So much for the legacy of Herbert Lehman, one of the first Wall Street millionaires to run for public office and the son of the man who founded the now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers. Lehman served as Finance Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and was elected Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1928 running on a ticket with gubernatorial candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt.
When Roosevelt ran for President in 1932, Lehman ran for Governor and beat U.S. Attorney Wild Bill Donovan, who would later become the top American spymaster during World War II, by a 57%-39% margin. Lehman was re-elected in 1934, defeating New York City master builder Robert Moses (58%-37%), and again in 1936 and 1938. In his last run for Governor, he narrowly won re-election, 50%-49%, over U.S. Attorney Thomas Dewey.
Lehman resigned as Governor in 1942 to join the Roosevelt Administration as Director of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations, and later as Director-General of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration.
In 1946, Lehman returned to New York to run for an open seat in the United States Senate. He lost to Republican Irving Ives, the former Speaker of the New York State Assembly and the Dean of the School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University, by a 53%-47% margin.
When four-term Demcorat Robert Wagner resigned from the U.S. Senate in 1949 for health reasons, Dewey, who was the Governor of New York, appointed lawyer John Foster Dulles to the seat. Lehman challenged Dulles in a November 1949 special election and won, 52%-48%. He won a six-year term in 1950, defeating Lt. Governor Robert Hanley by a 50%-45% margin.
Lehman retired from the Senate in 1956. In the contest for Lehman's seat, Republican Jacob Javits, the state Attorney General and former Congressman, defeated New York City Mayor Robert Wagner, Jr.
David Crabiel, the longtime Middlesex County Freeholder who died today at age 78, ran for Congress twice, both times without success. His first ... >
There's nothing more difficult to see than the history before your eyes. It sometimes takes generations to understand the significance of ... >
OK, he didn't say precisely that, but when the Chairman of the Budget Committee informs us that governmental spending is the key to prosperity, ... >
Score one for the Governor’s public relations team. For the last few weeks, they have been working overtime to fuel speculation Corzine was being ... >
I am pleased to report the results from the first national poll conducted by Environmental Studies Program in the College of Arts and Sciences at ... >
To view a larger version of this cartoon, click here. >
The media, which loves headlines and knows little history, is trying to sell President Elect Obama as another Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But that ... >
When I was eleven, way back in 1965, my family was invited for Thanksgiving to my cousins’ cousins, a Jewish-Italian family who lived in the ... >
Last week's fight between Henry Waxman and John Dingell for chairmanship of the powerful House Energy and Commerce committee also featured a less ... >
A couple of weeks ago, my mother, Angelina Katz, did her second debate on behalf of Barack Obama. A debate? My mother? If you knew her, you’d be ... >
A rained out MusicFest this past September has provided Union County with $275,000 in insurance monies. The Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders ... >
As New Jerseyans get ready to celebrate Thanksgiving the nation's economic outlook is indeed bleak, and there doesn't seem much to be ... >
Great info for New Yorkers
Wally,
Have you forgotten we're in the Garden State? What does this have to do with New Jersey?
Nothing, someone was bored
But can you name the man who served briefly as Governor when Lehman resigned. The man who, for the rest of his life would be known as "Former Governor"?
Easy...
Charles Poletti. But can you name the guy who was Lehman's first LG before Democrats dumped him for Poletti -- the guy who would have been Governor?