Frederick W. Dallinger

Frederick William Dallinger ( born October 2, 1871 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, † September 5, 1955 in North Conway, New Hampshire) was an American lawyer and politician. Between 1915 and 1932 he represented two times the state of Massachusetts in the U.S. House of Representatives; then he became a federal judge.

Career

Frederick Dallinger attended the public schools of his home and thereafter until 1893, the Cambridge Latin School. This was followed up in 1893 to study at Harvard University. After a subsequent law degree from the same university in 1897 and was admitted to his lawyer, he began to work in Boston in this profession. At the same time he proposed as a member of the Republican Party launched a political career. In the years 1894 and 1895 he was a member of the House of Representatives of Massachusetts; 1896 to 1899 he was a member of the State Senate. From 1897 to 1932, and during his time as a congressman, he served as Public Administrator in the administration of Middlesex County operates. Dallinger was also president of the Chamber of Commerce of Cambridge. In 1912 he lectured on the system of government at Harvard University.

In the congressional elections of 1914, Dallinger was in the eighth electoral district of Massachusetts in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Frederick Simpson Deitrick on March 4, 1915. After four elections he was able to complete in Congress until March 3, 1925 five legislative sessions. In this time of the First World War fell. In the years 1919 and 1920, the 18th and the 19th Amendment to the Constitution were ratified. From 1919 to 1923 Dallinger led the first Election Committee, 1923-1925, he was Chairman of the Education Committee.

1924 versichtete Frederick Dallinger a renewed candidacy for the U.S. House of Representatives. Instead, he sought unsuccessfully to his party's nomination for election to the U.S. Senate. After the death of Mr Harry Irving Thayer, who in 1925 became his successor in Congress, Dallinger was elected at the election due to his successor. After three re- elections he could remain in Congress between November 2, 1926 to his resignation on October 1, 1932. Dallingers resignation was after his appointment to a federal judgeship on the Customs Court (United States Customs Court ) by President Herbert Hoover. This post he held 1932-1942. Moreover, he worked in agriculture. Frederick Dallinger spent his life in Center Lovell, Maine. He died on September 5, 1955 in North Conway.

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