- William Scranton
Infobox Governor
name= William Warren Scranton
caption=
order=13th
office=United States Ambassador to the United Nations
term_start=1976
term_end=1977
president=Gerald Ford
predecessor=Daniel Patrick Moynihan
successor=Andrew Young
order= 38th
office2= Governor of Pennsylvania
term_start2=January 15 ,1963
term_end2=January 17 ,1967
lieutenant2=Raymond P. Shafer
predecessor2=David L. Lawrence
successor2=Raymond P. Shafer
office3=Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromPennsylvania's 10th congressional district
term_start3=January 3 ,1961
term_end3=January 3 ,1963
predecessor3=Stanley A. Prokop
successor3=Joseph M. McDade
birth_date= birth date and age |1917|07|19
birth_place=Madison, Connecticut
death_date=
death_place=
spouse=
profession=Attorney ,Politician
party= Republican
age=
religion=Presbyterian William Warren Scranton (born
July 19 1917 ) is a former U.S. Republican Party politician. Scranton served asGovernor of Pennsylvania from 1963 to 1967. From 1976 to 1977, he served asUnited States Ambassador to the United Nations .Biography
Early life
William Scranton was born while the Scranton family was on vacation at a cottage in
Madison, Connecticut . He was the son of Worthington Scranton, a wealthy Pennsylvania businessman, and Marion Margery Scranton, a member of theRepublican National Committee for over two decades. Despite her own involvement in politics, his mother tried to dissuade him from entering politics, due to his childhood struggles withasthma , believing that the stress of campaigning would be detrimental to his frail health. Mrs. Scranton died just before her son's election to Congress in 1960. He is the grandson ofJoseph A. Scranton , a U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania. Scranton family members were the founders and patriarchs of the city ofScranton, Pennsylvania . He is also a nephew by marriage of former U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Davis, a confidante of PresidentAbraham Lincoln . His maternal ancestorscame to America on the"Mayflower ".Education and World War II Service
He began his education at the
Scranton Country Day School , which had been founded by his parents, completing his basic schooling at theFessenden School inNewton, Massachusetts , and attended the prestigiousHotchkiss School inLakeville, Connecticut . He graduated fromYale University in 1939. While at Yale, he was a member of theChi Psi fraternity, where he became friends with another fraternity brother fromDelta Kappa Epsilon , future U.S. PresidentGerald Ford , and of theBerzelius Secret Senior Society. (Pictured with his Berzelius Class of '39 at [http://mssa.library.yale.edu/madid/showzoom.php?imgNum=5565] )He attended
Yale Law School from 1939 to 1941, dropping out in advance ofWorld War II , enlisting in theUnited States Army Air Corps and serving as an Air Transport Command pilot during the war. Although he did not serve incombat , he was assigned to aircraft mobilization and pilot training duties, and was stationed on three different continents during his tour of duty, includingSouth America ,Africa , andAsia . OnJuly 6 1942 , he married Mary Lowe Chamberlain. The couple had four children, a daughter and three sons, Susan, William Worthington, Joseph Curtis, and Peter Kip. He was honorably discharged from military as a captain, but was active in the U.S. Air Force Reserves for two decades thereafter. Following the war, he resumed his studies at Yale Law School. He graduated in 1946, and was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in August of that year.Early career
Scranton practiced law and then entered the business community after the war becoming successful in several firms in northeastern Pennsylvania. He became active in Republican Party politics in the 1950s and came to the attention of President
Dwight D. Eisenhower . In 1959, Eisenhower appointed Scranton as a special assistant toU.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and laterChristian Herter . Scranton served a little over a year before resigning to run for Congress. Scranton’s name recognition and family connections helped him win a 17,000 vote victory overincumbent Stanley A. Prokop in a largely Democratic district in 1960. Scranton represented Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1961 to 1963. Though a freshman Republican, he quickly gained a reputation as an outspoken centrist and supported much of President John F. Kennedy’s social agendaincluding civil rights and thePeace Corps . The media quickly dubbed him a “Kennedy Republican.”1962 Gubernatorial Election
In 1962, the Republican party in Pennsylvania, which had lost the two previous gubernatorial elections and seen the state's electoral votes go to Kennedy in the 1960 presidential election, became convinced that a moderate like Scranton would have enough bipartisan appeal to revitalize the party. He ran for Governor of Pennsylvania against
Richardson Dilworth , themayor of Philadelphia . The ticket addedRaymond P. Shafer , who would succeed him as governor, as hisrunning mate . After one of the most acrimonious campaigns in state history, the Scranton/Shafer team won a huge victory in the election besting their opponents by nearly half a million votes out of just over 6.6 million cast.Governor of Pennsylvania
As Governor, he signed into law sweeping reforms in the state's education system including creation of the state community college system, the state board of education, and the state Higher Education Assistance Agency. Furthermore, he created a program designed to promote the state in national and international markets and to increase the attractiveness of the state's prouducts and services.
1964 Presidential Election
Although he did not actively seek the 1964 Republican nomination for
President of the United States in the beginning, a “Draft Scranton” movement quickly gathered momentum among moderate and liberal Republicans who saw him as an alternative to conservative front-runner SenatorBarry Goldwater , as well as other Republicans who feared that Goldwater's polarizing views would lead to defeat, after the campaign of Goldwater's liberal opponent, New York governorNelson Rockefeller , had lost steam. Early in the campaign, he announced that he would be willing to accept the nomination for Vice President. Scranton first declined to enter the race but later threw his hat into the ring onJune 12 1964 . Scranton won the support of ten state delegations, but Goldwater went on to win the nomination on the first ballot. RNC Chairman and U.S. CongressmanWilliam E. Miller ofNew York was nominated for Vice President.Later career
Under the then-existing Pennsylvania law, Scranton was limited to a single term and could not run for reelection in 1966. That same year, he announced that he would never again seek elected office. After his term in office, Scranton attended the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention of 1967-1968 and helped write a new constitution for the state, which included a provision allowing future governors to seek a second term. In 1968, President-elect
Richard Nixon asked Scranton to become Secretary of State, but he declined. He did serve as a special envoy to theMiddle East but when he said the Nixon Administration should be "more evenhanded" in managing the problems of the Middle East, some in the AmericanJew ish community regarded this as antisemitic and Nixon quickly distanced himself from the former governor. In accordance with his 1966 pledge never to seek elected office, he rebuffed a draft movementencouraging him to run for the U.S. Senate.After the
Kent State shootings in 1970 Scranton was asked to chair thePresident's Commission on Campus Unrest to investigate this and other incidents of campus violence and protest. The committee’s conclusions came to be known as the “Scranton Report ”.Following Nixon's resignation from the Presidency in 1974, he was appointed as a transition team member for incoming President
Gerald Ford .Scranton reentered the business world and served on the boards of several high profile American corporations such as A&P,
IBM ,The New York Times , Pan American Airways, and theH.J. Heinz Company and was president of Northeastern National Bank and Trust Company. He has also been associated with theTrilateral Commission , theCouncil on Foreign Relations , and was a trustee of Yale University, hisalma mater .In 1976, Scranton was chosen by President Ford to become United States Ambassador to the
United Nations . His measured approach todiplomacy and genuine interest inhuman rights earned him much respect in his short time in office. Some in the Republican Party pushed for Scranton to be named Ford’s running mate for the 1976 presidential election, but Ford chose SenatorRobert Dole ofKansas instead. After his term as U.N. Ambassador, Scranton retired to his home inDalton, Pennsylvania .Scranton's son,
William Scranton, III served as Pennsylvania'sLieutenant Governor underRichard Thornburgh . He ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1986 and was for a while considered a leading candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2006 but ultimately dropped out of the race.References
* [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/governors/scranton.asp?secid=31 Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Biography]
*CongBio|S000193
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