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1967–1968 Massachusetts legislature

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

165th
Massachusetts General Court
164th 166th
Overview
Legislative bodyGeneral Court
ElectionNovember 8, 1966
Senate
Members40
PresidentMaurice A. Donahue
Majority LeaderKevin B. Harrington
Majority WhipMario Umana
Minority LeaderJohn Francis Parker
Minority WhipWilliam D. Weeks
Party controlDemocrat[1]
House
Members240
SpeakerRobert H. Quinn
Majority LeaderThomas W. McGee
Majority WhipJohn Cornelius Bresnahan
Minority LeaderSidney Curtiss
Minority WhipThomas M. Newth
Party controlDemocrat[2]
Sessions
1stJanuary 4, 1967 (1967-01-04) – January 2, 1968 (1968-01-02)
2ndJanuary 3, 1968 (1968-01-03) – July 20, 1968 (1968-07-20)[3]
Maurice Donahue, Senate president.
Robert Quinn, House speaker.
Leaders of the Massachusetts General Court, 1967.

The 165th Massachusetts General Court, consisting of the Massachusetts Senate and the Massachusetts House of Representatives, met in 1967 and 1968 during the governorship of John Volpe. Maurice A. Donahue served as president of the Senate and Robert H. Quinn served as speaker of the House.[4]

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Transcription

Episode 40: The Sixties LOCKED Hi, I’m John Green, this is Crash Course US History and today we’re gonna talk about the 1960s. Mr. Green, Mr. Green. Great. The decade made famous by the narcissists who lived through it. Hey, Me From the Past, finally you and I agree about something wholeheartedly. But while I don’t wish to indulge the baby-boomers’ fantasies about their centrality to world history, the sixties were an important time. I mean, there was the Cold War, Vietnam, a rising tide of conservatism (despite Woodstock), racism. There were the Kennedy’s and Camelot, John, Paul, George, and to a lesser extent, Ringo. And of course, there was also Martin Luther King Jr. intro So, the 1960s saw people organizing and actively working for change both in the social order and in government. This included the student movement, the women’s movement, movements for gay rights, and a push by the courts to expand rights in general. But, by the end of the 1960s, the anti-war movement seemed to have overshadowed all the rest. So as you’ll no doubt remember from last week, the civil rights movement began in the 1950s if not before, but many of its key moments happened in the sixties. And this really began with sit-ins that took place in Greensboro North Carolina. Black university students walked into Woolworths and waited at the lunch counters to be served, or, more likely, arrested. After 5 months of that, those students eventually got Woolworths to serve black customers. Then, in 1961 leaders from the Congress On Racial Equality launched Freedom Rides to integrate interstate buses. Volunteers rode the buses into the Deep South where they faced violence including beatings and a bombing in Anniston AL. But despite that, those freedom rides also proved successful and eventually the ICC desegregated interstate buses. In fact, by the end of the 60s over 70,000 people had taken part in demonstrations, from sit-ins, to teach-ins, to marches. But they weren’t all successful. Martin Luther King’s year-long protests in Albany, GA didn’t end discrimination in the city. And it took JFK ordering federal troops to escort James Meredith to class for him to attend the University of Mississippi. The University of Mississippi: America’s fallback college. Sorry, I’m from Alabama. So, the Civil Rights movement reached its greatest national prominence in 1963 when Martin Luther King came to my hometown of Birmingham, Alabama, where there had been more than 50 racially-motivated bombings since WWII. Television brought the reality of the Jim Crow South into people’s homes as images of Bull Connor’s police dogs and water cannons being turned on peaceful marchers, many of them children, horrified viewers and eventually led Kennedy to endorse the movement’s goals. Probably should mention that John F. Kennedy was president of the United States at the time, having been elected in 1960. He was assassinated in 1963 leading to Lyndon Johnson. Alright, politics over. Anyway, in response to these peaceful protests, Birmingham jailed Martin Luther King where he wrote one of the great letters in American history (doesn’t have a great name): Letter from Birmingham Jail. 1963 also saw the March on Washington, the largest public demonstration in American history up to that time where King gave his famous speech, “I have a Dream.” King and the other organizers called for a civil rights bill and help for the poor, demanding public works, a higher minimum wage, and an end to discrimination in employment. Which eventually, in one of the great bright spots in American history, did sort of happen with the Civil Rights Act. So, one reason American history teachers focus on the Civil Rights Movement so much is that it successfully brought actual legislative change. After being elected president, John F. Kennedy was initially cool to civil rights, but to be fair, the Cold War occupied a lot of his time, what with the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Bay of Pigs and whatnot. But the demonstrations of 1963 pushed John F. Kennedy to support civil rights more actively. According to our dear friend, the historian Eric Foner, “Kennedy realized that the United States simply could not declare itself the champion of freedom throughout the world while maintaining a system of racial inequality at home.”[1] So that June he appeared on TV and called on Congress to pass a law that would ban discrimination in all public accommodations. And then he was assassinated. Thanks, Lee Harvey Oswald. Or possibly someone else. But probably Lee Harvey Oswald. So then, Lyndon Johnson became president and he pushed Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The law prohibited discrimination in employment, schools, hospitals, and privately owned public places like restaurants, and hotels and theaters, and it also banned discrimination on the basis of sex. The Civil Rights Act was a major moment in American legislative history, but it hardly made the United States a haven of equality. So, Civil Rights leaders continued to push for the enfranchisement of African Americans. After Freedom Summer workers registered people in Mississippi to vote, King launched a march for voting rights in Selma, Alabama in January, 1965. And television swayed public opinion in favor of the demonstrators. Thank you, TV, for your one and only gift to humanity. Just kidding. Battlestar Galactica. So, in 1965 Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, which gave the federal government the power to oversee voting in places where discrimination was practiced. In 1965, Congress also passed the Hart-Cellar Act, which got rid of national origin quotas and allowed Asian immigrants to immigrate to the United States. Unfortunately the law also introduced quotas on immigrants from the Western Hemisphere. Lyndon Johnson’s domestic initiatives from 1965 through 1967 are known as the Great Society, and it’s possible that if he hadn’t been responsible for America escalating the war in Vietnam, he might have been remembered, at least by liberals, as one of America’s greatest presidents. Because the Great Society expanded a lot of the promises of the New Deal, especially in the creation of health insurance programs, like Medicare for the elderly and Medicaid for the poor. He also went to War on Poverty. Never go to war with a noun. You will always lose. Johnson treated poverty as a social problem, rather than an economic one. So instead of focusing on jobs or guaranteed income, his initiatives stressed things like training. That unfortunately failed to take into account shifts in the economy away from high wage union manufacturing jobs toward more lower-wage service jobs. [2] Here’s what Eric Foner had to say about Johnson’s domestic accomplishments: “By the 1990s […] the historic gap between whites and blacks in education, income, and access to skilled employment narrowed considerably. But with deindustrialization and urban decay affecting numerous families and most suburbs still being off limits to non-white people, the median wealth of white households remained ten times greater than that of African Americans, and nearly a quarter of all black children lived in poverty.” While Congress was busy enacting Johnson’s Great Society programs, the movement for African American freedom was changing. Let’s go to the ThoughtBubble. Persistent poverty and continued discrimination in the workplace, housing, education, and criminal justice system might explain the shift away from integration and toward black power, a celebration of African American culture and criticism of whites’ oppression. 1964 saw the beginnings of riots in city ghettoes, for instance, mostly in Northern cities. The worst riots were in 1965 in Watts, in southern California. These left 35 people dead, 900 injured, and $30 million in damage. Newark and Detroit also saw devastating riots in 1967. In 1968 the Kerner Report blamed the cause of the rioting on segregation, poverty, and white racism. Then there’s Malcolm X, who many white people regarded as an advocate for violence, but who also called for self-reliance. It’s tempting to see leadership shifting from King to X as the civil rights movement became more militant, but Malcolm X was active in the early 1960s and he was killed in 1965, three years before Martin Luther King was assassinated and before all the major shifts in emphasis towards black power. Older Civil Rights groups like CORE abandoned integration as a goal after 1965 and started to call for black power. The rhetoric of Black Power could be strident, but its message of black empowerment was deeply resonant for many. Oakland’s Black Panther Party did carry guns in self-defense but they also offered a lot of neighborhood services. But the Black Power turned many white people away from the struggle for African American freedom, and by the end of the 1960s, many Americans’ attention had shifted to anti-war movement. Thanks, ThoughtBubble. So it was Vietnam that really galvanized students even though many didn’t have to go to Vietnam because they had student deferments. They just really, really didn’t want their friends to go. The anti-war movement and the civil rights movement inspired other groups to seek an end to oppression. Like, Latinos organized to celebrate their heritage and end discrimination. Latino activism was like black power, but much more explicitly linked to labor justice, especially the strike efforts led by Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers. The American Indian Movement, founded in 1968, took over Alcatraz to symbolize the land that had been taken from Native Americans. And they won greater tribal control over education, economic development, and they also filed suits for restitution. And in June of 1969, after police raided a gay bar, called the Stonewall Inn, members of the gay community began a series of demonstrations in New York City, which touched off the modern gay liberation movement. Oh, it’s time for the Mystery Document? The rules here are pretty simple. I read the Mystery Document, guess the author, I’m either right or I get shocked. Alright, what have we got here. If the Bill of Rights contains no guarantee that a citizen shall be secure against lethal poisons distributed either by private individuals or by public officials [I already know it!], it is surely only because our forefathers, despite their considerable wisdom and foresight, could conceive of no such problem. Rachel Carson! Silent Spring. YES. I am on such a roll. Silent Spring was a massively important book because it was the first time that anyone really described all of the astonishingly poisonous things we were putting into the air and the ground and the water. Fortunately, that’s all been straightened out now and everything that we do and make as human beings is now sustainable. What’s that? Oh god. The environmental movement gained huge bipartisan support and it resulted in important legislation during the Nixon era, including the Clean Air and Water Acts, and the Endangered Species Act. And yes, I said that environmental legislation was passed during the Nixon administration. But perhaps the most significant freedom movement in terms of number of people involved and long-lasting effects was the American Feminist movement. This is usually said to have begun with the publication of Betty Friedan’s book The Feminine Mystique, which set out to describe “the problem that has no name.” Turns out the name is “misogyny.” [3] Friedan described a constricting social and economic system that affected mostly middle class women, but it resonated with the educated classes and led to the foundation of the National Organization of Women in 1966. Participation in student and civil rights movements led many women to identify themselves as members of a group that was systematically discriminated against. And by “systemic,” I mean that in 1963, 5.8% of doctors were women and 3.7% of lawyers were women and fewer than 10% of doctoral degrees went to women. They are more than half of the population. While Congress responded with the Equal Pay Act in 1963, younger women sought greater power and autonomy in addition to legislation. Crucially, 60s-era feminists opened America to the idea that the “personal is political,” especially when it came to equal pay, childcare, and abortion. Weirdly, the branch of government that provided most support to the expansion of personal freedom in the 1960s was the most conservative one, the Supreme Court. The Warren Court handed down so many decisions expanding civil rights that the era has sometimes been called a rights revolution. The Warren court expanded the protections of free speech and assembly under the First Amendment and freedom of the press in the New York Times v. Sullivan decision. It struck down a law banning interracial marriage in the most appropriately named case ever, Loving v. Virginia. And although this would become a lightning rod for many conservatives, Supreme Court decisions greatly expanded the protections of people accused of crimes. Gideon v. Wainwright secured the right to attorney, Mapp v. Ohio established the exclusionary rule under the Fourth Amendment, and Miranda v. Arizona provided fodder for Channing Tatum in his great movie, 21 Jump Street, insuring that he would always have to say to every perp, “You have the right to remain silent.” But you can’t silence my heart, Channing Tatum. It beats only for thee. But, the most innovative and controversial decisions actually established a new right where none had existed in the constitution. Griswold v. Connecticut, dealt with contraception, and Roe v. Wade, guaranteed a woman’s right to an abortion (at least in the first trimester). And those two decisions formed the basis of a new right, the right to privacy. Protests, the counter culture, and the liberation movements continued well into the early 1970s, losing steam with the end of the Vietnam war and America’s economy plunging into the toilet. For many, though, the year 1968 sums up the decade. 1968 began with the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, which stirred up the anti-war protests. Then racial violence erupted after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968. Then, anti-war demonstrators as well as some counter culture types arrived in large numbers at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago where they were set upon by police and beaten in what was later described as a “police riot.” 1968 also saw the Prague Spring uprising in Czechoslovakia crushed by the Soviets. And student demonstrators were killed by the police in Mexico City where the Olympics were held and Parisian students took to the streets in widespread protests against, you know, France. All this unrest scared a lot of people who ended up voting for Richard Nixon and his promises to return to law and order. Ultimately, like any decade or arbitrary historical “age,” the 60s defies easy categorization. Yes, there were hippies and liberation movements, but there were also reactions to those movements. On this one, I’m just gonna leave it up to Eric Foner to summarize the decade’s legacy: “[The 1960s] made possible the entrance of numerous members of racial minorities into the mainstream of American life, while leaving unsolved the problem of urban poverty. It set in motion a transformation of the status of women. It changed what Americans expected from government – from clean air and water to medical coverage in old age. And at the same time, it undermined confidence in national leaders. Relations between young and old, men and women, and white and non-white, along with every institution in society, changed as a result.” But there’s one last thing I want to emphasize. All of this wasn’t really the result of, like, a radical revolution. It was the result of a process that had been going on for decades. I mean, arguably a process that had been going on for hundreds of years. Thanks for watching, I’ll see you next week. Crash Course is made with the help of all these nice people and it’s possible because of generous support from the Bluth Family Frozen Banana Stand. Just kidding. We don’t have corporate sponsors. We have you. Subbable.com is a voluntary subscription platform (by the way, you can just click on my face) that allows people who care about stuff, like you hopefully care about Crash Course, to support it directly on a monthly basis. I’m over here now, but you should still click on my face. So Subbable has lots of great Crash Course perks, you can get signed posters and all kinds of things, and most importantly, you can help us keep this show free, for ever, for everyone. Thank you again for watching, and as we say in my hometown, there’s always money in the banana stand. ________________ [1] Foner Give me Liberty ebook version p. 1043 [2] [Text Box: The War on Poverty also included popular programs like VISTA, Head Start and food-stamps. Poverty was reduced but probably as much by economic growth as the programs themselves. And they didn’t eradicate poverty.] [3]

Senators

portrait name [5] date of birth [6] district [6]
Oliver F. Ames December 13, 1920 3rd Suffolk
John Dowkontt Barrus August 19, 1924
James F. Burke September 7, 1914
Harold Clasky March 2, 1896
Beryl Cohen September 18, 1934
John J. Conte May 3, 1930
Leslie Bradley Cutler March 24, 1890
Stephen Davenport June 27, 1924
James DeNormandie November 10, 1907
Maurice A. Donahue September 12, 1918
George D. Hammond October 29, 1906
Samuel Harmon April 29, 1911
Kevin B. Harrington January 9, 1929
John Edward Harrington Jr. July 30, 1930
Charles V. Hogan April 12, 1897
Allan Francis Jones June 29, 1921
James A. Kelly Jr. May 11, 1926
George V. Kenneally Jr. December 29, 1929
Fred I. Lamson December 11, 1910
Ronald MacKenzie May 3, 1934
Francis X. McCann September 2, 1912
James McIntyre (politician) May 25, 1930
Denis L. Mckenna August 14, 1922
Andrea F. Nuciforo Sr. July 14, 1927
John Francis Parker May 29, 1907
Philibert L. Pellegrini September 4, 1918
Vite Pigaga
John M. Quinlan July 11, 1935
Philip Andrew Quinn February 21, 1910
William I. Randall September 13, 1915
James Paul Rurak November 9, 1911
Harry Della Russo May 26, 1907
Donald N. Ryan January 27, 1930
William L. Saltonstall May 14, 1927
Mario Umana May 5, 1914
William X. Wall July 1, 1904
Joseph D. Ward March 26, 1914
William D. Weeks May 9, 1926

Representatives

portrait name [5] date of birth [6] district [6]
Antone S. Aguiar Jr. January 2, 1930 5th Bristol
David C. Ahearn July 28, 1929
Robert B. Ambler [7] 1927
John A. Armstrong June 12, 1901
Peter George Asiaf August 15, 1905
Jack Backman[7] April 26, 1922
Wilfred E. Balthazar July 17, 1914
David M. Bartley February 9, 1935
Robert A. Belmonte July 2, 1930
Roger L. Bernashe September 9, 1927
Francis Bevilacqua August 12, 1923
Donald T. Bliss 1937
Belden Bly September 29, 1914
Stanley Joseph Bocko August 26, 1920
Robert Joseph Bohigian July 24, 1922
Royal L. Bolling Sr.[8] June 19, 1920
John Jerome Bowes February 25, 1917
James John Bowler July 18, 1923
Joseph G. Bradley June 14, 1930
John Cornelius Bresnahan November 14, 1919
Joseph E. Brett May 19, 1907
John R. Buckley 1932
Charles J. Buffone 1919
Anthony Joseph Burke July 17, 1931
Walter T. Burke August 5, 1911
Thomas Bussone September 20, 1912
Fred F. Cain November 5, 1909
Eleanor Campobasso August 10, 1923
Raymond Edward Carey January 6, 1899
William A. Carey September 2, 1899
Philip N. Carney June 6, 1919
Daniel William Carney [7] August 17, 1925
Michael Catino February 21, 1904
Emmett J. Cauley February 28, 1903
Paul J. Cavanaugh February 22, 1936
Robert L. Cawley July 30, 1934
Harrison Chadwick February 25, 1903
Amelio Della Chiesa July 31, 1901
Stephen Thomas Chmura August 25, 1916
Steve T. Chmura March 29, 1928
John George Clark February 26, 1902
John F. Coffey February 7, 1918
Lincoln P. Cole, Jr. September 18, 1918
Andrew Collaro March 21, 1910
H. Thomas Colo December 27, 1929
Lloyd E. Conn November 26, 1904
William Augustine Connell, Jr November 17, 1922
George Thomas Contalonis
Paul J. Corriveau July 3, 1930
Edward P. Coury October 19, 1927
Russell H. Craig February 4, 1924
James J. Craven, Jr. March 24, 1919
Sidney Curtiss September 4, 1917
Michael A. D'Avolio
Michael John Daly July 18, 1940
Alan Paul Danovitch September 17, 1940
John Davoren July 27, 1915
John Joseph Desmond July 1, 1930
Arthur Leo Desrocher January 25, 1930
Edward J. Dever, Jr June 21, 1936
Joseph DiCarlo March 21, 1936
Edward M. Dickson March 12, 1912
Anthony R. DiFruscia June 5, 1940
George DiLorenzo March 24, 1919
Thomas Henry Doherty Jr. August 8, 1930
John F. Dolan September 7, 1922
John F. Donovan Jr. August 21, 1931
James P. Downey January 9, 1911
Charles Robert Doyle September 24, 1925
Wilfred C. Driscoll December 31, 1926
Richard J. Dwinell August 5, 1917
Joseph D. Early January 31, 1933
Arnold Irving Epstein April 5, 1920
Thomas Francis Fallon December 4, 1929
Vernon R. Farnsworth, Jr April 18, 1934
Thomas F. Farrell October 10, 1897
Michael Paul Feeney March 26, 1907
John J. Finnegan July 21, 1938
Irving Fishman March 29, 1921
Charles Flaherty (politician) October 13, 1938
Michael F. Flaherty Sr. September 6, 1936
Edward M. Flanagan January 9, 1929
Charles L. Flannery March 22, 1920
David Lawrence Flynn February 5, 1933
Maurice E. Frye, Jr February 6, 1921
Albert A. Gammal Jr. 1928
Donald R. Gaudette December 16, 1926
T. Harold Gayron August 31, 1914
Julie Gilligan August 5, 1911
Harold D. Gould Jr. May 18, 1934
Joel S. Greenberg May 31, 1930
James L. Grimaldi May 3, 1911
Anthony P. Grosso October 19, 1913
Gerard A. Guilmette October 22, 1911
Barry T. Hannon November 21, 1935
Walter J. Hannon September 4, 1931
Michael J. Harrington September 2, 1936
Edward D. Harrington Jr. August 11, 1921
David E. Harrison June 19, 1933
Francis W. Hatch Jr. May 6, 1925
Michael E. Haynes[8] May 9, 1927
Winston Healy October 20, 1937
Timothy William Hickey February 14, 1938
William Francis Hogan June 6, 1925
Franklin W. Holgate [8] May 3, 1929
Herbert B. Hollis September 10, 1899
Marie Elizabeth Howe June 13, 1939
James P. Hurrell March 1, 1944
Charles Iannello April 25, 1906
John Peter Ivascyn October 19, 1909
John Janas September 4, 1910
Katherine Kane April 12, 1935
Joseph M. Kearney February 23, 1927
F. Leo Kenney November 15, 1902
Walter T. Kerr May 20, 1918
Gregory Benjamin Khachadoorian July 8, 1928
Cornelius F. Kiernan August 15, 1917
Philip Kimball June 6, 1918
William I. Kitterman July 19, 1928
Benjamin Klebanow November 2, 1900
Freyda Koplow October 26, 1907
Walter Kostanski December 10, 1923
Mitsie T. Kulig May 18, 1921
Matthew J. Kuss December 5, 1915
Raymond M. LaFontaine May 18, 1927
Richard E. Landry May 29, 1936
J. Louis Leblanc January 6, 1940
Peter John Levanti March 19, 1903
Arthur Joseph Lewis, Jr. September 3, 1934
David H. Locke August 4, 1927
Alexander Lolas July 9, 1932
Gerald P. Lombard January 4, 1916
Michael J. Lombardi May 27, 1917
Charles W. Long August 14, 1940
John J. Long December 10, 1927
William Longworth August 17, 1914
Joseph S. Loughman January 11, 1928
Charles A. MacKenzie, Jr February 4, 1919
William Q. MacLean Jr. November 4, 1934
Donald Warren Madsen July 13, 1924
J. Robert Mahan December 14, 1903
Paul F. Malloy April 29, 1940
Theodore D. Mann May 13, 1922
Charles Mann April 27, 1935
M. Joseph Manning September 23, 1924
Donald J. Manning June 23, 1929
Benjamin C. Mayhew Jr. October 28, 1909
Thomas W. McGee May 24, 1924
Robert J. McGinn December 18, 1918
John Austin Shaw McGlennon August 10, 1935
John J. McGlynn February 26, 1922
Allan McGuane July 26, 1928
Arthur James McKenna October 29, 1914
John F. Melia June 5, 1915
Paul C. Menton April 15, 1925
William James Moran June 24, 1921
Hugh J. Morgan Jr. April 4, 1921
Louis J. Morini October 8, 1907
Gerald J. Morrissey May 20, 1927
Paul F. Murphy October 14, 1932
Paul Maurice Murphy February 24, 1932
Albert L. Nash May 13, 1921
John J. Navin September 9, 1915
Mary B. Newman February 15, 1909 2nd Middlesex
Thomas M. Newth March 15, 1911
James R. Nolen April 17, 1933
Karl S. Nordin September 10, 1906
James Anthony O'Brien, Jr June 22, 1919
John Paul O'Brien June 10, 1937
Norton Cornelius O'Brien April 9, 1907
Walter Wilson O'Brien October 14, 1910
David J. O'Connor November 9, 1924
Philip Conroy O'Donnell July 29, 1915
George Henry O'Farrell November 15, 1910
Gerald O'Leary August 7, 1933
Charles Ohanian September 2, 1936
Bernard Paquette February 2, 1919
Raymond S. Peck December 10, 1922
Felix Perrault October 27, 1915
Robert H. Quinn January 30, 1928
Manuel Raposa, Jr. May 13, 1915
Harry A. S. Read November 18, 1936
Leo Joseph Reynolds February 29, 1920
Frank G. Rico June 2, 1912
Daniel H. Rider July 15, 1912
William G. Robinson March 10, 1926
J. Hilary Rockett January 16, 1935
George Rogers (Massachusetts politician) August 2, 1933
Maurice E. Ronayne, Jr November 16, 1917
Harold Rosen (politician) 1906
Nathan Rosenfeld January 31, 1906
Raymond F. Rourke October 10, 1917
George Sacco July 19, 1936
Roger A. Sala August 8, 1893
Duane Thomas Sargisson
Joseph Douglas Saulnier April 14, 1906
Anthony James Scalli November 11, 1914
Frederic W. Schlosstein, Jr March 17, 1923
Anthony M. Scibelli October 16, 1911
John W. Sears December 18, 1930
Jerome A. Segal June 3, 1931
Joseph J. Semensi March 6, 1923
I. Edward Serlin August 21, 1912
George W. Shattuck July 17, 1916
C. Vincent Shea November 20, 1916
Paul J. Sheehy November 1, 1934
Aaron M. I. Shinberg
Alfred R. Shrigley June 6, 1914
Andre Rives Sigourney June 30, 1927
Michael John Simonelli May 9, 1913
Ralph E. Sirianni Jr. 1923
Lawrence Philip Smith December 4, 1919
George I. Spatcher February 2, 1902
John F. St. Cyr January 8, 1936
Janet Kirkland Starr October 11, 1918
Chandler Harrison Stevens
A. Edward Talbot January 24, 1915
Frank Daniel Tanner February 3, 1888
Arthur Tobin May 22, 1930
David Spence Tobin March 16, 1939
John Joseph Toomey March 25, 1909
Joseph Thomas Travaline
Warren A. Turner January 25, 1905
Elbert Tuttle August 19, 1931
George E. Twomey February 3, 1920
Dave Norman Vigneault September 3, 1936
George B. Walsh March 21, 1907
Joseph B. Walsh November 15, 1923
Stephen Weekes February 1, 1925
Norman S. Weinberg 1919
Robert D. Wetmore July 24, 1930
Frederick McClellan Whitney Jr. December 12, 1922
Arthur Williams December 14, 1915
Thomas Casmere Wojtkowski September 18, 1926
George Chester Young September 18, 1912
Edward S. Zelazo May 27, 1924
Samuel Zoll June 20, 1934

See also

References

  1. ^ "Composition of the Massachusetts State Senate", Resources on Massachusetts Political Figures in the State Library, Mass.gov, archived from the original on June 6, 2020
  2. ^ "Composition of the State of Massachusetts House of Representatives", Resources on Massachusetts Political Figures in the State Library, Mass.gov, archived from the original on June 6, 2020
  3. ^ "Length of Legislative Sessions". Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 2009. p. 348+.
  4. ^ "Organization of the Legislature Since 1780". Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 2005. p. 338+.
  5. ^ a b Norman L. Pidgeon and William C. Maiers. 1967–1968 Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
  6. ^ a b c d "Annual Register of the Executive and Legislative Departments of the Government of Massachusetts, 1967", Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1967, hdl:2452/796352
  7. ^ a b c State Library of Massachusetts, "Massachusetts State Legislator's Papers Collections at the State Library", Mass.gov, retrieved September 3, 2020
  8. ^ a b c Massachusetts, State Library of; Court, Massachusetts General (2010), Black Legislators in the Massachusetts General Court: 1867-Present, State Library of Massachusetts, hdl:2452/48905

Further reading

  • Election Statistics: The Commonwealth of Massachusetts (1966), Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1967, hdl:2452/43458
  • "The New Legislature", Boston Globe, January 4, 1967
  • Court, Massachusetts General (1967). Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston. hdl:2452/40798.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links

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