U. S. Guyer

Ulysses Samuel Guyer ( born December 13, 1868 Paw Paw, Lee County, Illinois, † June 5, 1943 in Bethesda, Maryland ) was an American politician.

Guyer studied at the Lane University in Lecompton, Kansas and attended the School of Law of the University of Kansas in Lawrence. In 1902 he was admitted to the legal profession and then practiced in Kansas City. After he had been from 1907 to 1909 Judge at the Court of the city, Guyer was from 1909 to 1910 mayor of Kansas City.

After the death of Congressman Edward C. Little Guyer was elected as a Republican to Congress to fill the vacant seat new, and thus represented the state of Kansas on 4 November 1924 to 3 March 1925 at the U.S. House of Representatives. He did not run for another term and returned to Kansas City, where he began to practice again. 1926 Guyer was re-elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and now belonged to him dated 3 March 1927 until his death on June 5, 1943 in Bethesda on. During this time he was one of those deputies who led the ultimately unsuccessful impeachment proceedings against the accused Federal Judge Harold Louderback corruption in the way in 1933.

Guyer was buried at the Fairview Cemetery in St. John (Kansas). In this city he had formerly been director of the St. John High School and from 1896 to 1901 superintendent of all urban schools.

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