William Lorimer (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Lorimer
William Lorimer

William Lorimer (April 27, 1861September 13, 1934) was a United States Senator and Representative from the State of Illinois.

Lorimer was born in Manchester, England. His family immigrated to the United States in 1866, first settling in Michigan and then moving to Chicago in 1870. Lorimer was self-educated, although apprenticed to a sign painter when he was ten. He worked in the Chicago meat-packing houses and for a street railroad company.

Lorimer was elected to three consecutive terms as a Republican in the U.S. Congress, beginning in 1895. He lost his re-election campaign in 1900, but won election again in 1902, serving for another three consecutive terms until his resignation on June 17, 1909 to take up his seat as a U.S. Senator. The Chicago Tribune published the admission by Illinois Assemblyman Charles A. White that Lorimer paid $1,000 for his vote for U.S. Senator [1]. The Seventeenth Amendment would not be ratified until 1913, removing the selection for Senator from the state legislatures to the popular vote of each state. He only served in the Senate until July 13, 1912, when, after a Senate investigation and acrimonious debate, the Senate adopted a resolution declaring "that corrupt methods and practices were employed in his election, and that the election, therefore, was invalid." He was the president of La Salle Street Trust & Savings Bank from 1910 to 1915, and then entered the lumber business. Lorimer died in Chicago at age 73.

[edit] References

[edit] Additional reading

Political offices
Preceded by
Lawrence E. McGann
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Illinois's 2nd congressional district

1895-1901
Succeeded by
John J. Feely
Preceded by
Henry S. Boutell
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Illinois's 6th congressional district

1903-1909
Succeeded by
William Moxley
Preceded by
Albert J. Hopkins
Class 3 U.S. Senator from Illinois
1909–1912
Succeeded by
Lawrence Yates Sherman