- Samuel L. Devine
Samuel Leeper Devine (
21 December 1915 –27 June 1997 ) was an American politician of the Republican party who served in theUnited States House of Representatives as Representative of the 12th congressional district of Ohio from3 January 1959 until3 January 1981 ; he left office after being defeated by DemocratBob Shamansky (who would lose the seat after a single (two-year) term to RepublicanJohn Kasich ).Biography
Devine was born in
South Bend, Indiana , on21 December 1915 . His family moved toColumbus, Ohio , in 1920. He attended public schools in the Columbus area. Devine attendedColgate University in 1933 and 1934; and then theOhio State University from 1934 to 1937. After being graduated from the Ohio State University, Devine went to law school at theUniversity of Notre Dame , and received an LL.B. and J.D. in 1940. He was admitted to the bar in 1940 and began private legal practice in Columbus, but in 1940 was appointed a special agent of theFederal Bureau of Investigation . He resigned from the Bureau in October 1945 and resumed private practice in Columbus.Devine embarked on a political career in 1950, and was elected to the
Ohio House of Representatives , in which he served from 1951 to 1955. Thereïn, Devine was chairman of theOhio Un-American Activities Committee , a joint committee of the Ohio House and the Senate, and modelled on the federalHouse Un-American Activities Committee . This committee was given extensive powers of interrogation. It declared in 1952 that approximately 1,300 Ohioans were members of the Communist Party. At Devine's urging, the state legislature overrode a gubenatorial veto of a bill to impose prison terms and fines on Communists.Devine served as Prosecuting Attorney for
Franklin County, Ohio , from 1955 until 1958, when he was elected to theUnited States Congress .Devine was also a college football official for 27 years.
See also
*
Election Results, U.S. Representative from Ohio, 12th District
*List of United States Representatives from Ohio External links
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