother later recalled that he was so young when he worked in a local grocery store that he had to stand on a wooden crate to reach the cash register.
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Daugherty graduated from law school in 1881 and returned home to Ohio, where he accepted a job in the office of a Washington Court House attorney, spending his spare time preparing to take the Ohio state
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Speech of Former Attorney General Daugherty and Introductory Remarks of Judge John E. Sater: At Testimonial Dinner Tendered by Business and Professional Men at Hotel Deshler, Columbus, Ohio, April 23rd,
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wrongdoings by Daugherty and could not remove him on rumors. We urged that Daugherty had lost the confidence of the whole country and himself should be willing to retire for the good of public service.
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in 1892, but the 7th District Republican Convention which put forward the party's nominee was irreconcilably split between Daugherty and his former law partner, A.R. Creamer, and wound up backing a
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in 1885, he was able to return the favor, boosting his protΓ©gΓ© Daugherty's career. The connection between the two was tightened further in September 1884, when Daugherty married Lucille Walker of
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Reply by the Attorney General of the United States, Harry M. Daugherty to charges filed with the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives, December 1, 1922, by Oscar E. Keller.
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1012:, Hoover was never part of the President's inner circle, yet was abruptly added to the traveling party on the cruise by a "nervous and distraught" Harding, who apparently sought his counsel.
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and Foraker clearly still seething over Daugherty's 1892 abandonment. Daugherty took his fight all the way to the Ohio Republican Convention before losing to Nash, 461 delegate votes to 205.
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This placed Daugherty in a difficult position, since his native Fayette County was solidly behind the Sherman faction, which included Governor McKinley and the significant financial clout of
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and opportunistically attempted to become a movement leader in the state. Daugherty was himself a drinker but was not a man to let personal habits stand in the way of political possibility.
268:. Following Harding's successful election, Daugherty was named attorney general. In that capacity, he was instrumental in winning presidential pardons for jailed anti-war dissidents such as
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Daugherty was also accused by opponents of the administration of having been complicit in the Teapot Dome affair by failing to intervene after he had learned of the malfeasance. A pair of
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A close political relationship developed between Foraker and Daugherty, with Daugherty exerting himself in support of Foraker's unsuccessful 1883 campaign. When Foraker was elected as
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in the fall of 1891, beating his Democratic opponent by more than 750 votes out of about 4,900 cast. This time Ohio Republicans recaptured not only the Governor's mansion β electing
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Although Daugherty sought nomination by the Ohio Republican Party for Governor in 1895, Hanna decided to support another candidate instead, so Daugherty decided to launch a run for
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In the aftermath, Governor McKinley appointed a special court of inquiry to investigate the riot and militia shooting. Following an investigation, the court of inquiry returned an
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pointed to an outburst of mob violence. Dolby supposedly confessed to the crime "upon being apprehended". The Fayette County sheriff called upon Governor McKinley to send out the
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Report Submitted to President Coolidge by Attorney General H. M. Daugherty Concerning Prohibition Litigation throughout U.S., Covering Period Jan. 16, 1920 to June 16, 1923.
977:. Morse, a multi-millionaire who had just begun a fifteen-year prison sentence, pretended to be dying in order to plead for a pardon on humanitarian grounds from President
261:. Although he sought national office several times, Daugherty was thwarted in his effort to obtain the nomination of his party and was never elected to office again.
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recognized Daugherty's gifts as an indefatigable partisan and effective stump speaker, however, and sent him out on the road in support of McKinley's campaign for
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years, Daugherty formed a partnership with Horatio B. Maynard, a prominent local lawyer, and the new practice soon emerged as a leading law firm in the county.
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Randolph C. Downes, "President Making: The Influence of Newton Fairbanks and Harry M. Daugherty on the Nomination of Warren G. Harding for the Presidency,"
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809:. The decision to propel Harding forward, if the nomination wasn't decided on the first ballot, was made in what became known in American politics as the
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in Washington Court House, Ohio. Some of his papers, consisting primarily of correspondence between him and President Warren Harding, are housed at the
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On March 28, 1924, Coolidge acquiesced, demanding and receiving a letter of resignation from Daugherty. He was quickly replaced as Attorney General by
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were charged with the same misconduct. Daugherty's case went to trial twice, with the first jury deadlocking with 7β5 in favor of conviction. He was
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again cleared the way for Daugherty's emergence. By 1906 Daugherty stood as a leader of a new insurgent political faction which included Congressman
670:, and Ohio, logging over 9,000 miles traveled in delivering some 47 campaign speeches in support of McKinley and the Republicans' successful effort.
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Daugherty remained an influential figure behind the election of several U.S. representatives and senators. He was Harding's campaign manager at the
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1128:. Bedridden and blind in one eye during this last year, he died peacefully in his sleep with his son and daughter at his side on October 12, 1941.
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as the recording secretary of the organization. He ran for political office in the election of 1882, winning election as the clerk of nearby
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272:. Twice the subject of federal corruption investigations, Daugherty was forced in 1924 to resign his post as attorney general by Coolidge.
1124:, Daugherty planned to write more books to clear his reputation, but in October 1940, he suffered two heart attacks and was stricken with
833:. He ran the campaign based on Harding's affable personality and fairly neutral political stance, advocating a return to "normalcy" after
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Respect for Law: Address of Hon. Harry M. Daugherty at the Meeting of the American Bar Association at Cincinnati, Ohio, August 31, 1921.
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558:. Wilson won his race in the November 1892 general election and wound up serving four years in Congress on behalf of the 7th District.
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called for Daugherty's resignation because of the role Daugherty had played ten years earlier in procuring a presidential pardon for
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Crooked: The Roaring 20s Tale of a Corrupt Attorney General, a Crusading Senator, and the Birth of the American Political Scandal
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Failure of the Attorney General to Prosecute or Defend Certain Criminal and Civil Actions, Wherein the Government is Interested.
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Republican Convention, however, and there Daugherty fell victim to factional machinations, with the nomination going instead to
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assets seized during World War I. The indictment came down one year after Smith, Republican political boss John T. King of
713:, and together the factional allies forced Foraker out of the United States Senate and into political retirement, aided by
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On October 17 two companies of militiamen arrived at Washington Court House to guard Dolby for his coming transport to the
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were elected by state legislatures rather than by direct vote of the people, this meant that a Republican would be sent to
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the level at the Justice Department, however. In July 1923, just as Harding was preparing to leave on a working cruise to
347:, accepted there despite not having first obtained an undergraduate education. He supplemented his insufficient income by
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As an Ohio Republican boss in 1920, Daugherty engineered Harding's ascendancy as the presidential nominee at that year's
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prevailed upon him to eliminate a man whom they considered to be a corrupt official. In his memoirs Hoover remembered:
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and former Democratic Senator Atlee Pomerene β were appointed to conduct a more thorough investigation of the matter.
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Theodore E. Burton, a congressman and senator, was a key Daugherty ally during the first decade of the 20th century.
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Address by the Attorney General of the United States, Hon. Harry M. Daugherty (at Canton, Ohio, October 21, 1922).
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Ohio governor Joseph B. Foraker, with whom Daugherty was politically allied as a young man, as he appeared in 1902
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introduced a resolution which set in motion the Senate investigation that would ultimately expose this so-called
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He enjoyed the company of these men and his old Ohio associates in and out of the government. Weekly White House
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boss Maurice Maschke carried the state Republican convention for Taft, a split of the Republican field in the
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instead. The Ohio Republican Convention was dominated by the Foraker faction, however, and Foraker loyalist
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won control of the Assembly as well, forcing Daugherty to participate as a member of the minority party.
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to the state's chief executive office β but also the majority of the state assembly. Since in this era
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In the aftermath of the caucus that would determine Ohio's U.S. Senator, editorials of the Democratic
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followed, with Daugherty being unanimously cleared of all charges in a report issued in April 1892.
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Mark Hanna, a key leader of the Sherman faction of the Ohio Republican Party, as he appeared in 1896
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Ever the political manipulator, in January 1918 Daugherty observed the significance of the growing
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During the party split of 1912, Daugherty was a staunch supporter of Taft and old guard Republican
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Daugherty returned to practicing law until his retirement in 1932, and that year published, with
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643:, who would ultimately serve two terms in Congress. For a second time Daugherty had been denied.
406:. In this capacity Daugherty served a single two-year term, earning a salary of $ 1500 per year.
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Hanna's death in February 1904 and a subsequent discrediting of some of his top allies such as
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and Daugherty threw his hat into the ring. After eking out a narrow victory in the Republican
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In 1926, Daugherty was indicted on charges that he improperly received funds in the sale of
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had another side which was not good. His political associates had been men of the type of
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and former Governor Herrick. Herrick won the nomination, and lost the general election to
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news reports that Foraker had received nearly $ 30,000 as a political retainer from the
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Ohio Historical Marker at the Fayette County Courthouse in Washington Court House, Ohio
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was also an area of some interest to Daugherty and his brother, who went so far as to
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Following the resounding Republican victory in the fall of 1920, Daugherty was named
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at breakfast and in the evening. With the Foraker faction, however, Daugherty became
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in what would prove to be the beginning of his terminal last days, finally dying in
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following his sentencing to twenty years in prison at a hearing held on October 16.
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was nominated for the Attorney General post over the deeply distrusted Daugherty.
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Political Corruption in America: An Encyclopedia of Scandals, Power, and Greed.
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after a single juror remained unconvinced of his guilt in the second trial.
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The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-1933,
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The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-1933,
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The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-1933,
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The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-1933,
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The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-1933.
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225:; January 26, 1860 β October 12, 1941) was an American politician. A key
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The Ohio Republican Party had for several years been deeply split along
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Harry M. Daugherty was born on January 26, 1860, in the small town of
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Daugherty attempted to gain nomination as a Republican candidate for
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due to what was perceived as his duplicitous political disloyalty.
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New International Yearbook: A Compendium of the World's Progress
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817:. Harding won the nomination after the vote deadlocked between
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practicing attorney in his hometown of Washington Court House.
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Republican Party members of the Ohio House of Representatives
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to the presidency with a plurality of under 42% of the vote.
701:. Daugherty and Burton aligned themselves with supporters of
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cartoon, whose caption reads, "N-nothin' to it, I tell you!"
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Returning from his Alaskan trip Harding suffered the first
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The Harding Era: Warren G. Harding and His Administration.
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Mark Grossman, "Harry Micajah Daugherty (1860-1941)," in
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United States Senate Historical Minutes, www.senate.gov/
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1486:"Harry M. Daugherty," in Joseph Patterson Smith (ed.),
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initially resisted calls to sack Daugherty, Hoover and
351:, winning a significant sum betting on the election of
2103:
Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1924.
2096:
Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1922.
1910:
1908:
1217:
Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1926.
1192:
Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1922.
903:, whom he appointed Director of the Veterans' Bureau;
2031:"'Boardwalk Empire' recap: 'You can't kill everyone'"
1223:
With Thomas Dixon. New York: Churchill Company, 1932.
414:. There Daugherty helped select an aggressive young
214:
202:
2213:
1905:
1263:
Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1978; pg. 2.
199:
1488:History of the Republican Party of Ohio: Volume 2.
907:, whom he appointed Alien Property Custodian, and
565:
2080:Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1969.
1757:
1755:
1490:Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1898; pp. 411-412.
1198:Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 1922.
1088:
899:; Daugherty, whom he appointed Attorney General;
293:. Daugherty's father, John H. Daugherty, was the
3282:
1876:"Senate Investigates the 'Teapot Dome' Scandal,"
1064:
1261:H.M. Daughterty and the Politics of Expediency.
1826:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1797:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1781:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1763:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1752:
1747:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1734:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1721:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1708:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1690:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1677:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1664:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1651:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1635:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1622:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1609:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1596:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1583:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1570:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1517:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1501:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1470:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1448:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1435:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1419:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1406:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1384:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1360:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1340:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1316:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1300:H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency,
1161:is also shown. Daugherty is also portrayed by
479:when the assembly reconvened in January 1892.
2970:
2686:
2199:
1850:Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2003; pp. 91-93.
856:
1944:
1942:
1926:
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1840:
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1818:
1791:
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1548:
1511:
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1464:
1462:
1460:
1458:
1456:
1429:
1427:
1310:
1308:
422:as the party's 1883 gubernatorial nominee.
233:, he is best remembered for his service as
208:
2977:
2963:
2693:
2679:
2206:
2192:
2129:
1400:
1398:
1396:
1394:
1392:
849:by President-elect Harding. Daugherty was
583:to defend the prisoner from a prospective
329:Daugherty's mother wanted him to become a
309:. Daugherty was a first cousin of actress
29:
1892:The Life and Times of William Howard Taft
1871:
1869:
1378:
1376:
1374:
1372:
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1282:
1255:
1253:
3346:People from Washington Court House, Ohio
3311:University of Michigan Law School alumni
2087:Lawrence: Regents Press of Kansas, 1977.
2011:"Harry M. Daugherty: Papers, 1920-1939."
1939:
1853:
1831:
1815:
1786:
1768:
1695:
1656:
1640:
1588:
1545:
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1525:
1506:
1482:
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1478:
1453:
1440:
1424:
1305:
1221:The Inside Story of the Harding Tragedy.
988:β Republican Assistant Attorney General
925:
871:Attorney General Daugherty in his office
866:
752:
618:
569:
486:
386:
245:, as well as for his involvement in the
3361:American people of Scotch-Irish descent
3341:Coolidge administration cabinet members
1389:
1102:The Inside Story of the Harding Tragedy
748:
709:under progressive Republican President
3331:Harding administration cabinet members
3283:
2020:Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, OH.
1866:
1365:
1345:
1321:
1279:
1250:
1077:, and former Alien Property Custodian
1033:Attorney General. While new President
482:
444:decided not to seek reelection to the
59:March 4, 1921 β April 6, 1924
2958:
2674:
2187:
2083:Eugene P. Trani and David L. Wilson.
1522:
1475:
964:Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation
853:and assumed office on March 4, 1921.
847:Attorney General of the United States
841:Attorney General of the United States
615:From politician to political operator
602:against Col. Coit, charging him with
475:to fill the expiring term of Senator
395:In 1882 Daugherty was elected by the
305:roots dating back to the time of the
235:Attorney General of the United States
2114:Works by or about Harry M. Daugherty
2085:The Presidency of Warren G. Harding.
1112:Spending many of his final years in
654:in 1896. Daugherty traveled through
382:
266:1920 Republican National Convention
13:
2054:
1537:"A Wild Night at Washington C.H.,"
1142:
1000:, Daugherty's personal assistant,
14:
3377:
3336:20th-century American politicians
2107:
1863:New York: Macmillan, 1952; pg. 48
697:of Cleveland and former Governor
345:University of Michigan Law School
3025:
2735:
2659:
459:Daugherty won reelection to the
195:
3316:United States attorneys general
2215:United States Attorneys General
2037:
2023:
2004:
1988:Marker #2-24 Harry M. Daugherty
1981:
1968:
1955:
1917:
1881:
1802:
1739:
1726:
1713:
1682:
1669:
1627:
1614:
1601:
1575:
1493:
566:The Washington Court House riot
16:American politician (1860β1941)
3356:The Cincinnati Enquirer people
1411:
1266:
1239:Little Green House on K Street
1089:Later years, death, and legacy
969:In May 1922, Arkansas Senator
887:with thinly disguised disgust:
803:Republican National Convention
652:President of the United States
433:β a cousin of Foraker's wife.
343:In 1878 Daugherty entered the
280:
47:United States Attorney General
1:
2001:, 2003. Accessed 2013-05-22.
1168:Backstairs at the White House
1065:American Metal Company affair
831:presidential election of 1920
758:
757:U.S. senator Warren Harding,
648:Republican National Committee
461:Ohio House of Representatives
249:during Harding's presidency.
1244:
1165:in the 1979 NBC mini-series
410:Convention in 1883, held in
400:Republican Central Committee
275:
7:
2064:vol. 31, no. 4 (Fall 1959).
1900:Farrar & Rinehart, Inc.
1227:
1204:Washington, DC: n.p., 1922.
1109:, not a guilty conscience.
911:who had office room in the
554:candidate as a compromise,
323:from a relatively early age
316:Daugherty's father died of
10:
3382:
3301:American campaign managers
3023:
2733:
1272:Shadow of Blooming Grove,
1147:Daugherty is portrayed by
943:. Then on April 14, 1922,
860:
357:1880 presidential election
3321:Ohio city council members
3259:
3234:
3203:
3180:Secretary of the Interior
3178:
3153:
3134:
3103:
3078:
3061:Secretary of the Treasury
3059:
3034:
3000:
2933:
2914:
2895:
2872:Secretary of the Interior
2870:
2851:
2820:
2801:
2782:
2765:Secretary of the Treasury
2763:
2744:
2716:
2657:
2221:
2172:
2152:
2144:
2139:
2062:Northwest Ohio Quarterly,
1211:Columbus, OH: n.p., 1924.
897:Secretary of the Interior
611:of manslaughter charges.
184:
169:
161:
151:
134:
110:
105:
101:
89:
77:
63:
52:
44:
40:
28:
21:
3205:Secretary of Agriculture
2897:Secretary of Agriculture
1808:Dodd, Mead and Company,
1174:
1131:Daugherty was buried at
1999:Ohio Historical Society
1185:Washington, DC: , 1921.
1137:Ohio Historical Society
1015:Hoover later recalled:
946:The Wall Street Journal
851:confirmed by the Senate
337:The Cincinnati Enquirer
229:political insider from
191:Harry Micajah Daugherty
3225:William Marion Jardine
3213:Henry Cantwell Wallace
2905:Henry Cantwell Wallace
1071:American Metal Company
1051:
1022:
1008:. Although as a pious
935:
924:
872:
762:
624:
575:
492:
469:United States Senators
392:
287:Washington Court House
174:University of Michigan
124:Washington Court House
3236:Secretary of Commerce
3155:Secretary of the Navy
2916:Secretary of Commerce
2853:Secretary of the Navy
2155:U.S. Attorney General
2073:(Hachette Books 2023)
1046:
1017:
1004:, suddenly committed
941:Department of Justice
929:
913:Department of Justice
889:
878:Secretary of Commerce
870:
756:
629:Ohio Attorney General
622:
573:
490:
446:Ohio General Assembly
390:
255:Ohio General Assembly
3044:Charles Evans Hughes
2754:Charles Evans Hughes
1923:Pringle, pp.629-631.
1914:Pringle, pp.628-634.
1149:Christopher McDonald
1042:Charles Evans Hughes
895:, whom he appointed
749:The Harding campaign
3351:Teapot Dome scandal
1896:Vol. II, pp.634-636
1276:, McGraw Hill, 1968
1133:Washington Cemetery
1059:Columbia Law School
986:special prosecutors
979:William Howard Taft
971:Thaddeus H. Caraway
960:Teapot Dome scandal
932:Charles Henry Sykes
829:for Harding in the
796:temperance movement
741:propelled Democrat
703:William Howard Taft
483:Change of alliances
440:In 1889 Republican
307:American Revolution
247:Teapot Dome scandal
3261:Secretary of Labor
3250:William F. Whiting
3136:Postmaster General
3113:Harry M. Daugherty
3036:Secretary of State
2935:Secretary of Labor
2822:Postmaster General
2811:Harry M. Daugherty
2746:Secretary of State
2176:Harlan Fiske Stone
2148:A. Mitchell Palmer
2123:Harry M. Daugherty
2076:Robert K. Murray,
2045:"Boardwalk Empire"
2033:. 31 October 2011.
1993:2015-09-24 at the
1540:Dayton Daily News,
1151:on the HBO series
1055:Harlan Fiske Stone
1039:Secretary of State
936:
873:
763:
719:Standard Oil Trust
711:Theodore Roosevelt
695:Theodore E. Burton
625:
576:
493:
393:
3366:Writers from Ohio
3278:
3277:
3219:Howard Mason Gore
2952:
2951:
2709:Warren G. Harding
2668:
2667:
2182:
2181:
2173:Succeeded by
2167:
2161:Warren G. Harding
2093:and 2 - Combined.
1259:James N. Giglio,
811:smoke-filled room
785:Charles W.F. Dick
768:Warren G. Harding
739:November election
691:political bossism
592:Ohio Penitentiary
540:persona non grata
527:Ohio State Senate
442:David Worthington
420:Joseph B. Foraker
383:Factional soldier
239:Warren G. Harding
237:under presidents
188:
187:
68:Warren G. Harding
35:Daugherty in 1920
3373:
3169:Curtis D. Wilbur
3105:Attorney General
3080:Secretary of War
3050:Frank B. Kellogg
3029:
3028:
3016:Charles G. Dawes
2979:
2972:
2965:
2956:
2955:
2803:Attorney General
2784:Secretary of War
2739:
2738:
2695:
2688:
2681:
2672:
2671:
2663:
2208:
2201:
2194:
2185:
2184:
2170:1921–1924
2158:
2145:Preceded by
2137:
2136:
2133:
2118:Internet Archive
2067:Nathan Masters,
2049:
2048:
2041:
2035:
2034:
2027:
2021:
2008:
2002:
1985:
1979:
1972:
1966:
1959:
1953:
1946:
1937:
1930:
1924:
1921:
1915:
1912:
1903:
1888:Henry F. Pringle
1885:
1879:
1873:
1864:
1859:Herbert Hoover,
1857:
1851:
1844:
1829:
1822:
1813:
1812:, 1917, page 503
1806:
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1312:
1303:
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1270:
1264:
1257:
1154:Boardwalk Empire
1079:Thomas W. Miller
975:Charles W. Morse
952:John B. Kendrick
905:Thomas W. Miller
827:campaign manager
815:Blackstone Hotel
760:
707:Secretary of War
699:Myron T. Herrick
641:Walter L. Weaver
633:Frank S. Monnett
556:George W. Wilson
465:William McKinley
454:Democratic Party
450:primary election
427:Governor of Ohio
259:William McKinley
224:
223:
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219:
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138:October 12, 1941
121:January 26, 1860
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106:Personal details
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3125:John G. Sargent
3119:Harlan F. Stone
3099:
3094:Dwight F. Davis
3074:
3055:
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2996:
2993:Calvin Coolidge
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2726:Calvin Coolidge
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2178:
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2165:Calvin Coolidge
2157:
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2057:
2055:Further reading
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1995:Wayback Machine
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1143:Popular culture
1118:Mackinac Island
1091:
1067:
1035:Calvin Coolidge
990:Owen J. Roberts
916:
865:
859:
857:The "Ohio Gang"
843:
751:
735:Cuyahoga County
617:
568:
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385:
377:bar examination
283:
278:
243:Calvin Coolidge
198:
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152:Political party
143:
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114:
96:Harlan F. Stone
90:
84:Mitchell Palmer
78:
72:Calvin Coolidge
70:
58:
53:
36:
24:
23:Harry Daugherty
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12:
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3269:James J. Davis
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3247:
3244:Herbert Hoover
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2998:
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2943:James J. Davis
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2924:Herbert Hoover
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2718:Vice President
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2556:J. N. Mitchell
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2159:Served under:
2151:
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2142:
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2140:Legal offices
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2109:
2108:External links
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2036:
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2016:2012-07-22 at
2003:
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881:Herbert Hoover
861:Main article:
858:
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689:on grounds of
676:George K. Nash
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431:Wellston, Ohio
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397:Fayette County
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39:
32:
27:
20:
3306:Ohio lawyers
3144:Harry S. New
3112:
3009:
2842:Harry S. New
2830:Will H. Hays
2810:
2475:
2246:Breckinridge
2153:
2127:Find a Grave
2099:
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1983:
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1159:Gaston Means
1152:
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1098:Thomas Dixon
1092:
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1047:
1026:heart attack
1023:
1018:
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994:
983:
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944:
937:
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844:
823:Frank Lowden
819:Leonard Wood
800:
793:
778:
772:
764:
730:conservatism
727:
723:
684:
680:
672:
664:South Dakota
660:North Dakota
645:
637:
626:
604:manslaughter
597:
589:
577:
560:
545:
538:
535:
531:
515:
513:
507:businessman
502:
494:
477:John Sherman
458:
439:
435:
424:
418:judge named
408:
394:
373:
342:
335:
328:
315:
295:Pennsylvania
284:
263:
251:
190:
189:
165:Lucie Walker
140:(1941-10-12)
91:Succeeded by
54:
3296:1941 deaths
3291:1860 births
3271:(1923β1929)
3252:(1928β1929)
3246:(1923β1928)
3227:(1925β1929)
3221:(1924β1925)
3215:(1923β1924)
3196:(1928β1929)
3190:(1923β1928)
3188:Hubert Work
3171:(1924β1929)
3165:(1923β1924)
3163:Edwin Denby
3146:(1923β1929)
3127:(1925β1929)
3121:(1924β1925)
3115:(1923β1924)
3096:(1925β1929)
3090:(1923β1925)
3071:(1923β1929)
3052:(1925β1929)
3046:(1923β1925)
3018:(1925β1929)
3012:(1923β1925)
2995:(1923β1929)
2945:(1921β1923)
2926:(1921β1923)
2907:(1921β1923)
2886:Hubert Work
2882:(1921β1923)
2863:(1921β1923)
2861:Edwin Denby
2838:(1922β1923)
2836:Hubert Work
2832:(1921β1922)
2813:(1921β1923)
2794:(1921β1923)
2775:(1921β1923)
2756:(1921β1923)
2728:(1921β1923)
2711:(1921β1923)
2561:Kleindienst
2516:T. C. Clark
1095:ghostwriter
1075:Connecticut
909:Jesse Smith
883:viewed the
835:World War I
733:along with
725:confirmed.
281:Early years
79:Preceded by
3285:Categories
2651:M. Garland
2601:Thornburgh
2566:Richardson
2546:Katzenbach
2461:McReynolds
2456:Wickersham
2411:A. Garland
2386:Pierrepont
2331:Crittenden
2296:Crittenden
1936:pp. 48-49.
1637:pp. 19-21.
1624:pp. 18-19.
1585:pp. 16-17.
1503:pp. 14-15.
1002:Jess Smith
780:Daily Star
715:muckraking
600:indictment
552:dark horse
509:Mark Hanna
416:Cincinnati
318:diphtheria
227:Republican
156:Republican
117:1860-01-26
2990:President
2706:President
2586:Civiletti
2526:McGranery
2476:Daugherty
2451:Bonaparte
1421:pp. 8-10.
1245:Footnotes
1234:Ohio Gang
1126:pneumonia
1083:acquitted
863:Ohio Gang
668:Minnesota
609:acquittal
585:lynch mob
505:Cleveland
497:factional
368:telegraph
331:Methodist
276:Biography
170:Education
64:President
55:In office
2641:Sessions
2621:Gonzales
2616:Ashcroft
2551:R. Clark
2531:Brownell
2496:Cummings
2406:Brewster
2401:MacVeagh
2381:Williams
2361:Stanbery
2316:Clifford
2231:Bradford
2226:Randolph
2014:Archived
1991:Archived
1974:Hoover,
1961:Hoover,
1948:Hoover,
1932:Hoover,
1902:, 1939).
1824:Giglio,
1795:Giglio,
1779:Giglio,
1761:Giglio,
1745:Giglio,
1732:Giglio,
1719:Giglio,
1706:Giglio,
1688:Giglio,
1675:Giglio,
1662:Giglio,
1649:Giglio,
1633:Giglio,
1620:Giglio,
1607:Giglio,
1594:Giglio,
1581:Giglio,
1568:Giglio,
1515:Giglio,
1499:Giglio,
1468:Giglio,
1446:Giglio,
1433:Giglio,
1417:Giglio,
1404:Giglio,
1382:Giglio,
1358:Giglio,
1338:Giglio,
1318:pp. 3-4.
1314:Giglio,
1298:Giglio,
1228:See also
1122:Michigan
1107:diabetes
656:Nebraska
548:Congress
412:Columbus
349:gambling
303:Virginia
2986:Cabinet
2702:Cabinet
2626:Mukasey
2541:Kennedy
2521:McGrath
2506:Jackson
2486:Sargent
2466:Gregory
2431:McKenna
2376:Akerman
2346:Stanton
2336:Cushing
2326:Johnson
2271:Berrien
2256:Pinkney
2241:Lincoln
2116:at the
1978:pg. 54.
1965:pg. 53.
1952:pg. 49.
1828:pg. 84.
1799:pg. 83.
1783:pg. 82.
1765:pg. 58.
1749:pg. 55.
1736:pg. 35.
1723:pg. 34.
1710:pg. 28.
1692:pg. 27.
1679:pg. 26.
1666:pg. 23.
1653:pg. 21.
1611:pg. 18.
1598:pg. 17.
1572:pg. 16.
1519:pg. 15.
1472:pg. 13.
1450:pg. 12.
1437:pg. 11.
1408:pg. 10.
1114:Florida
1006:suicide
956:Wyoming
930:A 1922
813:in the
807:Chicago
581:militia
355:in the
2888:(1923)
2844:(1923)
2631:Holder
2536:Rogers
2511:Biddle
2501:Murphy
2471:Palmer
2436:Griggs
2426:Harmon
2416:Miller
2396:Devens
2366:Evarts
2321:Toucey
2306:Nelson
2301:LegarΓ©
2291:Gilpin
2286:Grundy
2281:Butler
2251:Rodney
1386:pg. 6.
1362:pg. 5.
1342:pg. 4.
1302:pg. 3.
1010:Quaker
998:Alaska
922:House.
901:Forbes
885:clique
776:Marion
299:tailor
162:Spouse
147:, U.S.
130:, U.S.
2636:Lynch
2596:Meese
2591:Smith
2571:Saxbe
2481:Stone
2446:Moody
2421:Olney
2356:Speed
2351:Bates
2341:Black
2311:Mason
2276:Taney
1209:1924.
1175:Works
919:poker
45:51st
3010:None
2646:Barr
2611:Reno
2606:Barr
2581:Bell
2576:Levi
2441:Knox
2391:Taft
2371:Hoar
2266:Wirt
2261:Rush
1116:and
821:and
761:1918
646:The
291:Ohio
241:and
231:Ohio
135:Died
128:Ohio
111:Born
2988:of
2704:of
2236:Lee
2125:at
954:of
805:in
365:tap
178:LLB
3287::
2163:,
1997:,
1941:^
1907:^
1894:,
1890:,
1868:^
1833:^
1817:^
1788:^
1770:^
1754:^
1697:^
1642:^
1547:^
1524:^
1508:^
1477:^
1455:^
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