Butler B. Hare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Butler B. Hare (born 1875 in Saluda County, South Carolina; died in 1967) was an American politician elected at the U.S. House of Representatives representing the state of South Carolina.

Born to James and Elizabeth Hare (née Black), he was one of 9 sons born to the Civil War veteran. Butler earned his law degree from George Washington University and served his first term in the US House of Representatives in 1924 representing the 2nd district of South Carolina. He served from 1925-1933, and then left after redistricting eliminated a seat from South Carolina's congressional delegation.

He returned to the house in 1939 after defeating incumbent John Taylor. He served from 1939-1947 as the representative of South Carolina's 3rd District. His main accomplishment as a US Representative was authoring the Tydings-McDuffie Act, which made the former US Territory of Philippines an independent nation. His son, James Butler Hare, served a single term from 1949-1951 in South Carolina's 3rd district.