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Charles G. Dawes

Charles Gates Dawes (August 27, 1865 – April 23, 1951) was an American diplomat and Republican politician who was the 30th vice president of the United States from 1925 to 1929 under Calvin Coolidge. He was a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925 for his work on the Dawes Plan for World War I reparations.

Charles G. Dawes
Dawes, c. 1920s
30th Vice President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1925 – March 4, 1929
PresidentCalvin Coolidge
Preceded byCalvin Coolidge
Succeeded byCharles Curtis
United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom
In office
June 15, 1929 – December 30, 1931
PresidentHerbert Hoover
Preceded byAlanson B. Houghton
Succeeded byAndrew Mellon
1st Director of the Bureau of the Budget
In office
June 23, 1921 – June 30, 1922
PresidentWarren G. Harding
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byHerbert Lord
10th Comptroller of the Currency
In office
January 1, 1898 – September 30, 1901
PresidentWilliam McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt
Preceded byJames H. Eckels
Succeeded byWilliam Ridgely
Personal details
Born
Charles Gates Dawes

(1865-08-27)August 27, 1865
Marietta, Ohio, U.S.
DiedApril 23, 1951(1951-04-23) (aged 85)
Evanston, Illinois, U.S.
Resting placeRosehill Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
(m. 1889)
Children4
EducationMarietta College (AB)
University of Cincinnati (LLB)
Civilian awardsNobel Peace Prize
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1917–1919
RankBrigadier general
UnitAmerican Expeditionary Forces
Liquidation Commission of the War Department
Battles/warsWorld War I
Military awardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal

Born in Marietta, Ohio, Dawes attended Cincinnati Law School before beginning a legal career in Lincoln, Nebraska. After serving as a gas plant executive, he managed William McKinley's 1896 presidential campaign in Illinois. After the election, McKinley appointed Dawes as the Comptroller of the Currency. He remained in that position until 1901 before forming the Central Trust Company of Illinois. Dawes served as a general during World War I and was the chairman of the general purchasing board for the American Expeditionary Forces. In 1921, President Warren G. Harding appointed Dawes as the first director of the Bureau of the Budget. Dawes served on the Allied Reparations Commission, where he helped formulate the Dawes Plan to aid the struggling German economy.

The 1924 Republican National Convention nominated President Calvin Coolidge without opposition. After former Governor of Illinois Frank Lowden declined the vice-presidential nomination, the convention chose Dawes as Coolidge's running mate. The Republican ticket won the 1924 presidential election, and Dawes was sworn in as vice president in 1925. Dawes helped pass the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill in Congress, but President Coolidge vetoed it. Dawes was a candidate for renomination at the 1928 Republican National Convention, but Coolidge's opposition to Dawes helped ensure that Charles Curtis was nominated instead. In 1929, President Herbert Hoover appointed Dawes to be the Ambassador to the United Kingdom. Dawes also briefly led the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which organized a government response to the Great Depression. He resigned from that position in 1932 to return to banking, and died in 1951 of coronary thrombosis.

Early life and family edit

 
From 1909 to 1951, Charles G. Dawes lived in this house at 225 Greenwood St. in Evanston, Illinois, which was built in 1894 by Robert Sheppard. The house is a National Historic Landmark.

Dawes was born in Marietta, Ohio, in Washington County, on August 27 1865. son of Civil War General Rufus Dawes and his wife Mary Beman Gates.[1] Rufus had commanded the 6th Wisconsin Regiment of the Iron Brigade from 1863 to 1864 during the American Civil War. His uncle Ephraim C. Dawes was a major who served under Ulysses S. Grant at the Shiloh and Siege of Vicksburg, and was severely wounded at the Battle of Dallas, Georgia, in May 1864.[2]

Dawes's brothers were Rufus C. Dawes, Beman Gates Dawes, and Henry May Dawes, all prominent businessmen or politicians. He had two sisters, Mary Frances Dawes Beach, and Betsey Gates Dawes Hoyt.[3]

Dawes was a descendant of Edward Doty, a passenger on the Mayflower, and William Dawes who rode with Paul Revere to warn American colonists of the advancing British army at the outbreak of the American Revolution.

Dawes married Caro Blymyer on January 24, 1889.[4] They had a son, Rufus Fearing (1890–1912), and a daughter, Carolyn. They later adopted two children, Dana and Virginia.[5]

Education edit

He graduated from Marietta College in 1884[6] and Cincinnati Law School in 1886.[7] His fraternity was Delta Upsilon.[8]

Early business career edit

Dawes was admitted to the bar in Nebraska, and he practiced in Lincoln, Nebraska, from 1887 to 1894.[6][9] When Lieutenant John Pershing, the future army general, was military instructor at the University of Nebraska he and Dawes met and formed a lifelong friendship.[10] Pershing also received a law degree at Nebraska and proposed leaving the army to go into private practice with Dawes, who cautioned him against giving up the regular army pay for the uncertainty of legal remuneration.[11] Dawes also met Democratic Congressman William Jennings Bryan. The two became friends despite their disagreement over free silver policies.[12]

Dawes relocated from Lincoln to Chicago during the Panic of 1893.[12] In 1894, Dawes acquired interests in several Midwestern gas plants. He became the president of both the La Crosse Gas Light Company in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and the Northwestern Gas Light and Coke Company in Evanston, Illinois.[5]

Interest in music edit

Dawes was a self-taught pianist, flutist and composer. His composition Melody in A Major became a well-known piano and violin piece in 1912.[13] Marie Edwards made a popular arrangement of the work in 1921.[14] Also, in 1921, it was arranged for a small orchestra by Adolf G. Hoffmann.[15] Melody in A Major was played at many official functions that Dawes attended.[16]

In 1951, Carl Sigman added lyrics to Melody in A Major, transforming it into the song "It's All in the Game".[16] Tommy Edwards's recording of "It's All in the Game" was a number-one hit on the American Billboard record chart for six weeks in 1958.[17] Edwards's version of the song became number one on the United Kingdom chart that year.[18]

Since then, it has become a pop standard. Numerous artists have recorded versions, including Cliff Richard, the Four Tops, Isaac Hayes, Jackie DeShannon, Van Morrison, Nat "King" Cole, Brook Benton, Elton John, Mel Carter, Donny and Marie Osmond, Barry Manilow, Merle Haggard, and Keith Jarrett.

Dawes is the only vice president[clarification needed] to be credited with a number-one pop hit.[16] Dawes and Sonny Bono are the only people credited with a number-one pop hit who were also members of the United States Senate or House of Representatives.[19] Dawes and Bob Dylan (as a writer) are the only persons credited with a number-one pop hit to have also won a Nobel Prize.[a]

Dawes was a brother of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia.[20]

Early political career edit

Dawes's prominent positions in business caught the attention of Republican party leaders. They asked Dawes to manage the Illinois portion of William McKinley's bid for the Presidency of the United States in 1896.[21] Following McKinley's election, Dawes was named Comptroller of the Currency, United States Department of the Treasury. Serving in that position from 1898 to 1901, he collected more than $25 million from banks that had failed during the Panic of 1893 and changed banking practices to try to prevent another panic.[citation needed]

In October 1901, Dawes left the Department of the Treasury to pursue a U.S. Senate seat from Illinois. He thought that, with the help of the McKinley Administration, he could win it. McKinley was assassinated and his successor, President Theodore Roosevelt, preferred Dawes's opponent.[22] In 1902, following this unsuccessful attempt at legislative office, Dawes declared that he was done with politics. He organized the Central Trust Company of Illinois, where he served as its president until 1921.[5]

On September 5, 1912, Dawes's 21-year-old son Rufus drowned in Geneva Lake,[23] while on summer break from Princeton University. In his memory, Dawes created homeless shelters in both Chicago and Boston[24] and financed the construction of a dormitory at his son's alma mater, the Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville, New Jersey.[25]

World War I edit

 
Dawes in uniform, 1918

Dawes helped support the first Anglo-French Loan to the Entente powers of $500 million. Dawes's support was important because the House of Morgan needed public support from a non-Morgan banker. The Morgan banker Thomas W. Lamont said that Dawes's support would "make a position for him in the banking world such as he otherwise could never hope to make".[26] (Loans were seen as possibly violating neutrality, and Wilson was still resisting permitting loans.)

During WWI, Dawes was commissioned as a major on June 11, 1917, in the 17th Engineers. He was subsequently promoted to lieutenant colonel (July 17, 1917), and colonel (January 16, 1918). In October 1918, he was promoted to brigadier general.[27] From August 1917 to August 1919, Dawes served in France during WWI as chairman of the general purchasing board for the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF). His proposal to Gen. Pershing was adopted informed the Military Board of Allied Supply, on which he served as the American delegate in 1918. When the war ended in November, he became a member of the Liquidation Commission of the United States War Department. He was decorated with the Distinguished Service Medal[28] and the French Croix de Guerre in recognition of his service. He returned to the US aboard the SS Leviathan in August 1919.[29] Dawes published a memoir of his World War I service, A Journal of the Great War, 1921.

In February 1921, the U.S. Senate held hearings on war expenditures. During heated testimony, Dawes burst out, "Hell and Maria, we weren't trying to keep a set of books over there, we were trying to win a war!"[30] He was later known as "Hell and Maria Dawes" (although he always insisted the expression was "Helen Maria", an exclamation he claimed was common in Nebraska).[31] Dawes resigned from the Army in 1919[5] and became a member of the American Legion.

1920s: Financing Europe and the Nobel Peace Prize edit

He supported Frank Lowden at the 1920 Republican National Convention, but the presidential nomination went to Warren G. Harding.[12] When the Bureau of the Budget was created, he was appointed in 1921 by President Harding as its first director. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover appointed him to the Allied Reparations Commission in 1923. Dawes chaired the group that devised the solution to the European crisis: through the Dawes Plan, American banks loaned large sums of money to Germany. The loans helped Germany's industrial production to recover and the government to make reparation payments to France and Belgium as required by the Versailles Treaty. France and Belgium in turn agreed to withdraw the troops that had been occupying the Ruhr since January 1923. In 1929 the Reparations Commission under Owen Young replaced the plan with the more permanent Young Plan, which reduced the total amount of reparations and called for the removal of occupying forces from the Rhineland.[32][33] For his work on the Dawes Plan and the resulting reduction of tensions between France and Germany, Dawes shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925.[5][34]

Vice presidency (1925–1929) edit

 
Dawes (right) and Calvin Coolidge

I should hate to think that the Senate was as tired of me at the beginning of my service as I am of the Senate at the end.

— Charles G. Dawes[35]

At the 1924 Republican National Convention, President Calvin Coolidge was selected almost without opposition to be the Republican presidential nominee.[36] The vice-presidential nominee was more contested. Illinois Governor Frank Lowden was nominated, but declined. Coolidge's next choice was Idaho Senator William Borah, who also declined the nomination. The Republican National Chairman, William Butler, wanted to nominate then-Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover, but he was insufficiently popular. Eventually, the delegates chose Dawes. Coolidge quickly accepted the delegates' choice and felt that Dawes would be loyal to him and make a strong addition to his campaign.[36]

Dawes traveled throughout the country during the campaign, giving speeches to bolster the Republican ticket. On August 22, Dawes would appear at a rally located in Augusta, Maine on the behalf of Republican candidate for Governor Ralph Owen Brewster, who was accused by his opponent William Robinson Pattangall of being backed by the Ku Klux Klan and having sympathies for them. Dawes, who was challenged by Pattangall to talk on the issue, gave a speech attacking the Klan and its religious and racial prejudice rhetoric (Dawes was however careful on how he talked about race).[37] He frequently attacked Progressive nominee Robert M. La Follette as a dangerous radical who sympathized with the Bolsheviks.[12] The Coolidge-Dawes ticket was elected on November 4, 1924, with more popular votes than the candidates of the Democratic and Progressive parties combined.[38] The inauguration was held on March 4, 1925.[39]

Speech to Senate edit

When Dawes took the oath on March 4, he would take action and infamously go on a tangent against the Senate's Filibuster. In the speech, Dawes criticized rule XXII, calling it "undemocratic" and noted how it was easily taken advantage of due to its two-thirds voting procedure. Through most of the speech, Dawes pointed at specific senators and repeatedly slammed his fist on a table, Chief Justice William Howard Taft writing to his son that the vice president had "made a monkey out of himself." Alongside annoying the entire Senate with a speech that left many shocked, Dawes ended up irritating them again that same day, by having the senators be sworn in one by one (usually they would take the oath in groups). Dawes would end up stealing the thunder from Coolidge that day, many in the press afterwards made a joke out of Dawes, Coolidge was very upset on how the vice president was starting off his term.[40]

Nomination of Charles B. Warren edit

On March 10, the Senate debated the president's nomination of Charles B. Warren to be United States Attorney General. In the wake of the Teapot Dome scandal and other scandals, Democrats and Progressive Republicans objected to the nomination because of Warren's close association with the Sugar Trust. At midday, six speakers were scheduled to address Warren's nomination. Desiring to take a break for a nap, Dawes consulted the majority and minority leaders, who assured him that no vote would be taken that afternoon. After Dawes left the Senate, all but one of the scheduled speakers decided against making formal remarks, and a vote was taken. When it became apparent that the vote would be tied, Republican leaders hastily called Dawes at the Willard Hotel, and he immediately left for the Capitol. The first vote was 40-40, a tie which Dawes could have broken in Warren's favor. While waiting for Dawes to arrive, the only Democratic senator who had voted for Warren switched his vote. The nomination then failed 41-39—the first such rejection of a president's nominee in nearly 60 years.[35] This incident was chronicled in a derisive poem, based on the Longfellow poem "Paul Revere's Ride"; it began with the line, "Come gather round children and hold your applause for the afternoon ride of Charlie Dawes." The choice of poem was based on Charles Dawes being descended from William Dawes, who rode with Paul Revere.[citation needed]

Dawes and Coolidge became alienated from one another. Dawes declined to attend Cabinet meetings and annoyed Coolidge with his attack on the Senate filibuster. Dawes championed the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill, which sought to alleviate the 1920s farm crisis by having the government buy surplus farm produce and sell that surplus in foreign markets. Dawes helped ensure the passage of the bill through Congress, but President Coolidge vetoed it.[12]

In 1927, Coolidge announced that he would not seek re-election. Dawes again favored Frank Lowden at the 1928 Republican National Convention, but the convention chose Herbert Hoover.[12] Rumors circulated about Dawes being chosen as Hoover's running mate. Coolidge made it known that he would consider the renomination of Dawes as vice president to be an insult. Charles Curtis of Kansas, known for his skills in collaboration, was chosen as Hoover's running mate.[41]

Post-vice presidency (1929–1951) edit

Court of St. James's and the RFC edit

After Dawes completed his term as vice president, he served as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom (known formally as the Court of St. James's) from 1929 to 1931.[42] Overall, Dawes was an effective ambassador, as George V's son, the future Edward VIII, later confirmed in his memoirs.[citation needed] Dawes was rather rough-hewn for some of his duties, disliking presenting American débutantes to the King. On his first visit to the royal court, in deference to American public opinion, he refused to wear the customary Court dress, which then included knee breeches. This episode was said to upset the King, who had been prevented by illness from attending the event.

As the Great Depression continued to ravage the US, Dawes accepted President Herbert Hoover's appeal to leave diplomatic office and head the newly created Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC). After a few months, Dawes resigned from the RFC. As chairman of the failing Central Republic Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, he felt obligated to work for its rescue. Political opponents alleged that, under Dawes's leadership, the RFC had given preferential treatment to his bank. This marked the end of Dawes's career in public service. For the 1932 election, Hoover considered the possibility of adding Dawes to the ticket in place of Curtis, but Dawes declined the potential offer.[43]

Later in 1932, Dawes and associates formed the City National Bank and Trust Co. to take over the deposits of the failed Central Republic Bank and Trust Company.[44] In 1936, Republican congressional leaders informally approached Dawes about the possibility of heading up their presidential ticket at that year's presidential election, hoping for a candidate associated with the prosperous Coolidge years, but Dawes had no interest in returning to front-line politics; the (ultimately unsuccessful) ticket would instead be headed by Alf Landon.[43]

Later life edit

 
Dawes mausoleum at Rosehill Cemetery

Dawes served for nearly two decades as chairman of the board of City National from 1932 until his death.[45] He died on April 23, 1951, at his Evanston home from coronary thrombosis at the age of 85.[46] He is interred in Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago.[47]

Personal life edit

Dawes belonged to several lineage societies and veterans' organizations. These included the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Sons of the American Revolution, General Society of Colonial Wars, American Legion, and Forty and Eight.[48] Dawes was also a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts from 1925 until his death in 1951[49]

Honors edit

A Chicago public school located at 3810 W 81st Place is named in his honor, as are an Evanston public school at 440 Dodge Avenue and Evanston's Dawes Park at 1700 Sheridan Road.

United States military awards edit

Distinguished Service Medal citation:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal to Brigadier General Charles G. Dawes, United States Army, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States, in a duty of great responsibility during World War I. General Dawes rendered most conspicuous services in the organization of the General Purchasing Board as General Purchasing Agent of the American Expeditionary Forces and as the Representative of the U.S. Army on the Military Board of Allied Supply. His rare abilities, sound business judgment, and aggressive energy were invaluable in securing needed supplies for the Allied armies in Europe. (War Department, General Orders No. 12 (1919))

Foreign honors edit

Legacy edit

According to Annette Dunlap, Dawes was:

a self-made man who valued hard work and thriftiness tempered with Christian generosity. He spent his life promoting solid Republican values of small government with restrained budgets. Franklin Roosevelt’s philosophy of big government spending was anathema to him.[51]

In 1944, he bequeathed his lakeshore home in Evanston to Northwestern University for the Evanston Historical Society (later renamed the Evanston History Center). Dawes lived in the house until his death. The Dawes family continued to occupy it until the death of Mrs. Dawes in 1957. Since then, the Evanston History Center operates out of the house and manages it as a museum. Designated a National Historic Landmark, the Charles G. Dawes House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Selected writings edit

  • Dawes, C. G. (1894). The Banking System of the United States and Its Relation to the Money and the Business of the Country. Chicago: Rand McNally.
  • ———— "The Sherman Anti-Trust Law: Why It has Failed and Why It Should Be Amended". The North American Review 183.597 (1906): 189–194.
  • ———— (1915). Essays and Speeches. New York: Houghton.
  • ———— (1921). Journal of the Great War. 2 vols. New York: Houghton. online copy vol 1; also online copy v2
  • ———— (1923). The First Year of the Budget of the United States. New York: Harper. online copy
  • ———— (1935). Notes as Vice President, 1928–1929. Boston: Little, Brown. online copy
  • ———— (1937). How Long Prosperity? New York: Marquis.
  • ———— (1939). Journal as Ambassador to Great Britain. New York: Macmillan. online copy
  • ———— (1939). A Journal of Reparations. New York: Macmillan. online copy
  • ———— (1950). A Journal of the McKinley Years. Bascom N. Timmons (Ed.). La Grange, IL: Tower.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dylan, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016, wrote "Mr. Tambourine Man", a No. 1 hit for the Byrds.

References edit

  1. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. (2016). Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. Northwestern University Press and the Evanston History Center. p. 12. ISBN 9780810134195.
  2. ^ Magnusen, Steve - cite book title: To My Best Girl, 2020, GoToPublish.
  3. ^ Gates Dawes Ancestral Lines
  4. ^ . www.adherents.com. Archived from the original on February 15, 2006. Retrieved June 7, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998). Generals in Khaki. Raleigh, NC: Pentland Press, Inc. p. 103. ISBN 1571970886.
  6. ^ a b Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. p. 17.
  7. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. p. 18.
  8. ^ Johnson, Rossiter, ed. (February 1884). "Alumni of Delta U". The Delta Upsilon Quarterly. Indianapolis, IN: Delta Upsilon Fraternity. p. 48 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. pp. 20–38.
  10. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. pp. 24–25.
  11. ^ Smythe, Donald (1973). Guerrilla Warrior: The Early Life of John J. Pershing. Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 34.
  12. ^ a b c d e f . US Senate. Archived from the original on November 6, 2014. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  13. ^ Dawes, Charles Gates. Melody [in A major] for violin with piano acc. Chicago: Gamble Hinged Music, 1912. OCLC 21885776
  14. ^ Dawes, Charles Gates, and Marie Edwards. Melody. Chicago, Ill: Gamble Hinged Music Co, 1921. OCLC 10115887
  15. ^ Dawes, Charles Gates, and Adolf G. Hoffmann. Melody, small orchestra. Chicago: Gamble Hinged Music Co, 1921. OCLC 46679677
  16. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on July 26, 2015. Retrieved January 26, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ Joel Whitburn, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, revised and enlarged 6th edition (New York: Billboard Publications, 1996), 201.
  18. ^ (Hatfield 1997: 360)
  19. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–2004. Record Research. p. 539.
  20. ^ "The Vice President Who Wrote a Hit Song". August 16, 2011.
  21. ^ Davis, Jr., Henry Blaine (1998). Generals in Khaki. Pentland Press, Inc. p. 81. ISBN 1571970886. OCLC 40298151
  22. ^ (Waller 1998: 274)
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on January 9, 2021. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  24. ^ "Let's Talk It Over". The National Magazine. 46 (September): 905. 1917. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  25. ^ "Dawes House Dedicated.; Lawrenceville School Building Partly Financed by Ambassador". The New York Times. November 29, 1929.
  26. ^ Merchants of Death Revisited Mises Institute p. 61
  27. ^ The New York Times. October 4, 1918.
  28. ^ "Valor awards for Charles G. Dawes".
  29. ^ The New York Times. August 7, 1919.
  30. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Dawes Gates: a Life. p. 144.
  31. ^ "Vice President Dawes". Forbes Library. Retrieved July 12, 2018.
  32. ^ Dunlap, pp. 214–15.
  33. ^ Stephen A. Schuker, The End of French Predominance in Europe: The Financial Crisis of 1924 and the Adoption of the Dawes Plan (U of North Carolina Press, 1976).
  34. ^ "Charles G. Dawes". The Nobel Prize. Retrieved October 20, 2023.
  35. ^ a b Hatfield, M. O. (1997). Vice Presidents of the United States, 1789–1993. Senate Historical Office. Washington: United States Government Printing Office
  36. ^ a b Hatfield 1997: 363
  37. ^ Dunlap, Annette (September 15, 2016). Charles Gates Dawes: A Life. Northwestern University Press. pp. 192–195. ISBN 978-0-8101-3419-5.
  38. ^ Hatfield 1997: 364
  39. ^ Reviews, C.T.I (October 16, 2016). American Foreign Relations, A History. p. 193. ISBN 9781619066649. Retrieved January 26, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  40. ^ Dunlap, Annette (September 15, 2016). Charles Gates Dawes: A Life. Northwestern University Press. pp. 202–204. ISBN 978-0-8101-3419-5.
  41. ^ Mencken, Henry Louis; George Jean Nathan (1929). The American Mercury. p. 404.
  42. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. pp. 221–44.
  43. ^ a b Witcover, Jules (2014). The American Vice Presidency. Smithsonian Books. p. 296.
  44. ^ "Dawes's New Bank Opens in Chicago; City National and Trust Has $4,000,000 Capital and $1,000,000 Surplus. In Old Bank's Offices Institution Formed by Taking Over Some Departments of Central Republic". The New York Times. October 7, 1932.
  45. ^ . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Archived from the original on September 15, 1999. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  46. ^ "Charles G. Dawes, Ex-Vice President, Dies (April 24, 1951)". September 15, 2023.
  47. ^ Rumore, Kori (October 4, 2022). "Buried in Chicago: Where the famous rest in peace". Chicago Tribune.
  48. ^ "The What and the Why of the Forty and Eight". The American Legion Weekly. Vol. 7, no. 38. Indianapolis, Indiana: The American Legion. September 18, 1925. p. 7. ISSN 0886-1234 – via Internet Archive.
  49. ^ History of the AHAC, Boston, MA (membership roles and accession card)
  50. ^ Dunlap, Annette B. Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. pp. 178–79.
  51. ^ Cited in Indiana Magazine of History, (2018) 114(1) p. 76.

Bibliography edit

  • Dunlap, Annette B. (2016). Charles Gates Dawes: a Life. Northwestern University Press and the Evanston History Center. ISBN 9780810134195. online review of scholarly biography
  • Goedeken, Edward A. "Charles Dawes and the Military Board of Allied Supply". Journal of Military History 50.1 (1986): 1–6.
  • Goedecken, Edward A. (1985). "A Banker at War: The World War I Experiences of Charles Gates Dawes". Illinois Historical Journal. 78 (3): 195–206. JSTOR 40191858.
  • Goedecken, Edward (November 1987). "Charles G. Dawes Establishes the Bureau of the Budget, 1921-1922". The Historian. 50 (1): 40–53. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1987.tb00734.x. JSTOR 24446946.
  • Haberman, F. W. (Ed.). (1972). Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901–1925. Amsterdam: Elsevier Publishing.
  • Hatfield, Mark O. (1997). "Vice Presidents of the United States Charles G. Dawes (1925–1929)" (PDF). U.S. Government Printing Office. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  • Pixton, John E. "Charles G. Dawes and the McKinley Campaign". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 48.3 (1955): 283–306.
  • Pixton, J. E. (1952). The Early Career of Charles G. Dawes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Sherman, Richard G. (1965). "Charles G Dawes, a Nebraska Businessman, 1887-1894: The Making of an Entrepreneur" (PDF). Nebraska History. 46: 193–207. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.* Timmons, B. N. (1953). Portrait of an American: Charles G. Dawes. New York: Holt; popular biography online copy
  • Waller, R. A. (1998). The Vice Presidents: A Biographical Dictionary. Purcell, L. E. (Ed.). New York: Facts On File.
  • Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998). Generals in Khaki. Raleigh, NC: Pentland Press. ISBN 1571970886. OCLC 40298151.
  • Zabecki, David T.; Mastriano, Douglas V., eds. (2020). Pershing's Lieutenants: American Military Leadership in World War I. New York, NY: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-3863-6.

External links edit

Government offices
Preceded by Comptroller of the Currency
1898–1901
Succeeded by
New office President of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation
1932
Succeeded by
Political offices
New office Director of the Bureau of the Budget
1921–1922
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice President of the United States
1925–1929
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States
1924
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Vacant
Title last held by
Fridtjof Nansen
Laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize
1925
With: Austen Chamberlain
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom
1929–1931
Succeeded by

charles, dawes, charles, gates, dawes, august, 1865, april, 1951, american, diplomat, republican, politician, 30th, vice, president, united, states, from, 1925, 1929, under, calvin, coolidge, recipient, nobel, peace, prize, 1925, work, dawes, plan, world, repa. Charles Gates Dawes August 27 1865 April 23 1951 was an American diplomat and Republican politician who was the 30th vice president of the United States from 1925 to 1929 under Calvin Coolidge He was a co recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925 for his work on the Dawes Plan for World War I reparations Charles G DawesDawes c 1920s30th Vice President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1925 March 4 1929PresidentCalvin CoolidgePreceded byCalvin CoolidgeSucceeded byCharles CurtisUnited States Ambassador to the United KingdomIn office June 15 1929 December 30 1931PresidentHerbert HooverPreceded byAlanson B HoughtonSucceeded byAndrew Mellon1st Director of the Bureau of the BudgetIn office June 23 1921 June 30 1922PresidentWarren G HardingPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byHerbert Lord10th Comptroller of the CurrencyIn office January 1 1898 September 30 1901PresidentWilliam McKinleyTheodore RooseveltPreceded byJames H EckelsSucceeded byWilliam RidgelyPersonal detailsBornCharles Gates Dawes 1865 08 27 August 27 1865Marietta Ohio U S DiedApril 23 1951 1951 04 23 aged 85 Evanston Illinois U S Resting placeRosehill CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseCaro Blymyer m 1889 wbr Children4EducationMarietta College AB University of Cincinnati LLB Civilian awardsNobel Peace PrizeSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service1917 1919RankBrigadier generalUnitAmerican Expeditionary ForcesLiquidation Commission of the War DepartmentBattles warsWorld War IMilitary awardsArmy Distinguished Service MedalBorn in Marietta Ohio Dawes attended Cincinnati Law School before beginning a legal career in Lincoln Nebraska After serving as a gas plant executive he managed William McKinley s 1896 presidential campaign in Illinois After the election McKinley appointed Dawes as the Comptroller of the Currency He remained in that position until 1901 before forming the Central Trust Company of Illinois Dawes served as a general during World War I and was the chairman of the general purchasing board for the American Expeditionary Forces In 1921 President Warren G Harding appointed Dawes as the first director of the Bureau of the Budget Dawes served on the Allied Reparations Commission where he helped formulate the Dawes Plan to aid the struggling German economy The 1924 Republican National Convention nominated President Calvin Coolidge without opposition After former Governor of Illinois Frank Lowden declined the vice presidential nomination the convention chose Dawes as Coolidge s running mate The Republican ticket won the 1924 presidential election and Dawes was sworn in as vice president in 1925 Dawes helped pass the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill in Congress but President Coolidge vetoed it Dawes was a candidate for renomination at the 1928 Republican National Convention but Coolidge s opposition to Dawes helped ensure that Charles Curtis was nominated instead In 1929 President Herbert Hoover appointed Dawes to be the Ambassador to the United Kingdom Dawes also briefly led the Reconstruction Finance Corporation which organized a government response to the Great Depression He resigned from that position in 1932 to return to banking and died in 1951 of coronary thrombosis Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Education 3 Early business career 4 Interest in music 5 Early political career 6 World War I 7 1920s Financing Europe and the Nobel Peace Prize 8 Vice presidency 1925 1929 8 1 Speech to Senate 8 2 Nomination of Charles B Warren 9 Post vice presidency 1929 1951 9 1 Court of St James s and the RFC 10 Later life 11 Personal life 12 Honors 12 1 United States military awards 12 2 Foreign honors 13 Legacy 14 Selected writings 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 External linksEarly life and family edit nbsp From 1909 to 1951 Charles G Dawes lived in this house at 225 Greenwood St in Evanston Illinois which was built in 1894 by Robert Sheppard The house is a National Historic Landmark Dawes was born in Marietta Ohio in Washington County on August 27 1865 son of Civil War General Rufus Dawes and his wife Mary Beman Gates 1 Rufus had commanded the 6th Wisconsin Regiment of the Iron Brigade from 1863 to 1864 during the American Civil War His uncle Ephraim C Dawes was a major who served under Ulysses S Grant at the Shiloh and Siege of Vicksburg and was severely wounded at the Battle of Dallas Georgia in May 1864 2 Dawes s brothers were Rufus C Dawes Beman Gates Dawes and Henry May Dawes all prominent businessmen or politicians He had two sisters Mary Frances Dawes Beach and Betsey Gates Dawes Hoyt 3 Dawes was a descendant of Edward Doty a passenger on the Mayflower and William Dawes who rode with Paul Revere to warn American colonists of the advancing British army at the outbreak of the American Revolution Dawes married Caro Blymyer on January 24 1889 4 They had a son Rufus Fearing 1890 1912 and a daughter Carolyn They later adopted two children Dana and Virginia 5 Education editHe graduated from Marietta College in 1884 6 and Cincinnati Law School in 1886 7 His fraternity was Delta Upsilon 8 Early business career editDawes was admitted to the bar in Nebraska and he practiced in Lincoln Nebraska from 1887 to 1894 6 9 When Lieutenant John Pershing the future army general was military instructor at the University of Nebraska he and Dawes met and formed a lifelong friendship 10 Pershing also received a law degree at Nebraska and proposed leaving the army to go into private practice with Dawes who cautioned him against giving up the regular army pay for the uncertainty of legal remuneration 11 Dawes also met Democratic Congressman William Jennings Bryan The two became friends despite their disagreement over free silver policies 12 Dawes relocated from Lincoln to Chicago during the Panic of 1893 12 In 1894 Dawes acquired interests in several Midwestern gas plants He became the president of both the La Crosse Gas Light Company in La Crosse Wisconsin and the Northwestern Gas Light and Coke Company in Evanston Illinois 5 Interest in music editDawes was a self taught pianist flutist and composer His composition Melody in A Major became a well known piano and violin piece in 1912 13 Marie Edwards made a popular arrangement of the work in 1921 14 Also in 1921 it was arranged for a small orchestra by Adolf G Hoffmann 15 Melody in A Major was played at many official functions that Dawes attended 16 In 1951 Carl Sigman added lyrics to Melody in A Major transforming it into the song It s All in the Game 16 Tommy Edwards s recording of It s All in the Game was a number one hit on the American Billboard record chart for six weeks in 1958 17 Edwards s version of the song became number one on the United Kingdom chart that year 18 Since then it has become a pop standard Numerous artists have recorded versions including Cliff Richard the Four Tops Isaac Hayes Jackie DeShannon Van Morrison Nat King Cole Brook Benton Elton John Mel Carter Donny and Marie Osmond Barry Manilow Merle Haggard and Keith Jarrett Dawes is the only vice president clarification needed to be credited with a number one pop hit 16 Dawes and Sonny Bono are the only people credited with a number one pop hit who were also members of the United States Senate or House of Representatives 19 Dawes and Bob Dylan as a writer are the only persons credited with a number one pop hit to have also won a Nobel Prize a Dawes was a brother of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia 20 Early political career editDawes s prominent positions in business caught the attention of Republican party leaders They asked Dawes to manage the Illinois portion of William McKinley s bid for the Presidency of the United States in 1896 21 Following McKinley s election Dawes was named Comptroller of the Currency United States Department of the Treasury Serving in that position from 1898 to 1901 he collected more than 25 million from banks that had failed during the Panic of 1893 and changed banking practices to try to prevent another panic citation needed In October 1901 Dawes left the Department of the Treasury to pursue a U S Senate seat from Illinois He thought that with the help of the McKinley Administration he could win it McKinley was assassinated and his successor President Theodore Roosevelt preferred Dawes s opponent 22 In 1902 following this unsuccessful attempt at legislative office Dawes declared that he was done with politics He organized the Central Trust Company of Illinois where he served as its president until 1921 5 On September 5 1912 Dawes s 21 year old son Rufus drowned in Geneva Lake 23 while on summer break from Princeton University In his memory Dawes created homeless shelters in both Chicago and Boston 24 and financed the construction of a dormitory at his son s alma mater the Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville New Jersey 25 World War I edit nbsp Dawes in uniform 1918Dawes helped support the first Anglo French Loan to the Entente powers of 500 million Dawes s support was important because the House of Morgan needed public support from a non Morgan banker The Morgan banker Thomas W Lamont said that Dawes s support would make a position for him in the banking world such as he otherwise could never hope to make 26 Loans were seen as possibly violating neutrality and Wilson was still resisting permitting loans During WWI Dawes was commissioned as a major on June 11 1917 in the 17th Engineers He was subsequently promoted to lieutenant colonel July 17 1917 and colonel January 16 1918 In October 1918 he was promoted to brigadier general 27 From August 1917 to August 1919 Dawes served in France during WWI as chairman of the general purchasing board for the American Expeditionary Forces AEF His proposal to Gen Pershing was adopted informed the Military Board of Allied Supply on which he served as the American delegate in 1918 When the war ended in November he became a member of the Liquidation Commission of the United States War Department He was decorated with the Distinguished Service Medal 28 and the French Croix de Guerre in recognition of his service He returned to the US aboard the SS Leviathan in August 1919 29 Dawes published a memoir of his World War I service A Journal of the Great War 1921 In February 1921 the U S Senate held hearings on war expenditures During heated testimony Dawes burst out Hell and Maria we weren t trying to keep a set of books over there we were trying to win a war 30 He was later known as Hell and Maria Dawes although he always insisted the expression was Helen Maria an exclamation he claimed was common in Nebraska 31 Dawes resigned from the Army in 1919 5 and became a member of the American Legion 1920s Financing Europe and the Nobel Peace Prize editHe supported Frank Lowden at the 1920 Republican National Convention but the presidential nomination went to Warren G Harding 12 When the Bureau of the Budget was created he was appointed in 1921 by President Harding as its first director Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover appointed him to the Allied Reparations Commission in 1923 Dawes chaired the group that devised the solution to the European crisis through the Dawes Plan American banks loaned large sums of money to Germany The loans helped Germany s industrial production to recover and the government to make reparation payments to France and Belgium as required by the Versailles Treaty France and Belgium in turn agreed to withdraw the troops that had been occupying the Ruhr since January 1923 In 1929 the Reparations Commission under Owen Young replaced the plan with the more permanent Young Plan which reduced the total amount of reparations and called for the removal of occupying forces from the Rhineland 32 33 For his work on the Dawes Plan and the resulting reduction of tensions between France and Germany Dawes shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925 5 34 Vice presidency 1925 1929 edit nbsp Dawes right and Calvin CoolidgeI should hate to think that the Senate was as tired of me at the beginning of my service as I am of the Senate at the end Charles G Dawes 35 At the 1924 Republican National Convention President Calvin Coolidge was selected almost without opposition to be the Republican presidential nominee 36 The vice presidential nominee was more contested Illinois Governor Frank Lowden was nominated but declined Coolidge s next choice was Idaho Senator William Borah who also declined the nomination The Republican National Chairman William Butler wanted to nominate then Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover but he was insufficiently popular Eventually the delegates chose Dawes Coolidge quickly accepted the delegates choice and felt that Dawes would be loyal to him and make a strong addition to his campaign 36 Dawes traveled throughout the country during the campaign giving speeches to bolster the Republican ticket On August 22 Dawes would appear at a rally located in Augusta Maine on the behalf of Republican candidate for Governor Ralph Owen Brewster who was accused by his opponent William Robinson Pattangall of being backed by the Ku Klux Klan and having sympathies for them Dawes who was challenged by Pattangall to talk on the issue gave a speech attacking the Klan and its religious and racial prejudice rhetoric Dawes was however careful on how he talked about race 37 He frequently attacked Progressive nominee Robert M La Follette as a dangerous radical who sympathized with the Bolsheviks 12 The Coolidge Dawes ticket was elected on November 4 1924 with more popular votes than the candidates of the Democratic and Progressive parties combined 38 The inauguration was held on March 4 1925 39 Speech to Senate edit When Dawes took the oath on March 4 he would take action and infamously go on a tangent against the Senate s Filibuster In the speech Dawes criticized rule XXII calling it undemocratic and noted how it was easily taken advantage of due to its two thirds voting procedure Through most of the speech Dawes pointed at specific senators and repeatedly slammed his fist on a table Chief Justice William Howard Taft writing to his son that the vice president had made a monkey out of himself Alongside annoying the entire Senate with a speech that left many shocked Dawes ended up irritating them again that same day by having the senators be sworn in one by one usually they would take the oath in groups Dawes would end up stealing the thunder from Coolidge that day many in the press afterwards made a joke out of Dawes Coolidge was very upset on how the vice president was starting off his term 40 Nomination of Charles B Warren edit On March 10 the Senate debated the president s nomination of Charles B Warren to be United States Attorney General In the wake of the Teapot Dome scandal and other scandals Democrats and Progressive Republicans objected to the nomination because of Warren s close association with the Sugar Trust At midday six speakers were scheduled to address Warren s nomination Desiring to take a break for a nap Dawes consulted the majority and minority leaders who assured him that no vote would be taken that afternoon After Dawes left the Senate all but one of the scheduled speakers decided against making formal remarks and a vote was taken When it became apparent that the vote would be tied Republican leaders hastily called Dawes at the Willard Hotel and he immediately left for the Capitol The first vote was 40 40 a tie which Dawes could have broken in Warren s favor While waiting for Dawes to arrive the only Democratic senator who had voted for Warren switched his vote The nomination then failed 41 39 the first such rejection of a president s nominee in nearly 60 years 35 This incident was chronicled in a derisive poem based on the Longfellow poem Paul Revere s Ride it began with the line Come gather round children and hold your applause for the afternoon ride of Charlie Dawes The choice of poem was based on Charles Dawes being descended from William Dawes who rode with Paul Revere citation needed Dawes and Coolidge became alienated from one another Dawes declined to attend Cabinet meetings and annoyed Coolidge with his attack on the Senate filibuster Dawes championed the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill which sought to alleviate the 1920s farm crisis by having the government buy surplus farm produce and sell that surplus in foreign markets Dawes helped ensure the passage of the bill through Congress but President Coolidge vetoed it 12 In 1927 Coolidge announced that he would not seek re election Dawes again favored Frank Lowden at the 1928 Republican National Convention but the convention chose Herbert Hoover 12 Rumors circulated about Dawes being chosen as Hoover s running mate Coolidge made it known that he would consider the renomination of Dawes as vice president to be an insult Charles Curtis of Kansas known for his skills in collaboration was chosen as Hoover s running mate 41 Post vice presidency 1929 1951 editCourt of St James s and the RFC edit After Dawes completed his term as vice president he served as the U S Ambassador to the United Kingdom known formally as the Court of St James s from 1929 to 1931 42 Overall Dawes was an effective ambassador as George V s son the future Edward VIII later confirmed in his memoirs citation needed Dawes was rather rough hewn for some of his duties disliking presenting American debutantes to the King On his first visit to the royal court in deference to American public opinion he refused to wear the customary Court dress which then included knee breeches This episode was said to upset the King who had been prevented by illness from attending the event As the Great Depression continued to ravage the US Dawes accepted President Herbert Hoover s appeal to leave diplomatic office and head the newly created Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC After a few months Dawes resigned from the RFC As chairman of the failing Central Republic Bank and Trust Company of Chicago he felt obligated to work for its rescue Political opponents alleged that under Dawes s leadership the RFC had given preferential treatment to his bank This marked the end of Dawes s career in public service For the 1932 election Hoover considered the possibility of adding Dawes to the ticket in place of Curtis but Dawes declined the potential offer 43 Later in 1932 Dawes and associates formed the City National Bank and Trust Co to take over the deposits of the failed Central Republic Bank and Trust Company 44 In 1936 Republican congressional leaders informally approached Dawes about the possibility of heading up their presidential ticket at that year s presidential election hoping for a candidate associated with the prosperous Coolidge years but Dawes had no interest in returning to front line politics the ultimately unsuccessful ticket would instead be headed by Alf Landon 43 Later life edit nbsp Dawes mausoleum at Rosehill CemeteryDawes served for nearly two decades as chairman of the board of City National from 1932 until his death 45 He died on April 23 1951 at his Evanston home from coronary thrombosis at the age of 85 46 He is interred in Rosehill Cemetery Chicago 47 Personal life editDawes belonged to several lineage societies and veterans organizations These included the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Sons of the American Revolution General Society of Colonial Wars American Legion and Forty and Eight 48 Dawes was also a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts from 1925 until his death in 1951 49 Honors editIn 1925 Dawes was a co winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for his work on WWI reparations 50 A Chicago public school located at 3810 W 81st Place is named in his honor as are an Evanston public school at 440 Dodge Avenue and Evanston s Dawes Park at 1700 Sheridan Road United States military awards edit Distinguished Service Medal World War I Victory MedalDistinguished Service Medal citation The President of the United States of America authorized by Act of Congress July 9 1918 takes pleasure in presenting the Army Distinguished Service Medal to Brigadier General Charles G Dawes United States Army for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished services to the Government of the United States in a duty of great responsibility during World War I General Dawes rendered most conspicuous services in the organization of the General Purchasing Board as General Purchasing Agent of the American Expeditionary Forces and as the Representative of the U S Army on the Military Board of Allied Supply His rare abilities sound business judgment and aggressive energy were invaluable in securing needed supplies for the Allied armies in Europe War Department General Orders No 12 1919 Foreign honors edit Companion of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom Commander of the Legion of Honor France Commander of the Order of Leopold Belgium Croix de Guerre with palm France Legacy editAccording to Annette Dunlap Dawes was a self made man who valued hard work and thriftiness tempered with Christian generosity He spent his life promoting solid Republican values of small government with restrained budgets Franklin Roosevelt s philosophy of big government spending was anathema to him 51 In 1944 he bequeathed his lakeshore home in Evanston to Northwestern University for the Evanston Historical Society later renamed the Evanston History Center Dawes lived in the house until his death The Dawes family continued to occupy it until the death of Mrs Dawes in 1957 Since then the Evanston History Center operates out of the house and manages it as a museum Designated a National Historic Landmark the Charles G Dawes House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Selected writings editDawes C G 1894 The Banking System of the United States and Its Relation to the Money and the Business of the Country Chicago Rand McNally The Sherman Anti Trust Law Why It has Failed and Why It Should Be Amended The North American Review 183 597 1906 189 194 1915 Essays and Speeches New York Houghton 1921 Journal of the Great War 2 vols New York Houghton online copy vol 1 also online copy v2 1923 The First Year of the Budget of the United States New York Harper online copy 1935 Notes as Vice President 1928 1929 Boston Little Brown online copy 1937 How Long Prosperity New York Marquis 1939 Journal as Ambassador to Great Britain New York Macmillan online copy 1939 A Journal of Reparations New York Macmillan online copy 1950 A Journal of the McKinley Years Bascom N Timmons Ed La Grange IL Tower See also editList of covers of Time magazine 1920s December 14 1925 List of members of the American LegionNotes edit Dylan who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016 wrote Mr Tambourine Man a No 1 hit for the Byrds References edit Dunlap Annette B 2016 Charles Gates Dawes a Life Northwestern University Press and the Evanston History Center p 12 ISBN 9780810134195 Magnusen Steve cite book title To My Best Girl 2020 GoToPublish Gates Dawes Ancestral Lines The religion of Charles G Dawes U S Vice President www adherents com Archived from the original on February 15 2006 Retrieved June 7 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c d e Davis Henry Blaine Jr 1998 Generals in Khaki Raleigh NC Pentland Press Inc p 103 ISBN 1571970886 a b Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life p 17 Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life p 18 Johnson Rossiter ed February 1884 Alumni of Delta U The Delta Upsilon Quarterly Indianapolis IN Delta Upsilon Fraternity p 48 via Google Books Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life pp 20 38 Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life pp 24 25 Smythe Donald 1973 Guerrilla Warrior The Early Life of John J Pershing Charles Scribner s Sons p 34 a b c d e f Charles G Dawes 30th Vice President 1925 1929 US Senate Archived from the original on November 6 2014 Retrieved February 2 2017 Dawes Charles Gates Melody in A major for violin with piano acc Chicago Gamble Hinged Music 1912 OCLC 21885776 Dawes Charles Gates and Marie Edwards Melody Chicago Ill Gamble Hinged Music Co 1921 OCLC 10115887 Dawes Charles Gates and Adolf G Hoffmann Melody small orchestra Chicago Gamble Hinged Music Co 1921 OCLC 46679677 a b c Archived copy Archived from the original on July 26 2015 Retrieved January 26 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Joel Whitburn The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits revised and enlarged 6th edition New York Billboard Publications 1996 201 Hatfield 1997 360 Whitburn Joel 2004 Top R amp B Hip Hop Singles 1942 2004 Record Research p 539 The Vice President Who Wrote a Hit Song August 16 2011 Davis Jr Henry Blaine 1998 Generals in Khaki Pentland Press Inc p 81 ISBN 1571970886 OCLC 40298151 Waller 1998 274 Charles Gates Dawes Timeline Evanston History Center Archived from the original on January 9 2021 Retrieved January 26 2017 Let s Talk It Over The National Magazine 46 September 905 1917 Retrieved January 26 2017 Dawes House Dedicated Lawrenceville School Building Partly Financed by Ambassador The New York Times November 29 1929 Merchants of Death Revisited Mises Institute p 61 The New York Times October 4 1918 Valor awards for Charles G Dawes The New York Times August 7 1919 Dunlap Annette B Charles Dawes Gates a Life p 144 Vice President Dawes Forbes Library Retrieved July 12 2018 Dunlap pp 214 15 Stephen A Schuker The End of French Predominance in Europe The Financial Crisis of 1924 and the Adoption of the Dawes Plan U of North Carolina Press 1976 Charles G Dawes The Nobel Prize Retrieved October 20 2023 a b Hatfield M O 1997 Vice Presidents of the United States 1789 1993 Senate Historical Office Washington United States Government Printing Office a b Hatfield 1997 363 Dunlap Annette September 15 2016 Charles Gates Dawes A Life Northwestern University Press pp 192 195 ISBN 978 0 8101 3419 5 Hatfield 1997 364 Reviews C T I October 16 2016 American Foreign Relations A History p 193 ISBN 9781619066649 Retrieved January 26 2017 permanent dead link Dunlap Annette September 15 2016 Charles Gates Dawes A Life Northwestern University Press pp 202 204 ISBN 978 0 8101 3419 5 Mencken Henry Louis George Jean Nathan 1929 The American Mercury p 404 Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life pp 221 44 a b Witcover Jules 2014 The American Vice Presidency Smithsonian Books p 296 Dawes s New Bank Opens in Chicago City National and Trust Has 4 000 000 Capital and 1 000 000 Surplus In Old Bank s Offices Institution Formed by Taking Over Some Departments of Central Republic The New York Times October 7 1932 Dawes Charles Gates Biographical Information Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Archived from the original on September 15 1999 Retrieved January 17 2018 Charles G Dawes Ex Vice President Dies April 24 1951 September 15 2023 Rumore Kori October 4 2022 Buried in Chicago Where the famous rest in peace Chicago Tribune The What and the Why of the Forty and Eight The American Legion Weekly Vol 7 no 38 Indianapolis Indiana The American Legion September 18 1925 p 7 ISSN 0886 1234 via Internet Archive History of the AHAC Boston MA membership roles and accession card Dunlap Annette B Charles Gates Dawes a Life pp 178 79 Cited in Indiana Magazine of History 2018 114 1 p 76 Bibliography editDunlap Annette B 2016 Charles Gates Dawes a Life Northwestern University Press and the Evanston History Center ISBN 9780810134195 online review of scholarly biography Goedeken Edward A Charles Dawes and the Military Board of Allied Supply Journal of Military History 50 1 1986 1 6 Goedecken Edward A 1985 A Banker at War The World War I Experiences of Charles Gates Dawes Illinois Historical Journal 78 3 195 206 JSTOR 40191858 Goedecken Edward November 1987 Charles G Dawes Establishes the Bureau of the Budget 1921 1922 The Historian 50 1 40 53 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 1987 tb00734 x JSTOR 24446946 Haberman F W Ed 1972 Nobel Lectures Peace 1901 1925 Amsterdam Elsevier Publishing Hatfield Mark O 1997 Vice Presidents of the United States Charles G Dawes 1925 1929 PDF U S Government Printing Office Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Pixton John E Charles G Dawes and the McKinley Campaign Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 48 3 1955 283 306 Pixton J E 1952 The Early Career of Charles G Dawes Chicago University of Chicago Press Sherman Richard G 1965 Charles G Dawes a Nebraska Businessman 1887 1894 The Making of an Entrepreneur PDF Nebraska History 46 193 207 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Timmons B N 1953 Portrait of an American Charles G Dawes New York Holt popular biography online copy Waller R A 1998 The Vice Presidents A Biographical Dictionary Purcell L E Ed New York Facts On File Davis Henry Blaine Jr 1998 Generals in Khaki Raleigh NC Pentland Press ISBN 1571970886 OCLC 40298151 Zabecki David T Mastriano Douglas V eds 2020 Pershing s Lieutenants American Military Leadership in World War I New York NY Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 3863 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Dawes Charles G Dawes on Nobelprize org nbsp Charles G Dawes Archive Archived July 30 2020 at the Wayback Machine Finding aid for the Charles G Dawes archival collection Evanston History Center headquartered in the lakefront Dawes house United States Congress Charles G Dawes id D000147 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved 2009 05 14 Notes As Vice President 1928 1929 by Charles G Dawes Portrait Of An American by Charles G Dawes Newspaper clippings about Charles G Dawes in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW nbsp Image of Vice President Charles Dawes during a visit to Los Angeles 1925 Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive Collection 1429 UCLA Library Special Collections Charles E Young Research Library University of California Los Angeles Government officesPreceded byJames H Eckels Comptroller of the Currency1898 1901 Succeeded byWilliam RidgelyNew office President of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation1932 Succeeded byAtlee PomerenePolitical officesNew office Director of the Bureau of the Budget1921 1922 Succeeded byHerbert LordPreceded byCalvin Coolidge Vice President of the United States1925 1929 Succeeded byCharles CurtisParty political officesPreceded byFrank Orren LowdenWithdrew Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States1924 Succeeded byCharles CurtisAwards and achievementsVacantTitle last held byFridtjof Nansen Laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize1925 With Austen Chamberlain Succeeded byAristide BriandGustav StresemannDiplomatic postsPreceded byAlanson B Houghton United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom1929 1931 Succeeded byAndrew Mellon Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Politics nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles G Dawes amp oldid 1206175462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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