- Raymond E. Baldwin
Infobox Governor
name = Raymond Earl Baldwin
order = 57th & 59th
office = Governor of Connecticut
term_start = 1939
term_end = 1941 1943 – 1946
lieutenant = James L. McConaughy (1939-1941) William L. Hadden (1943-1945) Wilbert Snow (1945-1946)
predecessor =Wilbur Lucius Cross (1939)Robert A. Hurley (1943)
successor =Robert A. Hurley (1941)Wilbert Snow (1946)
birth_date =August 31 ,1893
birth_place =Rye, New York
death_date = death date and age|1986|10|4|1893|8|31
death_place =Greenwich, Connecticut
party = Republican
spouse =
profession =
religion =Raymond Earl Baldwin (
August 31 ,1893 -October 4 ,1986 ) was aUnited States Senator andGovernor of Connecticut . Born inRye, New York , he moved toMiddletown, Connecticut in 1903 and attended the public schools. He graduated fromWesleyan University in Middletown in 1916, and enteredYale University . However, upon the declaration of war, he enlisted in theUnited States Navy . He was assigned to officers' training school and was commissioned an ensign in February 1918, and promoted tolieutenant (j.g.) in September 1918. He resigned from the Navy in August 1919 and returned toYale Law School , graduating in 1921; he was admitted to the bar in 1921 and practiced in New Haven and Bridgeport.Baldwin was
prosecutor of the Stratford Town Court from 1927 to 1930, and was judge of that court from 1931 to 1933. He was a member of theConnecticut House of Representatives from 1931 to 1933, serving asmajority leader in 1933. He resumed the practice of law from 1933 to 1938, and was town chairman of Stratford from 1935 to 1937. He was Governor of Connecticut in 1939 and 1940, and was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection to the office in 1940. He was, however, again elected Governor in 1942 and 1944, and served until his resignation on December 25, 1946, having been elected United States Senator as a Republican on November 5, 1946, to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1947, caused by the death ofFrancis T. Maloney , and at the same time was elected for the term commencing January 3, 1947, and served from December 27, 1946, until his resignation on December 16, 1949. Baldwin was anassociate justice of the Connecticut SupremeCourt of Errors , and was appointed chief justice in 1959 and served until his retirement in 1963; in addition, he was chairman of the Connecticut Constitutional Convention in 1965. He died in Fairfield County (Greenwich) onOctober 4 ,1986 , aged 93, and was interred in Indian Hill Cemetery, Middletown.Baldwin was instrumental in helping
Wendell Willkie win the 1940 Republican presidential nomination. An early supporter of Willie, Baldwin saw to it that he had the Connecticut delegation behind him at the convention, which was crucial in Willkie's efforts to beat frontrunnersThomas Dewey ,Robert Taft andArthur Vandenberg . Willkie had unofficially promised Baldwin the spot as his running mate, but party leaders pressured Willikie to nameCharles McNary instead, and Baldwin graciously stepped aside from contention.
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