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George D. Robinson

American politician

George D. Robinson

Summary

American politician

FieldValue
nameGeorge Dexter Robinson
imageGovGeorgeDRobinson.jpg
captionPortrait c. 1900
imagesize150px
order134th
office1Governor of Massachusetts
term_start1January 3, 1884
term_end1January 6, 1887
lieutenant1Oliver Ames
predecessor1Benjamin Butler
successor1Oliver Ames
office2Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts
term_start2March 4, 1877
term_end2January 7, 1884
predecessor2Chester W. Chapin
successor2Francis W. Rockwell
constituency211th district (1877–83)
12th district (1883–84)
office3Member of the Massachusetts Senate from the 2nd Hampden district
term_start3January 5, 1876
term_end3January 3, 1877
predecessor3Henry Fuller
successor3Henry C. Ewing
office4Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
term41874
birth_nameGeorge Washington Robinson
birth_date
birth_placeLexington, Massachusetts
death_date
death_placeChicopee, Massachusetts
partyRepublican
spouse{{plainlist
* {{marriageHannah Stevens18591864enddied}}
alma_materHarvard College
signatureGeorge D Robinson signature.png

U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts 12th district (1883–84)

George Dexter Robinson (born George Washington Robinson; January 20, 1834 – February 22, 1896) was an American lawyer and Republican politician from Chicopee, Massachusetts. After serving in the Massachusetts General Court and United States House of Representatives, Robinson served three one-year terms as Governor of Massachusetts, notably defeating Benjamin Franklin Butler in the 1883 election.

After leaving office, his most famous legal client was Lizzie Borden, notoriously accused of killing her father and stepmother. She was acquitted in a highly sensationalized trial.

Born in Lexington and educated at Harvard, Robinson taught high school before becoming a lawyer. He gained a reputation as a fine Parliamentarian while serving in Congress. As governor, he promoted the passage of civil service reform legislation and labor-friendly wage and dispute-resolution laws. He aligned with the state's industrial leaders against public health advocates, and banned discrimination in the issuance of life insurance policies. As a lawyer, he gained notoriety for Borden's defense, and was criticized for defending fraudulent fraternal benefit societies.

Early years

George Washington Robinson was born in Lexington, Massachusetts to Charles and Mary (Davis) Robinson. The son of farmers, he attended Lexington Academy and Hopkins Classical School in Cambridge, and graduated from Harvard University in 1856. While at Harvard he was admitted to the Zeta Psi fraternity. In 1855, he had his name legally changed to "George Dexter Robinson", supposedly because someone else in Lexington had a similar name to his.

Robinson as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

Although he had intended to study medicine, Robinson entered the teaching profession, serving as the principal of Chicopee High School in Chicopee, Massachusetts from 1856 to 1865. During this time, he engaged in some study of medicine. In 1865, he engaged in the study of law with his brother, and was admitted to the bar in 1866, opening a practice in Chicopee.

Robinson entered politics in 1873, winning election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives as a Republican. He was then elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1875, in each case representing Chicopee. He served on judiciary committees in both chambers, as well as a committee on constitutional amendments in the Senate. Robinson was one of a small number of legislators who refused free travel passes offered by the railroads.

In 1876, Robinson was elected to the United States House of Representatives, where he served most of four terms. He gained a reputation in the chamber as an experienced Parliamentarian and debater. He sat on a number of committees, including the House Judiciary Committee, and was considered a "doer" who moved the business of the body forward.

Governor

While serving in Congress, Robinson was nominated to run for Governor of Massachusetts in 1883, against the colorful incumbent Democrat Benjamin Butler. He ran on a platform of civil service reform (seeking to deal with issues of patronage), and defeated Butler by 10,000 votes. Robinson served three terms, winning by wider margins against other opponents. A civil service reform bill, at the time the strictest in the nation, passed in 1884. It required even laborers hired by state and municipal governments to have minimal certification from a civil service commission established for the purpose. This effectively reduced certain types of patronage dispensed by elected officials, and may have been a Republican move to curtail the growing power of predominantly Democratic Irish-American urban party bosses. An attempt to weaken the civil service reform, by exempting veterans from its requirements, was vetoed by Robinson in 1886.

One controversy that Robinson inherited from the Butler administration concerned the state's board of health, charity and lunacy. This board had been created by merging several previously independent boards, and Butler had appointed as its chairman an activist concerned with industrial pollution. Butler had made this appointment following criticism that its public health mission had been diluted by the merger. The state's textile and manufacturing interests, hostile to the board's calls for more significant pollution control legislation, prevailed on Robinson to replace the chairman with a more business-friendly choice. A petition campaign by activists followed, prompting Robinson to separate the public health functions into a separate board.

Robinson refused to run for reelection in 1886, and resumed the practice of law in Springfield. He refused an offer from Grover Cleveland of a seat on the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1887, and a seat on the Cherokee Commission from Benjamin Harrison in 1889.

Family

Robinson was married twice. The first marriage was in 1859 to Hannah Stevens, with whom he had one child before her death in 1864. He then married Susan Simonds in 1867, with whom he also had one child. Robinson was active in the Unitarian Church.

Notes

Sources

References

  1. Gleason, p. 231
  2. Baird, p. 291
  3. Gleason, p. 232
  4. He was generally regarded as a fiscal conservative. During his tenure, legislation was enacted banning discrimination in the issuance of [[life insurance]] policies. He proposed successful legislation to extend free public education to every student, and required that textbooks be provided to each student free of charge. He also signed legislation requiring that corporations pay workers weekly, and established the state's first Board of Arbitration, which resolved disputes between workers and employers.Rundell, p. 655
  5. Miller, pp. 341-354
  6. ''The Nation'', June 23, 1887
  7. Cumbler, pp. 120-125
  8. "American Antiquarian Society Members Directory".
  9. Dunn, p. 362
  10. Bennett, p. 518
  11. Bennett, pp. 518-520
  12. Massachusetts Insurance Department (1888), p. xxiii
  13. Massachusetts Insurance Department (1894), pp. xlvi-xlvii
  14. and the state insurance commissioner criticized Robinson for his defense of the organization in his reports, which he charged exacerbated the financial losses incurred by Iron Hall and similar organizations.Massachusetts Insurance Department (1884), p. xlvi
  15. See Bennett for descriptions and tactics used by operators of these schemes.
  16. {{CongBio. R000335
  17. "The Firm". Robinson Donovan P.C..
  18. Rundell, p. 654
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