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Frank Hanly

James Franklin Hanly (April 4, 1863 – August 1, 1920) was an American politician who served as a congressman from Indiana from 1895 until 1897, and was the 26th governor of Indiana from 1905 to 1909. He was the founder of Hanly's Flying Squadron, which advocated prohibition nationally and played an important role in arousing public support for prohibition.

Frank Hanly
26th Governor of Indiana
In office
January 9, 1905 – January 11, 1909
LieutenantHugh Thomas Miller
Preceded byWinfield T. Durbin
Succeeded byThomas Marshall
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Indiana's 9th district
In office
March 4, 1895 – March 3, 1897
Preceded byDaniel W. Waugh
Succeeded byCharles B. Landis
Member of the Indiana Senate
In office
1890-1891
Personal details
Born
James Franklin Hanly

(1863-04-04)April 4, 1863
St. Joseph, Illinois, U.S.
DiedAugust 1, 1920(1920-08-01) (aged 57)
Dennison, Ohio, U.S.
Political partyRepublican (Before 1909)
Prohibition (1909–1920)
SpouseEva Simmer
EducationEastern Illinois University

During his term as governor he successfully advocated the passage of a local-option liquor law, which led the majority of Indiana's counties to ban liquor sales. His other achievements included banning gambling, fighting political corruption, and adjusting state agencies to operate on a non-partisan basis. He left office and the Republican Party and became an active and vocal prohibitionist. He was an unsuccessful Prohibition Party candidate for President of the United States in the 1916 election.

Early life

Hanly was born in a log cabin near St. Joseph, Illinois on April 4, 1863, the youngest of the seven children of Elijah and Anna Calton Hanly. His mother taught him to read at home, even though she was blind. As a young man he lived for a while on a farm in the nearby village of Homer. In Homer he attended the Liberty rural school for one year where he became known as a formidable debater. At age sixteen he left home to attend the common schools and the Eastern Illinois Normal School at Danville, Illinois, until 1879. He worked odd jobs to pay for his schooling, and often slept in barns. That year he graduated he moved to Warren County, Indiana where he taught in the state public schools from 1881 to 1889.[1][2]

He met Eva Augusta Rachel Simmer and the couple married in 1881. Together, they had five children, but only one survived childhood. While teaching he became friends with a local judge, Joseph M. Rabb. Rabb encouraged Hanly to take an active part in politics and stump in behalf of Republicans. Hanly studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1889, joining Rabb's law office in Williamsport, Indiana.[3] Hanly practiced law with Ele Stansbury, a young lawyer who would later serve as Indiana Attorney General.[4]

Political career

Early campaigns

He was elected as a member of the Indiana State Senate in an 1889 special election to fill and empty state senate seat, defeating George W. Cronk, and served there from 1890 until 1891. In the senate he gained a reputation for vigorous oration. He ran as a Republican and won election to the Fifty-fourth Congress, serving from March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897. During his term his district was realigned by the Democratic controlled Indiana General Assembly, who created a gerrymander of his district causing him to lose his re-election in 1896.[1][3]

He launched a campaign for Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 1899, but was defeated in the Republican legislature vote by Albert J. Beveridge. The election caused a major division in the state party, and progressive anti-prohibition candidates supported Beveridge, while the prohibition and conservative wing of the party supported Hanly. After losing the nomination, he briefly retired from politics. The split worsened following the election, leading progressives to split from the Republican party.[1] Hanly went on a speaking tour around the state to build up support for another run for office. His speeches were fiery and often quoted Abraham Lincoln.[5]

Governor

 
Frank Hanly's official governor's portrait.

Hanly reentered politics in 1904, and won the Republican nomination for governor of Indiana. Hanly was elected Governor of Indiana, defeating John W. Kern by 84,364 votes.[6] The election was hard-fought by Hanly, who delivered excoriating speeches against the Democratic party which he referred to as "unholy", and "great only its ability to destroy." He called their election campaign "selfish" and said they ran it only so they could "obtain the flesh pot of office."[5] Hanly was considered a party maverick and he pushed his own agenda, rather than his party's platform, once in office. He pushed for what he considered major state reforms, accomplishing many of them. He crusaded against liquor, horse-racing and political corruption, even prosecuting members of his own administration for embezzlement.[1][5]

Using his popularity, he was able to have the Republican-controlled General Assembly pass legislation to ban gambling on horse races in the state and at the Indiana State Fair. He successfully reorganized most of the state government in an attempt to make the government bureaus non-partisan. He was able to successfully achieve his goal among the state's law enforcement, correctional facilities, and state-run charities.[1] He also brought considerable improvement to the state's accounting methods. He required detailed expense reports to be created by all state employees seeking reimbursements, began regular audits of all spending, and with the support of the state treasurer, he began to establish new accounts by which the government could better monitor where funds were being spent, and by whom.[7][8]

In 1907, he signed the Compulsory Sterilization Law, which mandated the sterilization of certain individuals in state custody, making Indiana the first state to adopt eugenics legislation. The legislation was part of the progressive agenda and received broad support at the time.[9] Governor Thomas R. Marshall later ordered the practice stopped in 1909.[10] In 1921, the Indiana Supreme Court found the law unconstitutional.[11]

A major scandal broke shortly after he entered office, when it was found the public officials had been using their expense accounts to pay for gambling debts at the French Lick Springs Hotel, owned by the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Thomas Taggart. Hanly harangued Taggart for breaking the law by establishing a "Monte Carlo." In July 1906 he ordered the state police to raid French Lick and West Baden, and seized several slot machines, roulette wheels, poker sets, playing cards, Klondike tables, gambling records, dice, and a whole host of other gambling implements. He brought suit against the corporations operating the French Lick Springs Hotel and the West Baden Springs Hotel seeking to seize their properties for profiting from illegal activities. John Kerns, who Hanly defeated for governor in 1904, represented the hotels. The case dragged on until after Hanly left office. In 1910 an Orange County jury ruled in favor of the hotels.[12]

Hanly was most concerned about temperance and was known to support a ban on liquor. His stated reason for supporting prohibition was the effect that alcoholics had on their children. He championed a bill that would allow counties to ban the sale of alcohol. The General Assembly had failed to pass the bill during their two normal sessions during his terms, so he called a special session in 1908 to have the body take up debate of the propose bill, which they passed.[1] Once enacted, 72 of Indiana's 92 counties went dry, banning the sale of all liquors.[13] The timing of the passage of the bill caused it to become a major election issue, and Hanly had robbed the Republicans of one of the primary plank of their platform and alienated progressives, costing Republicans the election.[14]

Prohibition party

While still governor, Hanly began to make work with the Anti-Saloon League. Early on he discovered the divisions within the prohibitionist movement and was instrumental in unifying the groups and their goal. He was among the first to advocate a constitutional amendment to ban the sale of liquor, and the prohibitionists rallied to that goal.[15]

Hanly was a prohibition lecturer throughout the United States from 1910 to 1920 and in France in 1919. He organized the Flying Squadron of America (sometimes called Hanly's Flying Squadron), a temperance organization that staged a nationwide campaign to promote temperance. It consisted of three groups of revivalist-like speakers who toured cities across the country between September 30, 1914 and June 6, 1915.[1][16]

Hanly left the Republican party to join the new Prohibition Party following his term as governor. In 1915 he was nominated to be the party's candidate for governor, but he declined, and instead became the Progressive Party's candidate. He was later nominated to be the Prohibition Party's candidate for President of the United States in the 1916 election.[1] Hanly was overwhelmingly defeated; the ticket of Hanly and Ira Landrith garnered 221,030 votes, or about 1.2% of the total.[17]

In April 1920 Hanly argued the case of Hawke v. Smith, a challenge to the Eighteenth Amendment, before the United States Supreme Court. The case was based on the belief that the amendment had been invalidated when Ohio overturned their previous ratification of the amendment after a public referendum. Hanly won a unanimous decision issued on June 1, 1920, upholding prohibition and determining that Ohio could not change their vote after the tally had already been taken among the states.[18]

Death

While on a trip to Ohio in 1920 to give anti-liquor lectures, he was involved in an automobile-train accident near Dennison, Ohio and died from his injuries.[1] He is interred at Hillside Cemetery, near Williamsport, Indiana.[19] Hanly is remembered as an enigmatic reformer and the Don Quixote for prohibition. He remains one of Indiana's most controversial governors.[2]

Electoral history

Indiana gubernatorial election, 1904[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Frank Hanly 359,362 53.5
Democratic John Kern 274,998 41.0
Prohibition McWhirter 22,690 3.4
Socialist Hallenberger 10,991 1.6
Populist Leroy Templeton 2,605 0.4
Indiana gubernatorial election, 1916[21]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James P. Goodrich 337,831 47.8
Democratic John A. M. Adair 325,060 46.0
Prohibition William Hickman 16,401 2.3
Progressive Frank Hanly[22] 7,067 1.0
Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Woodrow Wilson Democratic New Jersey 9,126,868 49.2% 277 Thomas Riley Marshall Indiana 277
Charles Evans Hughes Republican New York 8,548,728 46.1% 254 Charles Warren Fairbanks Indiana 254
Allan Louis Benson Socialist New York 590,524 3.2% 0 George Ross Kirkpatrick New Jersey 0
James Franklin Hanly Prohibition Indiana 221,302 1.2% 0 Ira Landrith Tennessee 0
Other 49,163 0.3% Other
Total 18,536,585 100% 531 531
Needed to win 266 266

Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1916 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 28, 2005.Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 31, 2005.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bodenhamer, p. 658
  2. ^ a b Gugin, p. 224
  3. ^ a b Gugin, p. 225
  4. ^ Clark, Justin (2 November 2021). "The Crusader: J. Frank Hanly and the Election of 1916". Indiana History Blog. Indiana State Library.
  5. ^ a b c Gugin, p. 226
  6. ^ Eseray, p. 306
  7. ^ Gray, p. 217
  8. ^ Gugin, p. 227
  9. ^ Cindy Aisen Fox, Hoosier state led with involuntary sterilization laws, Indiana University Home Pages, March 9, 2007
  10. ^ Julius Paul, "Three Generations of Imbeciles Are Enough": State Eugenic Sterilization Laws in American Thought and Practice, unpublished manuscript. Washington, D.C.: Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, 1965, p. 343. Full text at [1]
  11. ^ Williams v. Smith, 131 NE 2 (Ind.), 1921.
  12. ^ Gugin, p. 228Indianapolis Star, p. 1 March 14, 1910
  13. ^ David J. Bodenhamer; Robert Graham Barrows; David Gordon Vanderstel (1994). Encyclopedia1 of Indianapolis. p. 1327. ISBN 0-253-31222-1.
  14. ^ Gugin, p. 229
  15. ^ Gray, p. 219
  16. ^ . National Governors Association. Archived from the original on 2008-09-27. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  17. ^ J. Frank Hanly (1909). Scientific Temperance Journal. Temperance Education Foundation, Scientific Temperance Federation. pp. 83–84.
  18. ^ Gray, p. 220
  19. ^ Gugin, p. 230
  20. ^ "Gugin, p. 227"
  21. ^ "Gugin, p. 252"
  22. ^ After accepting the Progressive nomination for governor, Hanly accepted the Prohibition Party nomination for President.

Bibliography

  • Bodenhamer, David J (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31222-1.
  • Gray, Ralph D (1994). Indiana History: A Book of Readings. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-32629-X.
  • Gugin, Linda C.; St. Clair, James E, eds. (2006). The Governors of Indiana. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indiana Historical Society Press. ISBN 0-87195-196-7.

External links

    United States Congress. "HANLY, James Franklin (id: H000159)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

    • Details of Hawke v. Smith
    • James Hanly at FindAGrave
    U.S. House of Representatives
    Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
    from Indiana's 9th congressional district

    1895–1897
    Succeeded by
    Party political offices
    Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Indiana
    1904
    Succeeded by
    Preceded by Prohibition nominee for President of the United States
    1916
    Succeeded by
    Political offices
    Preceded by Governor of Indiana
    1905–1909
    Succeeded by

    frank, hanly, hanley, redirects, here, arkansas, state, legislator, lawyer, henley, confused, with, frank, hanley, james, franklin, hanly, april, 1863, august, 1920, american, politician, served, congressman, from, indiana, from, 1895, until, 1897, 26th, gover. J F Hanley redirects here For Arkansas state legislator and lawyer see J F Henley Not to be confused with Frank Hanley James Franklin Hanly April 4 1863 August 1 1920 was an American politician who served as a congressman from Indiana from 1895 until 1897 and was the 26th governor of Indiana from 1905 to 1909 He was the founder of Hanly s Flying Squadron which advocated prohibition nationally and played an important role in arousing public support for prohibition Frank Hanly26th Governor of IndianaIn office January 9 1905 January 11 1909LieutenantHugh Thomas MillerPreceded byWinfield T DurbinSucceeded byThomas MarshallMember of the U S House of Representatives from Indiana s 9th districtIn office March 4 1895 March 3 1897Preceded byDaniel W WaughSucceeded byCharles B LandisMember of the Indiana SenateIn office 1890 1891Personal detailsBornJames Franklin Hanly 1863 04 04 April 4 1863St Joseph Illinois U S DiedAugust 1 1920 1920 08 01 aged 57 Dennison Ohio U S Political partyRepublican Before 1909 Prohibition 1909 1920 SpouseEva SimmerEducationEastern Illinois UniversityDuring his term as governor he successfully advocated the passage of a local option liquor law which led the majority of Indiana s counties to ban liquor sales His other achievements included banning gambling fighting political corruption and adjusting state agencies to operate on a non partisan basis He left office and the Republican Party and became an active and vocal prohibitionist He was an unsuccessful Prohibition Party candidate for President of the United States in the 1916 election Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Early campaigns 2 2 Governor 2 3 Prohibition party 3 Death 4 Electoral history 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditHanly was born in a log cabin near St Joseph Illinois on April 4 1863 the youngest of the seven children of Elijah and Anna Calton Hanly His mother taught him to read at home even though she was blind As a young man he lived for a while on a farm in the nearby village of Homer In Homer he attended the Liberty rural school for one year where he became known as a formidable debater At age sixteen he left home to attend the common schools and the Eastern Illinois Normal School at Danville Illinois until 1879 He worked odd jobs to pay for his schooling and often slept in barns That year he graduated he moved to Warren County Indiana where he taught in the state public schools from 1881 to 1889 1 2 He met Eva Augusta Rachel Simmer and the couple married in 1881 Together they had five children but only one survived childhood While teaching he became friends with a local judge Joseph M Rabb Rabb encouraged Hanly to take an active part in politics and stump in behalf of Republicans Hanly studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1889 joining Rabb s law office in Williamsport Indiana 3 Hanly practiced law with Ele Stansbury a young lawyer who would later serve as Indiana Attorney General 4 Political career EditEarly campaigns Edit He was elected as a member of the Indiana State Senate in an 1889 special election to fill and empty state senate seat defeating George W Cronk and served there from 1890 until 1891 In the senate he gained a reputation for vigorous oration He ran as a Republican and won election to the Fifty fourth Congress serving from March 4 1895 to March 3 1897 During his term his district was realigned by the Democratic controlled Indiana General Assembly who created a gerrymander of his district causing him to lose his re election in 1896 1 3 He launched a campaign for Republican nomination for U S Senate in 1899 but was defeated in the Republican legislature vote by Albert J Beveridge The election caused a major division in the state party and progressive anti prohibition candidates supported Beveridge while the prohibition and conservative wing of the party supported Hanly After losing the nomination he briefly retired from politics The split worsened following the election leading progressives to split from the Republican party 1 Hanly went on a speaking tour around the state to build up support for another run for office His speeches were fiery and often quoted Abraham Lincoln 5 Governor Edit Frank Hanly s official governor s portrait Hanly reentered politics in 1904 and won the Republican nomination for governor of Indiana Hanly was elected Governor of Indiana defeating John W Kern by 84 364 votes 6 The election was hard fought by Hanly who delivered excoriating speeches against the Democratic party which he referred to as unholy and great only its ability to destroy He called their election campaign selfish and said they ran it only so they could obtain the flesh pot of office 5 Hanly was considered a party maverick and he pushed his own agenda rather than his party s platform once in office He pushed for what he considered major state reforms accomplishing many of them He crusaded against liquor horse racing and political corruption even prosecuting members of his own administration for embezzlement 1 5 Using his popularity he was able to have the Republican controlled General Assembly pass legislation to ban gambling on horse races in the state and at the Indiana State Fair He successfully reorganized most of the state government in an attempt to make the government bureaus non partisan He was able to successfully achieve his goal among the state s law enforcement correctional facilities and state run charities 1 He also brought considerable improvement to the state s accounting methods He required detailed expense reports to be created by all state employees seeking reimbursements began regular audits of all spending and with the support of the state treasurer he began to establish new accounts by which the government could better monitor where funds were being spent and by whom 7 8 In 1907 he signed the Compulsory Sterilization Law which mandated the sterilization of certain individuals in state custody making Indiana the first state to adopt eugenics legislation The legislation was part of the progressive agenda and received broad support at the time 9 Governor Thomas R Marshall later ordered the practice stopped in 1909 10 In 1921 the Indiana Supreme Court found the law unconstitutional 11 A major scandal broke shortly after he entered office when it was found the public officials had been using their expense accounts to pay for gambling debts at the French Lick Springs Hotel owned by the chairman of the Democratic National Committee Thomas Taggart Hanly harangued Taggart for breaking the law by establishing a Monte Carlo In July 1906 he ordered the state police to raid French Lick and West Baden and seized several slot machines roulette wheels poker sets playing cards Klondike tables gambling records dice and a whole host of other gambling implements He brought suit against the corporations operating the French Lick Springs Hotel and the West Baden Springs Hotel seeking to seize their properties for profiting from illegal activities John Kerns who Hanly defeated for governor in 1904 represented the hotels The case dragged on until after Hanly left office In 1910 an Orange County jury ruled in favor of the hotels 12 Hanly was most concerned about temperance and was known to support a ban on liquor His stated reason for supporting prohibition was the effect that alcoholics had on their children He championed a bill that would allow counties to ban the sale of alcohol The General Assembly had failed to pass the bill during their two normal sessions during his terms so he called a special session in 1908 to have the body take up debate of the propose bill which they passed 1 Once enacted 72 of Indiana s 92 counties went dry banning the sale of all liquors 13 The timing of the passage of the bill caused it to become a major election issue and Hanly had robbed the Republicans of one of the primary plank of their platform and alienated progressives costing Republicans the election 14 Prohibition party Edit While still governor Hanly began to make work with the Anti Saloon League Early on he discovered the divisions within the prohibitionist movement and was instrumental in unifying the groups and their goal He was among the first to advocate a constitutional amendment to ban the sale of liquor and the prohibitionists rallied to that goal 15 Hanly was a prohibition lecturer throughout the United States from 1910 to 1920 and in France in 1919 He organized the Flying Squadron of America sometimes called Hanly s Flying Squadron a temperance organization that staged a nationwide campaign to promote temperance It consisted of three groups of revivalist like speakers who toured cities across the country between September 30 1914 and June 6 1915 1 16 Hanly left the Republican party to join the new Prohibition Party following his term as governor In 1915 he was nominated to be the party s candidate for governor but he declined and instead became the Progressive Party s candidate He was later nominated to be the Prohibition Party s candidate for President of the United States in the 1916 election 1 Hanly was overwhelmingly defeated the ticket of Hanly and Ira Landrith garnered 221 030 votes or about 1 2 of the total 17 In April 1920 Hanly argued the case of Hawke v Smith a challenge to the Eighteenth Amendment before the United States Supreme Court The case was based on the belief that the amendment had been invalidated when Ohio overturned their previous ratification of the amendment after a public referendum Hanly won a unanimous decision issued on June 1 1920 upholding prohibition and determining that Ohio could not change their vote after the tally had already been taken among the states 18 Death EditWhile on a trip to Ohio in 1920 to give anti liquor lectures he was involved in an automobile train accident near Dennison Ohio and died from his injuries 1 He is interred at Hillside Cemetery near Williamsport Indiana 19 Hanly is remembered as an enigmatic reformer and the Don Quixote for prohibition He remains one of Indiana s most controversial governors 2 Electoral history EditIndiana gubernatorial election 1904 20 Party Candidate Votes Republican Frank Hanly 359 362 53 5Democratic John Kern 274 998 41 0Prohibition McWhirter 22 690 3 4Socialist Hallenberger 10 991 1 6Populist Leroy Templeton 2 605 0 4Indiana gubernatorial election 1916 21 Party Candidate Votes Republican James P Goodrich 337 831 47 8Democratic John A M Adair 325 060 46 0Prohibition William Hickman 16 401 2 3Progressive Frank Hanly 22 7 067 1 0Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteWoodrow Wilson Democratic New Jersey 9 126 868 49 2 277 Thomas Riley Marshall Indiana 277Charles Evans Hughes Republican New York 8 548 728 46 1 254 Charles Warren Fairbanks Indiana 254Allan Louis Benson Socialist New York 590 524 3 2 0 George Ross Kirkpatrick New Jersey 0James Franklin Hanly Prohibition Indiana 221 302 1 2 0 Ira Landrith Tennessee 0Other 49 163 0 3 Other Total 18 536 585 100 531 531Needed to win 266 266Source Popular Vote Leip David 1916 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved July 28 2005 Source Electoral Vote Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved July 31 2005 See also Edit Indiana portalList of governors of Indiana Flying Squadron Also known as Hanly s Flying Squadron Temperance movement Temperance organizationsReferences EditNotes a b c d e f g h i Bodenhamer p 658 a b Gugin p 224 a b Gugin p 225 Clark Justin 2 November 2021 The Crusader J Frank Hanly and the Election of 1916 Indiana History Blog Indiana State Library a b c Gugin p 226 Eseray p 306 Gray p 217 Gugin p 227 Cindy Aisen Fox Hoosier state led with involuntary sterilization laws Indiana University Home Pages March 9 2007 Julius Paul Three Generations of Imbeciles Are Enough State Eugenic Sterilization Laws in American Thought and Practice unpublished manuscript Washington D C Walter Reed Army Institute of Research 1965 p 343 Full text at 1 Williams v Smith 131 NE 2 Ind 1921 Gugin p 228Indianapolis Star p 1 March 14 1910 David J Bodenhamer Robert Graham Barrows David Gordon Vanderstel 1994 Encyclopedia1 of Indianapolis p 1327 ISBN 0 253 31222 1 Gugin p 229 Gray p 219 J Frank Hanly Biography National Governors Association Archived from the original on 2008 09 27 Retrieved 2008 09 24 J Frank Hanly 1909 Scientific Temperance Journal Temperance Education Foundation Scientific Temperance Federation pp 83 84 Gray p 220 Gugin p 230 Gugin p 227 Gugin p 252 After accepting the Progressive nomination for governor Hanly accepted the Prohibition Party nomination for President Bibliography Bodenhamer David J 1994 The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 31222 1 Gray Ralph D 1994 Indiana History A Book of Readings Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 32629 X Gugin Linda C St Clair James E eds 2006 The Governors of Indiana Indianapolis Indiana Indiana Historical Society Press ISBN 0 87195 196 7 External links EditBiography from Indiana Historical BureauUnited States Congress HANLY James Franklin id H000159 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Indiana County History Hanly Biography National Governors Association Biography Details of Hawke v Smith James Hanly at FindAGraveU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byDaniel W Waugh Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Indiana s 9th congressional district1895 1897 Succeeded byCharles B LandisParty political officesPreceded byWinfield T Durbin Republican nominee for Governor of Indiana1904 Succeeded byJames E WatsonPreceded byEugene W Chafin Prohibition nominee for President of the United States1916 Succeeded byAaron S WatkinsPolitical officesPreceded byWinfield T Durbin Governor of Indiana1905 1909 Succeeded byThomas Marshall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Hanly amp oldid 1128522138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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