- Thomas H. Eliot
Infobox_Congressman
name =Thomas H. Eliot
date of birth=June 14 ,1907
date of death=death date and age|1991|10|14|1907|6|14
place of birth =Cambridge, Massachusetts
place of death =Cambridge, Massachusetts
state =Massachusetts
district = 9th
term_start =January 3 ,1941 -January 3 ,1943
preceded =Robert Luce
succeeded =Charles L. Gifford
party =Democrat
religion =Unitarian Universalism
spouse =Thomas Hopkinson Eliot (
June 14 1907 -October 14 1991 ) was alawyer ,politician , andacademic , serving as chancellor ofWashington University in St. Louis and in theUS House of Representatives fromMassachusetts .A great-grandson of Samuel Atkins Eliot and grandson ofCharles William Eliot , Eliot was born inCambridge, Massachusetts into the prominentEliot family . He attended Browne and Nichols School, graduated fromHarvard University in 1928 and was a student atEmmanuel College inCambridge University , from 1928 to 1929. He graduated fromHarvard Law School in 1932 and was admitted to theMassachusetts bar in 1933, commencing practice inBuffalo, New York . He served as assistant solicitor in theUnited States Department of Labor 1933-1935 and as general counsel for the Social Security Board 1935-1938. He was lecturer on government atHarvard University in 1937 and 1938, and regional director of the Wage and Hour Division in the Department of Labor in 1939 and 1940.In 1938 Eliot ran unsuccessfully as election candidate to the Seventy-sixth Congress. However, he gained election as a Democrat to the Seventy-seventh Congress (
January 3 ,1941 –January 3 ,1943 ). He was unsuccessful as a candidate for renomination in 1942 and for nomination in 1944 to the Seventy-ninth Congress.Eliot saw war service in 1943 as director of the British Division, Office of War Information,
London , England, and special assistant to the United States Ambassador. From 1943 to 1944 he was chairman of the appeals committee,National War Labor Board . He served with theOffice of Strategic Services in 1944, and from November 1944 to November 1945 was chief counsel, Division of Power, Department of the Interior.In addition, Eliot served asNew England chairman of theUnited Negro College Fund .After the war, Eliot engaged in the practice of law in
Boston , 1945-1950, before returning to university life. In 1952 he was appointed professor of political science atWashington University in St. Louis were he wrote " Governing America; the Politics of a Free People: National, State, and Local Government", and "American Government: Problems and Readings in Political Analysis" . In 1958 he became a professor of constitutional law from 1958. In 1961 he moved to Washington University College of Liberal Arts, serving as Dean 1961-1962, and Chancellor 1962-1971. He also served as Vice chairman,United States Commission on Intergovernmental Relations , 1963-1967, president, Salzburg Seminar in American Studies, 1971-1977 and as a teacher, Buckingham, Browne and Nichols School, 1977-1985. Eliot was a resident of Cambridge, Mass., until his death there in 1991.He was interred atMount Auburn Cemetery ,Cambridge, Massachusetts . [ [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11831243 Thomas Hopkinson Eliot] Find-A-Grave, D C McJonathan-Swarm, 2005-09-26]Bibliography
* Eliot, Thomas H. "Recollections of the New Deal: When the People Mattered." Edited with an introduction by
John Kenneth Galbraith . Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1992;
*Eliot, Thomas H. "Public and Personal." Edited byFrank O’Brien . St. Louis: Washington University Press, 1971.References
External links
*
* [http://chancellorsroom.wustl.edu/theliot.htm Biographical entry] at Washington University in Saint Louis
* [http://www.ssa.gov/history/teliot.html Biographical entry] at theSocial Security Administration
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