- Thomas Watt Gregory
Thomas Watt Gregory (
November 6 ,1861 –February 26 ,1933 ) was an American attorney and Cabinet Secretary.Born in
Crawfordsville, Mississippi , he graduated fromSouthwestern Presbyterian University in 1883, and was a special student at theUniversity of Virginia . Gregory entered theUniversity of Texas at Austin in 1884 and graduated a year later with a degree in law.He began the practice of law in
Austin, Texas , in 1885. He served as a regent of the University of Texas for eight years.Gregory Gymnasium was named in honor of his efforts to provide an adequate exercise facility for the students and faculty of the University. He declined appointment as assistant attorney general of Texas in 1892, and an appointment to the state bench in 1896.While embracing the progressive rhetoric of the early twentieth century with his condemnations of "plutocratic power," "predatory wealth," and "the greed of the party spoilsmen," Gregory participated in Col.
Edward M. House ' essentially conservative Democratic coalition.Gregory was a delegate to the
Democratic National Convention at St. Louis and State delegate at large to the Baltimore convention. He was appointed Special Assistant to the U.S. Attorney General in 1913, in the investigation and proceedings against theNew York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company .In 1914, President
Woodrow Wilson appointed him Attorney General of the United States, and he held that office until 1919. Despite a continuing commitment to progressive reform, Gregory's performance as attorney general provoked enormous controversy because of his collaboration with postmaster generalAlbert S. Burleson and others in orchestrating a campaign to crush domestic dissent duringWorld War I . Gregory helped frame theEspionage and Sedition Acts , which compromised the constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech and press, and lobbied for their passage. He encouraged extralegal surveillance by theAmerican Protective League and directed the federal prosecutions of more than 2,000 opponents of the war.In 1916 President Wilson wanted to appoint Gregory to the
United States Supreme Court , but the attorney general declined the offer because of his impaired hearing, his eagerness to participate in Wilson's reelection campaign, and his belief that he lacked the necessary temperament to be a judge. Gregory was a member of Wilson'sSecond Industrial Conference in 1919 and 1920.During a trip to New York to confer with
Franklin Delano Roosevelt , Gregory contracted pneumonia and died, on February 26, 1933. He is buried in Austin.His portrait was painted in 1917 by the Swiss-born American artist
Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862-1947), and hangs in the Department of Justice in Washington DC.External links
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/print/GG/fgr53.html Handbook of Texas Online: Thomas W. Gregory]
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