- Andrew L. Lewis, Jr.
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Andrew Lindsay Lewis, Jr. 7th United States Secretary of Transportation In office
January 23, 1981 – February 1, 1983President Ronald Reagan Preceded by Neil Goldschmidt Succeeded by Elizabeth Dole Personal details Born November 3, 1931
Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaSpouse(s) Marilyn Stoughton Children Karen, Andrew and Russell Lewis Alma mater Harvard University
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyAndrew Lindsay Lewis, Jr. (born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 3, 1931) is a businessman who was Secretary of Transportation for part of the administration of United States President Ronald Reagan. He is widely known as Drew Lewis.
Contents
Life and education
He received his BS from Haverford College in 1953 and his MBA from Harvard University in 1955. He did postgraduate work at MIT in 1968. He married Marilyn Stoughton in June 1950 and they currently have three children together and fourteen grandchildren. His son Andrew "Andy" Lewis IV served as a township commissioner in Haverford Township, Pennsylvania between 2004–2007 and was elected in 2007 to the Delaware County Council.
Career
In the 1950s he held several positions at Henkels and McCoy, Inc. In the 1960s he rose up the ranks of National Gypsum Company becoming their assistant chairman in 1969. From 1972 to 1974 he was president and CEO of Snelling and Snelling, Inc. In 1971, he was appointed as trustee in bankruptcy (along with Richardson Dilworth) for Reading Company, the railroad company headquartered in Philadelphia, and guided the company through its successful reorganization and discharge from bankruptcy in 1980.
From 1974 to 1981 he headed Lewis and Associates, a business consulting firm. During the 1960s and 1970s, he served in several political capacities: county committee member, chairman of the Pennsylvania Republican Party's finance committee, GOP candidate for Governor in 1974, chairman of the Pennsylvania delegation to the 1976 GOP convention, and Deputy Chairman of the Republican National Committee. During the 1976 Republican presidential campaign, Lewis, as head of the powerful Pennsylvania delegation, had backed Gerald Ford.
At the Republican convention, Ronald Reagan announced that if nominated he would name Richard S. Schweiker, Lewis' good friend, as his running mate. Lewis had already committed to Ford and so honored his word, and kept his delegation in line to help nominate Ford as the Republican candidate. Reagan remembered his loyalty in 1980, and appointed Lewis to head his Pennsylvania campaign organization.
When Reagan was elected President, he named Lewis as his Secretary of Transportation, where he served from 1981 to 1983, a tenure that included the air traffic controllers strike, and the passage of the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982—and the user fees to finance it.
In 1983, he was hired as Chairman and CEO of Warner-Amex Cable Communications (WACCI), the joint venture between the then Warner Communications and American Express, succeeding Gustave M. Hauser[1]. In this role, he was also chairman of the WACCI subsidiary, Warner-Amex Satellite Entertainment Company (WASEC), which eventually became known as MTV Networks after a public offering in 1984.
In April 1986, about the time Warner Communications sold its interest in MTV Networks, and purchased American Express's share of Warner Amex Cable (renaming it Warner Cable), Drew Lewis left WACCI to become Chairman and CEO of the Union Pacific Railroad[2].
In October 1986, he became President and Chief Operating Officer of the parent Union Pacific Corporation. One year later, on October 1, 1987, he became Chairman and CEO of Union Pacific Corporation, succeeding William S. Cook. He served in that post until 1997.
Since then he has been on the boards of American Express, Ford Motor Co., and SmithKline Beecham.
References
External links
Political offices Preceded by
Neil GoldschmidtUnited States Secretary of Transportation
1981 – 1983Succeeded by
Elizabeth DoleBusiness positions Preceded by
John KenefickPresident of Union Pacific Railroad
1986 – 1987Succeeded by
Mike WalshPreceded by
John KenefickCEO of Union Pacific Railroad
1986 – 1997Succeeded by
Richard K. DavidsonParty political offices Preceded by
Raymond J. BroderickRepublican nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania
1974 (lost)Succeeded by
Dick ThornburghUnited States Secretaries of Transportation Categories:- 1931 births
- Living people
- People from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania Republicans
- American railroad executives of the 20th century
- People of the Union Pacific Railroad
- United States Secretaries of Transportation
- Harvard Business School alumni
- Haverford College alumni
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