- Kenneth McKellar
Infobox Senator | name=Kenneth Douglas McKellar
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Tennessee
party=Democrat
term_start=March 4 ,1917
term_end=January 3 ,1953
preceded=Luke Lea
succeeded=Albert Gore, Sr.
order2 = 87th & 89th President "pro tempore" of the United States Senate
term_start2 =January 6 ,1945
term_end2 =January 2 ,1947 January 3 ,1949 -January 2 ,1953
predecessor2 =Carter Glass (1st time)Arthur Vandenberg (2nd time)
successor2 =Arthur Vandenberg (1st time)Styles Bridges (2nd time)
state3=Tennessee
district3=10th
term_end3=December 4 ,1911
term_end3=March 3 ,1917
preceded3=George W. Gordon
succeeded3=Hubert Fisher
date of birth=birth date|1869|1|29|mf=y
place of birth=Dallas County, Alabama
date of death=death date and age|1957|10|25|1869|1|29|mf=y
place of death=Memphis, Tennessee
spouse=none ("never married")
religion=Kenneth Douglas McKellar (
January 29 ,1869 –October 25 ,1957 ) was an Americanpolitician fromTennessee who served as a United States Representative from 1911 until 1917 and as a United States Senator from 1917 until 1953. A Democrat, he served longer in both houses of Congress than anyone else in Tennessee history, and only a few others in American history have served longer in both houses.Early life and career
McKellar was a native of
Dallas County, Alabama and was graduated from theUniversity of Alabama in 1891 and itslaw school in 1892. He moved toMemphis, Tennessee , and was admitted to the bar the same year. McKellar was first elected to the House in aspecial election in November 1911 to succeedGeorge W. Gordon in the 10th Congressional District, which included Memphis. He won the seat in his own right in 1912 and was reelected in 1914 serving until his election to the United States Senate.United States Senate
McKellar ran for the Senate in 1916, defeating incumbent Senator Luke Lea in the Democratic primary and wining the general election against former Republican Governor
Ben W. Hooper . He was reelected to the Senate in 1922 (defeating former SenatorNewell Sanders ), 1928, 1934, 1940 (againstHoward Baker, Sr. , father of future SenatorHoward Baker ), and 1946.McKellar was considered something of a progressive in his early days in the Senate, supporting many of President
Woodrow Wilson 's reform initiatives as well as ratification of theTreaty of Versailles . He also staunchly supported theNew Deal especially the creation of theTennessee Valley Authority . He was also a close ally of Memphis political bossE. H. Crump .Despite his early support for
Franklin Roosevelt 's policies, McKellar grew more conservative in his political stances and began opposing the Roosevelt administration's appointments. The most noted of these would be a prolonged feud with FDR's appointee to head the TVA,David Lillienthal . McKellar twice served asPresident pro tempore of the United States Senate , commencing in 1945, being the first to hold the position under the system that has prevailed since of reserving it for the most senior member of the majority party. He also served as chairman of the Civil Service Committee] , Post Office and Road Committee, and, most notably, the powerful Appropriations Committee from 1945–1947 and again from 1949–1953.Longevity
He is the only Tennessee senator to have completed more than three full terms; except for McKellar, Tennessee has generally not fully joined into the Southern tradition of reelecting Senators for protracted periods of service. (Before the era of popular election of U.S. Senators, Senator
William B. Bate was elected to a fourth term by theTennessee General Assembly , but died only five days into it. SenatorIsham G. Harris had also died early in his fourth term. SenatorJoseph Anderson was elected by the General Assembly to three full terms after completing the term ofWilliam Blount , who was expelled from the Senate.)1952 election
In 1952 McKellar stood for a seventh term (the first Senator to do so), despite being by then quite elderly (age 83). He was opposed for renomination by
Middle Tennessee Congressman Albert Gore. McKellar's reelectionslogan was "Thinking Feller? Vote McKellar.", which Gore countered with "Think Some More – Vote for Gore." Gore defeated McKellar for the Democratic nomination in August in what was widely regarded as something of an upset. At this point in Tennessee history, the Democratic nomination for statewide office was still "tantamount to election", as the Republican Party's activities were still largely limited toEast Tennessee , as they had been since the Civil War. Gore went on to serve three terms in the Senate.McKellar's 1952 defeat was part of a statewide trend. 1952 also saw the defeat for renomination of incumbent
governor of Tennessee Gordon Browning byFrank G. Clement . Browning, who had served a total of three terms as governor, the last two successive, had also at one point been a close ally of Crump's but had since broken ranks with him. As Clement and Gore were both considerably younger and regarded as more progressive than their predecessors, some historians cite the 1952 elections as an indication that Tennessee was earlier to enter into the "New South " era of Southern politics than most of the other Southern states. This election also marked the end of Crump having any real influence in Tennessee beyond Memphis.Legacy
McKellar wrote a book about his Tennessee predecessors in the Senate called "Tennessee Senators as Seen by One of Their Successors" (1942). In recent years it has been updated by one of his successors, former Senate Majority Leader Dr.
Bill Frist .Some have speculated that Senator McKellar was the inspiration for the character of
South Carolina Senator Seabright Cooley inAllen Drury 's "Advise and Consent ". [http://home.earthlink.net/~dbratman/drury.html]Lake McKellar in the industrial area of Memphis near the
Mississippi River and McKellar Airport inJackson, Tennessee ("MKL") are both named in his honor.External links
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