John William Wright Patman | |
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40th Dean of the United States House of Representatives | |
In office January 1973 – March 1976 |
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Preceded by | Emanuel Celler |
Succeeded by | George H. Mahon |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas's 1st district |
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In office March 4, 1929 – March 7, 1976 |
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Preceded by | Eugene Black |
Succeeded by | Sam B. Hall |
Personal details | |
Born | August 6, 1893 Hughes Springs, Texas |
Died | March 7, 1976 Bethesda, Maryland |
(aged 82)
Political party | Democratic |
Religion | Baptist |
John William Wright Patman (August 6, 1893 – March 7, 1976) was a U.S. Congressman from Texas in Texas's 1st congressional district and chair of the United States House Committee on Banking and Currency (1965–75).
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Patman was the son of John N. and Emma (Spurlin) Patman, was born near Hughes Springs in Cass County, Texas, on August 6, 1893. After graduating from Hughes Springs High School in 1912, he enrolled in Cumberland University Law School in Lebanon, Tennessee. Receiving his law degree in 1916 he was admitted to the Texas bar the same year.[1] During World War I Patman served as a private and a machine gun officer.
Patman was elected to the Texas House of Representatives in 1920. He left the House in 1924 when he was appointed district attorney of the fifth judicial district of Texas.
In 1928, Patman was elected to the House of Representatives in Texas's 1st congressional district. In 1932, Patman introduced a bill that would have mandated the immediate payment of the bonus to World War I veterans. It was during the consideration of this bill that the Bonus Army came to Washington. Patman was a supporter of the Landmark New Deal.
In January 1932, Patman spearheaded a movement to impeach Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon,[2] which forced the latter's resignation the following month.
He was the author of the landmark Robinson Patman Act in 1936.
One observer remembered Patman as a populist Democrat when, in 2011, Rick Perry had taken a pungent jab at Ben Bernancke. Patman, sitting as chair of the House Banking Committee in the early 1970s, "snarl[ed] at then Fed chairman Arthur Burns, before him to give testimony, 'Can you give me any reason why you should not be in the penitentiary?'”[3]
In 1975, Patman was voted out of his position as Chairman of the Banking committee by younger Congressmen, in a revolt against the 'Seniority system' which also removed Felix Edward Hébert and William R. Poage from their positions as chairmen. Patman was replaced by Henry S. Reuss by a caucus vote of 152–117. The main reason given for the caucus removing Patman was due to concerns about his age and effectiveness. Fourteen months later, Patman died at the age of 82 in Bethesda, Maryland.
In the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, the Wright Patman Congressional Federal Credit Union is named after him. This credit union serves the banking needs of elected and former members of the House and their staff. In addition, Wright Patman Lake in Northeast Texas is also named for him.
Wright Patman's eponymous committee played an important role in the early days of the Watergate scandal that eventually brought down President Richard Nixon. The Patman Committee investigated the hundred dollar bills found on the Watergate "plumbers" upon their arrest, suspecting they could directly link them to CREEP, the president's re-election committee. This investigative course was on the money, as it ultimately proved to be Nixon's undoing in the sense that the money trail, as revealed in the Washington Post, helped plant the basis for the establishment of the Ervin Senate Select Committee on Watergate in April, 1973. (In the final analysis, however, the most universally adopted reason for seeking Nixon's impeachment was his obstruction of justice occurring in the "smoking gun" tape of June 23, 1972,[4] asking his aides to seek C.I.A. intervention through Director Richard Helms and Deputy Director Vernon Walters to stop the initial Watergate investigation, begun days after the break-in on orders of newly appointed F.B.I. Director L. Patrick Gray, for its supposed threat to national security in uncovering "the whole Bay of Pigs thing"--a Nixon reference which H. R. Haldeman, party to the June 23 conversation with Nixon, later equated in his book, The Ends of Power, published in February, 1978 in the wake of the House Select Committee's investigation into the assassination of President Kennedy, with Nixon's code phrase for the Kennedy assassination, though Haldeman later recanted the statement before he died.
The revelation of the existence of the White House taping system occurred during testimony to the Ervin Committee by Alexander Butterfield in July, 1973. The Patman Committee's 1972 investigation was stymied on pressure from the White House, in part led by Congressman Gerald R. Ford,[5] within a year to become Vice-President, appointed to the position by President Nixon after Spiro T. Agnew was forced to resign after pleading nolo contendere to charges of having received bribes during his stint as Governor of Maryland prior to 1969, charges mysteriously surfacing only after the Watergate scandal broke the previous year.
Many speculated at the time that Agnew was deliberately being tossed by Nixon onto the fire as a sacrificial lamb in an attempt to calm the furor surfacing from the previous summer's Senate Select Committee hearings on Watergate which had been nationally televised. Conversely, however, by nominating the moderate Gerald Ford as his new Vice-President, Nixon spread that much more the flames of discontent with his method of governing, resulting in the Articles of Impeachment returned by the House Judiciary Committee in late July 1974, prompting Nixon's decision to resign, effective at noon August 9.
United States House of Representatives | ||
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Preceded by Eugene Black |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas's 1st congressional district 1929–1976 |
Succeeded by Sam B. Hall |
Texas House of Representatives | ||
Preceded by J. D. Newton |
Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 2 (Linden) 1921–1925 |
Succeeded by George W. Coody |
Honorary titles | ||
Preceded by Emanuel Celler |
Dean of the House 1973–1976 |
Succeeded by George H. Mahon |