- Forrest C. Donnell
Forrest C. Donnell (
August 20 ,1884 ndashMarch 3 ,1980 ) was a United States Senator and a Governor ofMissouri . He was a Republican.Early life
Donnell was born in
Quitman, Missouri .Donnell graduated from
Maryville High School (Missouri) in 1900 and served as the town Mayor ironically living in the same home asAlbert Morehouse who had also been governor.At the
University of Missouri he was a member of theKappa Sigma andPhi Delta Phi fraternities and was elected to member inPhi Beta Kappa ,Theta Kappa Nu andQEBH societies. He was valedictorian of the 1904 class and received a law degree in 1907.In 1907 he moved to
St. Louis, Missouri . In October 1911 he and future SenatorSelden P. Spencer formed the law firm of Spencer & Donnell. In 1917 he was president of the Association of Young Republicans of Missouri; in 1918-1920 as a member of the executive committee of the Republican State Committee of Missouri; and in 1919 as president of the Twenty-eighth Ward Republican Club of St. Louis. [ [http://www.accessgenealogy.com/scripts/data/database.cgi?file=Data&report=SingleArticle&ArticleID=0001157 Donnell, Forrest C ] ]He was the city attorney of
Webster Groves, Missouri , asuburb southwest of St. Louis City.Governor
He served as the Governor of Missouri between 1941 and 1945.
Donnell was the first Republican governor after the collapse of the
Thomas Pendergast political machine and the only major Republican elected statewide in the 1940 election and Democrats were to delay seating him for six weeks until being forced to do so by theMissouri Supreme Court in what would be called the “Great Governorship Steal.”Donnell had defeated St. Louis politician Lawrence “Larry” McDaniel by 3,613 votes out of nearly 2 million cast thanks largely to votes cast in rural areas. [ [http://www.uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?year=1940&off=5&elect=0&fips=29&f=0 1940 Gubernatorial General Election Results - Missouri ] ]
Donnell’s predecessor
Lloyd C. Stark had wrested control of federal appointments in the state from the Pendergast machine in 1936. Consequently there was unease with a Republican taking over the appointments.Within hours of the election several members of the Democratic party met at the DeSoto Hotel in St. Louis to plot strategy. Among those attending were Senator
Bennett Champ Clark , St. Louis MayorBernard F. Dickmann , Democratic Party ChairmanRobert Hannegan , Attorney GeneralRoy McKittrick and state Democratic ChairmanC. Marion Hulen .Their strategy was to charge that Republican votes were fraudulently bought and to use a provision of the Missouri Constitution that provided the Speaker of the House “would count – tabulate – the votes and proclaim to the general public who won. “
Donnell was refused to be seated while the Speaker investigated the votes. Governor Stark urged that he be seated. The Missouri Supreme Court ultimately seated him. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=PHZjb8mXxH4C&pg=PA141&lpg=PA141&dq=%22larry+mcdaniel%22+missouri+governor&source=web&ots=0MeE0RVC0C&sig=2Cv7CKDOZmtccFflMAviSK-eXYE#PPA142,M1 The Missouri Supreme Court: From Dred Scott to Nancy Cruzan by Gerald T. Dunne – University of Missouri Press – 1993 – pages 141-145 (available of print.google.com)] ISBN 0826208266 ] [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,932204,00.htmlEx Machina – Time Magazine – April 11, 1941] ]
Donnell was a Mason and would be elected Grand Master of the Missouri chapter during his term as governor. Ironically, Democrat
Harry S. Truman was to imply that Donnell helped Truman win the 1940 Senate election because of their Mason bond.Truman said:
:I had a Catholic friend in St. Louis by the name of James E. Wade. He attended a meeting [where] Davis made his usual charges. Forrest Donnell, who afterwards became [Republican] Governor and Senator, was speaking from the same platform. Donnell was just behind me in the Grand Lodge line and would be Grand Master in a year or two.
:So Jim Wade went up to him . . . and asked him if I could be the low sort of fellow that Davis charged and still be Grand Master of Masons of Missouri. Mr. Donnell said: 'No, Jim, he could not.' That ruined Mr. Davis—I won by 276,000 votes." [ [http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,816178,00.html The Wonderful Wastebasket – Time Magazine – March 24, 1952] ]
enator
Donnell was elected to the U.S. Senate and served from 1945 to 1951. He lost to
Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. 53.6 - 46.4 in theUnited States Senate elections, 1950 He died in 1980 at the age of 95 in St. Louis.
He is buried in
Bellefontaine Cemetery .References
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=D000414 Congressional biography]
* [http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.29fab9fb4add37305ddcbeeb501010a0/?vgnextoid=c259f441ae476010VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD&vgnextchannel=4b18f074f0d9ff00VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD National Governors Association Biography]
*Matthew C. Sherman, "'The Most Serious Senator': A Reconsideration of Forrest C. Donnell of Missouri and the North Atlantic Treaty," Missouri Historical Review 101 (2007): 78-98.
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