- Edward J. Gardner
Edward Joseph Gardner (
August 7 ,1898 –December 7 ,1950 ) was a member of theUnited States House of Representatives from Ohio’s third congressional district.Edward J. Gardner was born in
Hamilton, Ohio , the son of Edward Gardner and his wife Mary. His father came fromIreland as a child; his mother was born inOhio . Edward Gardner attended the localparochial schools and was graduated from the College of Commerce and Finance of St. Xavier University in 1920. Edward did graduate work atWharton School of Business of theUniversity of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia and at theUniversity of Cincinnati .During the
First World War , Edward Gardner served as a private in theUnited States Army in 1918.After the war, Edward Gardner took a job as district controller of a food distributing company at
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for four years and then worked as a public accountant at Hamilton, Ohio, from 1924 until his death in 1950.In 1926, Edward J. Gardner was elected to the Hamilton city council serving as president and vice
mayor for two years. He was elected a member of theOhio House of Representatives in 1937 and again in 1941, serving two-year terms. In 1944, he was elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-ninth Congress. During his campaign Edward J. Gardner told fellow Democrats that he would work honestly and ceaselessly for employment of returning servicemen. "We must make a positive determination that there shall be jobs and wages, that there should be security from unemployment, thereby setting a market for production," he said. During his term, he supported a temporary extension of wartime price controls and the draft and the right to strike.President Truman's unpopularity overshadowed his reelection campaign in 1946 and he was defeated.
Returning to Hamilton, he continued his profession as a public accountant after his congressional service. Edward Joseph Gardner died in Hamilton and was interred in St. Mary’s Cemetery.
ources
* "World War II – On The Home Front" Dayton Daily News (OH) October 9, 1994 page, 1B.
* Reston, James. "Cleveland a Democrat Bridgehead But Rest of Ohio Seems GOP Camp," New York "Times", Oct 19, 1946, pg. 10.
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