John Lewis Bates | |
---|---|
41st Governor of Massachusetts | |
In office January 8, 1903 – January 5, 1905 | |
Lieutenant | Curtis Guild Jr. |
Preceded by | Winthrop M. Crane |
Succeeded by | William Lewis Douglas |
38th Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts | |
In office January 4, 1900 – January 8, 1903 | |
Governor | Winthrop M. Crane |
Preceded by | Winthrop M. Crane |
Succeeded by | Curtis Guild Jr. |
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives | |
In office 1894-1899 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Easton, Massachusetts | September 18, 1859
Died | June 8, 1946 Boston, Massachusetts | (aged 86)
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Clara Elizabeth Smith |
Profession | Lawyer |
John Lewis Bates (September 18, 1859 – June 8, 1946) was a lawyer and Republican politician from Massachusetts.
Bates worked to promote East Boston, securing legislative approval of the first tunnel under Boston Harbor, joining the neighborhood to the rest of the city. From 1903 to 1905, he served as the 41st governor of Massachusetts, upsetting the Republican establishment with his organizing tactics and alienating his own supporters with some of his conservative executive actions and proposals.
Later in life, he served as chair of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1917–1918.
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John Bates HD Spot
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Jonathan Sergison, architect, Sergison Bates, Londron
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Interview with John W. Bates, VIetnam War veteran. CCSU Veterans History Project
Transcription
Here's a question to ask yourself. Let's say there were two versions of you. One of you had all this great skill, all this great knowledge, all these great ideas, and a mediocre communicator. Now, let's say this you comes up against the other you that has all of this and is a phenomenal communicator. Which one do you think is going to do better in life? You can have the best ideas in the world, but if you can't communicate them to other human beings, they're just going to be great ideas in your head for the rest of eternity and it's not going to make a real difference. Here's the thing I tell people. When you're on stage, you're the ringleader. You've got to take the rudder. They've given you the floor, make it an excellent experience for them. Don't look at them and wonder what they think of you. Look at them and let them know you think they're okay. I am a keynote speaker and I do keynote presentations all over the word and also coach people in communications particularly keynote speaking, sales presentations. I am coaching actually TED speakers and then I bring that TED worthy communications into corporations as well. [wave like the Queen] When I work with executives and speakers, it's never just about communication everything's on the table all the time because life comes up in these places that are really threatening like speaking in public, or raising money, or doing communications that really matter. When you train with me, everything's on the table. We're going to be taking on your entire life through the lens of leadership and communication. It really is incredible how many people there are out there that are up to really big generous things in their life and it's just a real honor to be able to work with them and to be able to make a difference for them.
Early life and education
John Bates was born in North Easton, Massachusetts to Rev. Lewis Benton Bates, an itinerant Methodist minister, and Louisa D. (Field) Bates. He attended public school in New Bedford, Chelsea, Taunton, and eventually the Boston Latin School.
He earned an A.B. from the Methodist-affiliated Boston University in 1882 and a J.D. in 1885. Over the next decade Bates practiced law in Boston, residing in its East Boston neighborhood.
Early political career
Boston Common Council
Bates, a Republican, first served on Boston's Common Council representing. During this period, Bates built a ward-based political machine largely independent of the existing party infrastructure.[1]
Beginning in 1891, Bates began promoting connections between East Boston and the rest of the city (separated by the inner Boston Harbor). Early proposals for a bridge went nowhere, and Bates instead began working on a tunnel proposal. The proposal met opposition from Boston's leadership over its construction costs. Bates convinced Mayor Josiah Quincy to accept a toll of one cent per rider, securing agreement for its construction.
Speaker of the Massachusetts House
Bates won election to represent East Boston in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1893 and served until 1899.
From 1897 to 1899, Bates was Speaker of the House. He was elected Speaker with the support of his independent machine, without party support.[1]
Lieutenant governor
In 1899, Bates again bucked the Republican party establishment by defeating the expected nominee, Curtis Guild Jr., for the party nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts.[1] Bates was not highly thought of by the more Brahmin elements of the party establishment, but it ultimately supported his runs for lieutenant governor and governor. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, who supported Bates in 1902, believed that some of the opposition to Bates was based "on the profound idea of a certain element... 'that he was not our kind'."[2]
Governor of Massachusetts
In 1902, Bates was elected the 41st Governor, despite a significant crossover of Republicans to his Democratic opponent, William A. Gaston.[2]
During his first term, Bates stepped up enforcement of strict liquor control laws. He also generated controversy by disregarding supporters' requests and catering to the more exclusive elements of the party establishment. However, these elements only supported Bates out of party duty and were also upset by the appointment of one of his East Boston cronies as Boston police commissioner.[3]
Despite losing support from factions in his own party, Bates won reelection in 1903. His second term deepened these divisions. He proposed further amendments to Sunday entertainment laws and angered agricultural interests with a proposal for reorganizing grading and inspection of farms. He vetoed a Republican bill limiting the working hours of women and children, earning him the opposition of labor interests. He also angered veterans groups by vetoing a bill granting a gratuity to the state's surviving American Civil War veterans, which the legislature successfully overrode.[4]
In 1904, the long-planned tunnel to East Harbor was opened. It now carries the MBTA Blue Line.
In the 1904 election, Democrats nominated Brockton businessman William L. Douglas, who had nationwide name and facial recognition because his image was stamped on the shoes he sold. Douglas, who was on good terms with labor interests, financed the Democratic campaign and won a landslide victory over Bates.[5]
Later career
Bates then retired to his private law practice in Boston, largely withdrawing from political life.
He was offered the possibility of standing for Vice President of the United States in 1912, but refused.
From 1917 to 1919, he presided over the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, which enacted a number of changes to the state constitution. During World War II, he served on the state's Public Safety Commission.
Personal life
Bates married Clara Elizabeth Smith on July 12, 1887.
Bates was an active member of the Freemasons and the International Order of Odd Fellows. He was awarded an honorary law degree by Wesleyan University in 1903.[6]
He retired from his law practice in 1931, and died at his home in Allston in 1946. He was interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in Everett.[6]
See also
- 119th Massachusetts General Court (1898)
- List of speakers of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
References
Sources
- Abrams, Richard (1964). Conservatism in a Progressive Era: Massachusetts Politics 1900-1912. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
External links
- Biographical: Massachusetts (biography of Lewis through 1902)