- Thomas Gore
Infobox Senator |name=Thomas Pryor Gore
nationality=American
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Oklahoma
party=Democratic
term_start=December 11 ,1907
term_end=March 3 ,1921
preceded=None
One of two first Oklahoma's senators due toStatehood
succeeded=John W. Harreld
term_start2=March 4 ,1931
term_end2=January 3 ,1937
preceded2=William B. Pine
succeeded2=Joshua B. Lee
date of birth=December 10 ,1870
place of birth=Webster County, Mississippi
date of death=March 16 ,1949 (aged 78)
place of death=Washington, D.C.
spouse=Nina Belle Kay
religion=Thomas Pryor Gore (born Governor Thomas Pryor Gore on
December 10 ,1870 –March 16 ,1949 ) was a Democratic politician. Born inWebster County, Mississippi , he moved toOklahoma in 1901 and was aUnited States Senator from Oklahoma from 1907 until 1921 and from 1931 until 1937. He is notable for being totally blind as well as for being the maternal grandfather of authorGore Vidal . Although said to be distantly related toAlbert Gore, Sr. and former vice-presidentAl Gore there is no proven connection; Al Gore descends from a John Gore who was in Virginia by 1653 while Thomas P. Gore descends from a James Gore who was born in England or Wales in 1662.He became blind as a child through two separate accidents but did not give up his dream of becoming a senator. In 1907, he was elected to the Senate as one of the first two senators from the new state of Oklahoma. He was re-elected in 1908 and 1914 but defeated in 1920. He was known as a member of the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, who worked with Republicans such as Robert La Follette. He was to a large extent no different from any other politician because of his blindness, but there were problems, as La Follette recounts an example in his memoirs when, during a
filibuster , Gore did not realize that the senator who was to take over speaking for him had left the room, and the filibuster failed because he did not continue to speak. Also, some of Gore's colleagues in the Senate would attempt to take advantage of Gore's blindness by tricking him into signing documents that it was not in his party's interest for him to sign. He was famous for turning the tables on these sharp dealers and tricking them into signing documents that they did not intend to sign. These exploits made him popular with the press who dubbed him "The Blind Cowboy."He is also noted as being the author of a bill placed before the United States Senate during the early stages of
World War I which encouraged American citizens not to travel aboard belligerent merchant vessels. The merchant vessels were under threat of attack byGerman U-boats , and the Senator felt the loss of American lives upon these boats threatened official American neutrality at the time. Though previously a strong supporter of PresidentWoodrow Wilson , Gore opposed the United States entry intoWorld War I even after American involvement began. This largely caused Gore to be defeated in the Democratic primary in 1920. On domestic policy he was a supporter of the interests of farmers and native Americans.Gore was re-elected in 1930 to the Senate. When
Franklin D. Roosevelt first took office as President, Gore at first supported hisNew Deal but later feuded with him. After Gore retired from the US Senate in January, 1937, after losing the 1936 Democratic primary, he practiced law inWashington, D.C. , until his death on March 16, 1949. Gore was initially buried at Rosehill Cemetery,Oklahoma City, Oklahoma , but was later reinterred on July 19, 1949, in Fairlawn Cemetery, also in Oklahoma City.He married Nina Belle Kay (1877 - 1963), a Texas plantation owner's daughter, on December 27, 1900. They had two children, Nina S. Gore (1903 - 1978) (the mother of
Gore Vidal ) and Thomas Notley Gore (born 1910).His grandson,
Gore Vidal , who has made his own fame as an author, has stated that his grandfather was an atheist and had a strong misanthropic streak - a populist who didn't like people, as Vidal put it. During a speech to the National Press Club (November 4, 1994) Vidal claimed that Thomas Gore had said "If there was any race other than the human race, I'd go join it."A major road artery in
Lawton, Oklahoma , Gore Boulevard, is named after him, as is the eastern Oklahoma village of Gore.External links
*CongBio|G000323
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