- Robert E. Hannegan
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Robert E. Hannegan
image_width=
order=52nd
title=United States Postmaster General
term_start=1945
term_end=1947
predecessor=Frank C. Walker
successor=Jesse M. Donaldson
birth_date=June 30 ,1903
birth_place=
death_date=October 6 ,1949
death_place=
party=Democrat
spouse=
profession=Politician ,Civil servant ,Businessman
religion=Robert Emmet Hannegan (
June 30 ,1903 –October 6 ,1949 ) was aSt. Louis, Missouri politician who served asCommissioner of Internal Revenue from October 1943 to January 1944. He also served as chairman of theDemocratic National Committee from 1944 to 1947 andUnited States Postmaster General from 1945 to 1947. After his political career, in 1947, Hannegan and partnerFred Saigh purchased theSt. Louis Cardinals ofMajor League Baseball . But Hannegan, ill withheart disease , sold his share in the team to Saigh a few months before his death.Education
Hannegan earned an LL.B. from
Saint Louis University School of Law in 1925.Facts|date=November 2007Politics
A power broker in the
St. Louis Democratic Party allied with SenatorBennett Clark , Hannegan helped save the political career ofHarry S. Truman in 1940 following thetax fraud conviction of Truman's ally, Kansas City bossTom Pendergast . Hannegan supported Truman for re-election to theU.S. Senate when he was challenged in the Democratic primary by GovernorLloyd C. Stark andMaurice M. Milligan , who both sought credit for bringing down Pendergast. Truman re-won the seat with increased support in St. Louis, particularly fromCatholic neighborhoods in which Hannegan wielded considerable influence. In his second term, Truman achieved national prominence by chairing a Senate committee investigating government waste in defense contracts.When
Franklin Delano Roosevelt offered Truman the position of DNC chairman, Truman declined and recommended Hannegan, who Roosevelt eventually appointed. As Democratic chairman, Hannegan was responsible for brokering the deal that made Truman Roosevelt's running mate in 1944. Shortly before theDemocratic National Convention that year, Roosevelt famously sent Hannegan a letter stating he would be "happy to run with" either Truman orSupreme Court JusticeWilliam O. Douglas . Douglas supporters speculated that when reporting the letter to the convention audience Hannegan reversed the order of the two men's names in order to make it appear as though Truman was Roosevelt's first choice. However, research in the 1990s by biographers of Douglas proved this widely circulated rumor was false and the letter had indeed listed Truman's name first. Ironically, Truman later asked Douglas to be his running mate in 1948, but Douglas declined.Though plagued with ill health for much of his tenure as party chairman, Hannegan emphasized voter turnout efforts in Roosevelt's 1944 re-election campaign and prevented an upset by
Thomas Dewey , who won a surprising 46 percent of the popular vote that year. He promoted a liberal policy agenda for the national party and was a strong advocate oflabor unions . Hannegan stepped down as chairman after Democrats suffered Congressional losses in the 1946 midterm elections, but his ideological focus at the helm of the party contributed to Truman's upset win in the Presidential election of 1948 and influenced hisFair Deal proposals.Death
Hannegan is interred next to his beloved wife, Erma Protzmann Hannegan at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, section 18. [Historical Tour Outline of Calvary Cemetery (brochure)]
Popular Culture
Hannegan was mentioned in the film
Miracle on 34th Street in his role as Postmaster General. Therefore in the film, by implication, he was responsible for affirming that Mr. Kris Kringle, the central character was the one and only Santa Claus.External links
* [http://www.trumanlibrary.org/hstpaper/hannegan.htm Truman Library Hannegan papers]
References
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