Vincent M. Brennan

Vincent Morrison Brennan ( born April 22, 1890 in Mount Clemens, Michigan, † February 4, 1959 in Detroit, Michigan ) was an American politician. Between 1921 and 1923 he represented the state of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

In 1895, Vincent Brennan came with his parents to Detroit, where he initially the SS Peter and Paul's Parochial School and then to 1909 the Detroit College visited. After a subsequent law degree from Harvard University and his made ​​in 1912 admitted to the bar he began in Detroit to work in his new profession. By 1914, he completed while still studying at the University of Detroit. Politically, Brennan member of the Republican Party. In the years 1912 and 1913 he was legal adviser to the Ministry of Labour, the state government of Michigan; 1915 to 1920, he served as advisor to the city of Detroit. In the years 1919 and 1920, Brennan sat in the Senate from Michigan. At that time he also designed a highway code for the city of Detroit, which served as a model for many similar laws in other American cities.

In the congressional elections of 1920, Brennan was in the 13th electoral district of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Clarence J. McLeod on 4 March 1921. Since he resigned in 1922 to further candidacy, he was able to complete only one term in Congress until March 3, 1923. Between 1924 and 1954 Brennan was district judge in Wayne County; then he again worked as a lawyer. Politically, he is no more have appeared. Vincent Brennan died on February 4, 1959 in Detroit.

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