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Everett Dirksen

Everett McKinley Dirksen (January 4, 1896 – September 7, 1969) was an American politician. A Republican, he represented Illinois in the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate. As Senate Minority Leader from 1959 until his death in 1969, he played a highly visible and key role in the politics of the 1960s. He helped write and pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968, both landmark pieces of legislation during the civil rights movement. He was also one of the Senate's strongest supporters of the Vietnam War. A talented orator with a florid style and a notably rich baritone voice, he delivered flamboyant speeches that caused his detractors to refer to him as "The Wizard of Ooze".

Everett Dirksen

Everett McKinley Dirksen

(1896-01-04)January 4, 1896
Pekin, Illinois, U.S.

September 7, 1969(1969-09-07) (aged 73)
Washington, D.C., U.S.

Louella Carver
(m. 1927)

1

1918–1919

Born in Pekin, Illinois, Dirksen served as an artillery officer during World War I and opened a bakery after the war. After serving on the Pekin City Council, he won election to the House of Representatives in 1932. In the House, he was considered a moderate and supported much of the New Deal; he became more conservative and isolationist over time, but reversed himself to support US involvement in World War II. He won election to the Senate in 1950, unseating Senate Majority Leader Scott W. Lucas. In the Senate, he favored conservative economic policies and supported the internationalism of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Dirksen succeeded William F. Knowland as Senate Minority Leader after the latter declined to seek re-election in 1958.


As the Senate Minority Leader, Dirksen emerged as a prominent national figure of the Republican Party during the 1960s. He developed a good working relationship with Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and supported President Lyndon B. Johnson's handling of the Vietnam War. He helped break the Southern filibuster of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While still serving as Senate Minority Leader, Dirksen died in 1969.


The Dirksen Senate Office Building is named after him.

Early life[edit]

Everett McKinley Dirksen was born on January 4, 1896, in Pekin, Illinois, a small city near Peoria.[1] His parents were German immigrants from East Frisia near the Dutch border. His father Johann Friedrich Dirksen was born in Jennelt and his mother Antje (née Conrady) was born in Loquard.[2] Today, both villages are part of the municipality of Krummhörn.[1]


The Dirksens were strong Republicans. Everett's parents gave him the middle name "McKinley" after William McKinley, then a leading candidate for the Republican nomination for president.[1] His fraternal twin, Thomas Reed Dirksen, was named for Speaker of the House Thomas Brackett Reed, also a candidate for the nomination at the time. Another brother, Benjamin, was named for President Benjamin Harrison.[3] Everett had two older half-brothers, Thomas and Henry, from his mother's first marriage to Beren Ailts (died 1890).[4]


Johann and Antje Dirksen spoke a Low German dialect at home and taught German to their children.[1] Johann Dirksen farmed and worked at the Pekin Wagon Works as a design painter. He had a debilitating stroke when Everett was five years old and he died when Everett was nine.[5]


Dirksen grew up on a farm managed by his mother in a neighborhood called Bonchefiddle (″Böhnchenviertel″, Low German for "beans quarter") on the outskirts of Pekin. The neighborhood was known as Bonchefiddle because frugal immigrants grew beans in their front yards instead of decorative flowers.[6] He attended local schools and graduated from Pekin High School in 1913 as the class salutatorian. While in school, he helped support the family by working at a Pekin corn refining factory.[7][8]


Dirksen attended the University of Minnesota,[8][9] where he was a pre-law student from 1914 to 1917.[10] He paid his tuition by working in the classified advertising department at the Minneapolis Tribune, as a door-to-door magazine and book salesman, as an attorney's assistant, and as a clerk in a railroad freight office.[11] While attending the university, Dirksen participated in the Student Army Training Corps and attained the rank of major in the school's corps of cadets.[12] He also gained his first political experience by giving local and on-campus speeches in support of Republican presidential nominee Charles Evans Hughes during the 1916 campaign.[8]

Military service[edit]

At the start of World War I, the Dirksens came under local scrutiny for their German heritage. Dirksen's mother refused to take down a living room photo of Kaiser Wilhelm II as demanded by a self-appointed Pekin "loyalty commission" on the grounds that "it's a free country." Benjamin Dirksen was medically unfit for military service and Thomas was married. It fell to Everett to demonstrate the family's patriotism by serving in uniform.[13] He dropped out of college to enlist in the United States Army.[14]


On January 4, 1917, his twenty-first birthday, Dirksen joined the United States Army.[15] Three months later, the United States entered World War I. He completed his initial training in field artillery at Camp Custer, Michigan, performed duty with his unit at Camp Jackson, South Carolina, and attained the rank of sergeant.[16] He was deployed to France in 1918 and attended artillery school and officer training at Saumur.[17] He was commissioned as a second lieutenant and assigned to the 328th Field Artillery Regiment, a unit of the 85th Division.[17][18] Dirksen was trained as an aerial observer and conducted target acquisition and assessment of field artillery bombardments in the Saint-Mihiel sector as a member of the 328th Field Artillery's 13th and 19th Balloon Companies.[18][19] He later performed the same duty for the 69th Balloon Company, a unit of the IV Corps.[19] He subsequently served in the intelligence staff section (G-2) of the IV Corps headquarters.[19] Dirksen performed post-war occupation duty with IV Corps in Germany until mid-1919.[19] Dirksen declined an opportunity to remain with the Army of Occupation (extended due to his fluent German), received his discharge, and returned to Pekin.[20]

Post-war[edit]

After the war, Dirksen invested money in an electric washing machine business, but it failed, after which he joined his brothers in running the Dirksen Brothers Bakery. He also wrote a number of unpublished short stories, as well as plays with former classmate Hubert Ropp. Dirksen was active in the American Legion, and his appearances on its behalf gave him the opportunity to hone his public speaking skills.[21]


His political career began in 1926 when he was elected to the nonpartisan Pekin City Council. He placed first in field of eight candidates vying for four seats. At the time, the top vote-getter also received appointment as the city's commissioner of accounts and finance. Dirksen held both posts from 1927 to 1931.[22]

U.S. representative[edit]

Elections[edit]

In 1930, Dirksen unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Representative William E. Hull in the Republican primary. He lost by 1,155 votes, 51.06% to 48.94%. In 1932, he challenged Hull again, and won with 52.5% of the vote.[23]


He was re-elected seven times from 1934 to 1946. His closest challenge came in 1936, when Charles C. Dickman held him to 53.25% of the vote amid a national and statewide landslide for the Democratic Party.

Tenure[edit]

His support for many New Deal programs initially marked him as a moderate, pragmatic Republican, though over time he became increasingly conservative and isolationist.[23][24] During World War II, he lobbied successfully for an expansion of congressional staff resources to eliminate the practice under which House and Senate committees borrowed executive branch personnel to accomplish legislative work. He reversed his isolationist stance to support the war effort, but also secured the passage of an amendment to the Lend Lease Act by introducing it while 65 of the House's Democrats were at a luncheon. It provided that the Senate and the House could, by a simple majority in a concurrent resolution, revoke the war powers granted to the president.[25]


Dirksen studied law privately in Washington, D.C. after he was elected to Congress. He was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in 1936 and the bar of Illinois in 1937.


In December 1943, Dirksen announced that he would be a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 1944. He stated that a coalition of midwestern Republican representatives had urged him to run and that his campaign was serious. However, press pundits had assumed that the candidacy was a vehicle to siphon support away from the campaign of Wendell Willkie, whose reputation as a maverick and staunch internationalist had earned him the hatred of many Republican Party regulars, especially in the Midwest.[26] Dirksen's presidential campaign was apparently still alive on the eve of the 1944 convention, as Time speculated that he was running for vice president.[27] Dirksen received no votes for either office from delegates at the convention.


In 1947, Dirksen was diagnosed with chorioretinitis in his right eye. Despite a number of physicians recommending that the eye be removed, Dirksen chose treatment and rest; he recovered most of the sight in the afflicted eye. In 1948, he declined to run for re-election because of his ailment.[22]

Personal life[edit]

Appearance and demeanor[edit]

Dirksen's penchant for changing his mind was noted by the Chicago Sun-Times, which once noted that he had changed his mind 62 times on foreign policy matters, 31 times on military affairs, and 70 times on agricultural policies.[22]

Family[edit]

Dirksen's widow, Louella, died of cancer on July 16, 1979.[48] Their daughter Joy, the first wife of Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee, died of cancer on April 24, 1993.[49]

Religion[edit]

Dirksen was a member of the Second Reformed Church, which, although a Dutch Reformed Church, was primarily German (the Reformed Church in America[1] was founded in the 18th century by Dutch immigrants).[50]


Dirksen was a Freemason and was a member of Pekin Lodge No. 29. In 1954, he was grand orator of the Grand Lodge of Illinois. He was honored with the 33rd degree in 1954.[51]

In 1972, one of the Senate's buildings was renamed the in his honor.

Dirksen Senate Office Building

The of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Chicago is also named after him.

federal courthouse/building

A parkway in , Illinois (bypass for the historic Route 66 through the capital's center) is named in his honor.[57]

Springfield

Dirksen Drive, a road in , is named after him. He was a winter resident in DeBary in his later years.[58]

DeBary, Florida

Dirksen's statue, originally located adjacent to the and is now in Mineral Springs Park in his hometown of Pekin, Illinois, includes two objects iconically identified with the senator: an oil can and a bunch of marigolds.

Illinois State Capitol

Everett Dirksen was inducted as a laureate of and awarded the Order of Lincoln (the state's highest honor) by the governor of Illinois in 1966 in the area of government.[59]

The Lincoln Academy of Illinois

The Everett McKinley Dirksen Elementary School on 8601 West Foster Avenue in Chicago is a magnet school named in his memory along with other public schools in other Illinois townships.

Dirksen was mentioned in 's alternate history book If Kennedy Lived in which in 1964, President John F. Kennedy, having survived his assassination in Dallas the previous year, gathered Senate minority leader Dirksen and others in discussion of selling grain to the Soviet Union.

Jeff Greenfield

The issued a commemorative stamp in 1981 honoring Dirksen.[60]

United States Postal Service

The Everett McKinley Dirksen Award for Distinguished Reporting of Congress has been awarded annually since 1980 by the (NPF) [61]

National Press Foundation

List of members of the American Legion

List of United States Congress members who died in office (1950–99)

Dirksen, Everett McKinley (1998). . Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-02414-6.

The Education of a Senator

Dirksen, Louella; Browning, Norma Lee (1972). . New York, NY: Doubleday. Army of Occupation.

The Honorable Mr. Marigold: My Life with Everett Dirksen

Hulsey, Byron C. (2000). . Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Press. ISBN 978-0-7006-1036-5.

Everett Dirksen and His Presidents: How a Senate Giant Shaped American Politics

Illinois Secretary of State (1945). . State of Illinois: Springfield, IL.

Illinois Blue Book (1945)

Illinois Secretary of State (1970). . State of Illinois: Springfield, IL.

Illinois Blue Book (1970)

Illinois State Historical Society (1983). . Vol. 76. Springfield, IL: Illinois State Historical Society.

Illinois Historical Journal

Kenney, David; Hartley, Robert E. (2003). . Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-2549-8.

An Uncertain Tradition: U.S. Senators from Illinois, 1818-2003

MacNeil, Neil (1970). . New York, NY: World Publishing Company. saumur.

Dirksen: Portrait of a Public Man

U.S. Senate (September 16, 1969). (PDF). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Extensions of Remarks

. New York, NY: H. W. Wilson. 1941.

Current Biography

U.S. Congress (1969). . Vol. 92. U.S. Government Printing Office: Washington, DC.

Official Congressional Directory

U.S. Senate (1970). . Vol. 1–1. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. ISBN 9781345031591.

Senate Reports

United States Senate (1970). . Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.

Everett McKinley Dirksen, Late a Senator from Illinois

Bonfield, Arthur Earl (March 1968). . Michigan Law Review. 66 (5). Michigan Law Review Association, inc.: 949–1000. doi:10.2307/1287188. JSTOR 1287188. S2CID 154226726.

"The Dirksen Amendment and the Article V Convention Process"

Kyvig, David E. (Spring 2002). . Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 95 (1): 68–85. JSTOR 40193488.

"Everett Dirksen's Constitutional Crusades"

Rodriguez; Daniel B. and Barry R. Weingast. "The Positive Political Theory of Legislative History: New Perspectives on the 1964 Civil Rights Act and Its Interpretation". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. Volume: 151. Issue: 4. 2003. pp 1417+.

Schapsmeier Edward L., and Frederick H. Schapsmeier. Dirksen of Illinois. University of Illinois Press, 1985.

online

Library, National Institutes of Health

Stan Mendenhall, "Everett Dirksen and the 1964 Civil Rights Act"

U. Kansas Press, 2000

Abstract of Byron C. Hulsey, Everett Dirksen and His Presidents: How a Senate Giant Shaped American Politics

The Dirksen Congressional Research Center

at IMDb

Everett Dirksen

United States Congress. . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

"Everett Dirksen (id: D000360)"

A film clip is available for viewing at the Internet Archive

"Longines Chronoscope with Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (May 7, 1952)"

. Find a Grave. Retrieved 2008-02-10.

"Everett Dirksen"

Complete transcript and audio of Everett Dirksen's RNC Nomination of Barry Goldwater

Lyndon Baines Johnson Library

Oral History Interviews with Everett Dirksen

on C-SPAN

Appearances

Dirksen Primary School, Pekin, IL

Dirksen Junior High School, Joliet, IL