|
LEVERETT SALTONSTALL: UNITED STATES SENATOR
1892-1979
Edgar J. Driscoll,
Jr.
The Boston Globe, June
18, 1970
 |
|
Saltonstall
on August 15, 1939. Courtesy of the Boston Public Library,
Print Department.
|
A man to whom public
office was a public trust, he served the common weal with great
distinction and great devotion for more than 46 years.
When he stepped down
from the Senate at the age of 74 in January 1967 to become a gentleman
farmer on his Dover estate and to work in civic, charitable and
cultural endeavors, he said:
"I wanted to quit when
I was still doing the job rather than just fade away in the Senate
... Too many of my Senate colleagues overdid it. They stayed on
too longnapping through committee hearings when they should
have packed up and gone home."
If "Salty" or "Lev,"
as he was affectionately known to countless friends, admirers
and constituents, had chosen to run for reelection, there was
little doubt that victory would have been his. But he didn't,
since he was not sure he could give his best for six more years.
 |
| Saltonstall
at the American Legion's 23rd Annual Convention in 1941. Courtesy
of the Boston Public Library, Print Department. |
Before retiring after
22 years in what has been called the world's most select club, the
Republican leader had held the ranking minority role in no fewer
than seven Senate committee posts.They included the most powerful
in Congress: Appropriations, Defense, Legislative, Armed Services,
Preparedness, Small Business and Government Procurement, as well
as assignments on nine others.
When he was elected to the Senate after three highly successful
two-year terms as governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
1939-1944, a newspaper characterized the patrician Proper Bostonian
as "reflecting in his bearing and character much of the thing
that in bygone years won for Boston the title of the 'Athens
of America': he is what men call a scholar and a gentleman,
sort of survivor of the people who moved through the pages of
the 'Flowering of New England.'
Sen. Saltonstall was first elected to the Senate in 1944 to
fill the unexpired term of Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, who had resigned
to join the Armed Forces of World War II.
He won by a majority of 561,000 votes, the largest margin ever
given a candidate for statewide office. He was reelected in
1948, 1954 and 1960.
|
|
|
U.S.
Senator Saltonstall, center, laughingly admires his portrait
after it was hung in the State House yesterday beside portraits
of nine other former Governors. At left is Governor Bradford
and at right is G.H. Edgell, director of the Museum of Fine
Arts, who was appointed chairman of the state art commission
by Saltonstall (February 23, 1947). Courtesy of the Boston
Public Library, Print Department.
|
In the Senate, he was known as "a senator's senator," possessing
the Yankee traits of tidiness, unfailing courtesy and caution,
coupled with integrity, modesty, thoroughness, tenacity and
a shrewd grasp of political realities.
One of the most prompt and faithful of the senator's attending
committee hearings and Senate sessions, he usually preferred
to work through the amendment of bills rather than direct sponsorship.
His hand touched thousands of pieces of legislation.
As a leading senator, he was closely associated with such national
legislation as Internal Affairs and Aid, Selective Service,
Unification of Armed Services, Veterans Benefits, the Marshall
Plan, the National Act Against Discrimination in Employment,
the National Science Foundation, Child Health, Displaced Persons,
Anti-Filibuster, the Cape Cod National Park, NASA, the Atomic
Commission and the Nuclear Control Treaty with Russia.
Known
on Capitol Hill as "the gentlemanly gentleman from Massachusetts,"
the senator was noted for his modus operandi.
At a hearing on a highly controversial issue
he would courteously listen to every witness, apply the principles
of his cautious New England heritage, then search for the middle
ground. As a dogged rounder-upper of facts and a careful weigher
of them in order to get the full picture, he had a reputation
for 'fairness and integrity'.
As one columnist put it, when the Republican
leader retired: "He will not be remembered as an imaginative,
brilliant, aggressive leader. Fair, cautious, decent are more
descriptive."
Not one of the visibly powerful or flashy men
of the Senate, despite his seniority, he made his mark instead
as a modest, quiet gentleman with the personal quality of simplicity.
People would do things for him they would not do for a sharper,
abrasive colleague.
|
|
|
Senator
Saltonstall speaks at Memorial Day exercises held in Newton
(May 31, 1950). Courtesy of the Boston Public Library,
Print Department.
|
No oratorjust a good, common, garden variety of speaker
who spoke little on the Senate floorhe did his work in
committee, where the basic decisions are made.
He would sit for hours in the mark-up sessions for bills or
on the conference committees between the House and Senate to
work out differences in a bill. While others argued and shouted,
he would sit silent, writing slowly on a scratch pad and finally
say in that broad-A accent of his: "How about this?" for compromise
language. In addition to the influence and respect he held in
Washington in his day, the senator and three-term governor had
another distinction. His tall, lean figure, which he carried
ramrod straight, was topped by what has been called "the most
distinctive face in United States public life," "a well-worn
American antique," "The Mayflower Compact," and "a face that
hasn't changed in 300 years."
It was a kindly, honest-looking, craggy face with its heavy-lidded
blue eyes, long nose, wide-spaced teeth, lean cheeks and jutting
jaw all capped by a full head of hair.
Some of his admirers regarded
his physiognomy as a cross between two other American stalwarts,
Presidents Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln. "Oh, God love
him, he looks just like a farmer," we remember overhearing one
woman say to another at one of his political rallies.
On occasion the senator would quote one of
the favorite limericks of still another President, Woodrow Wilson:
"For beauty I am not a star.
There are others more handsome by far,
But my face, I don't mind it,
For I am behind it,
It's the people in front that I jar."
In 1938, when they were running for governor, James Michael
Curley disparagingly commented that his Republican opponent
was "a man with a Harvard accent and a South Boston face." He
wished he hadn't.
UNITARIAN NOTE
Leverett Saltonstall, descendant of Sir Richard Saltonstall
of Colonial Days, was a member of the Unitarian Church in
Chestnut Hill as well as of the Dover, Massachusetts Unitarian
Church and president of the Unitarian Club of Boston.
|
"SALTY"
by Thomas Blair, Harvard College
'03
 |
|
A
young citizen meets Gov. and Mrs. Saltonstall. The drum
major is Joanna Bleuitt, 4, mascot of the Commander James
A. Sawyer club of Brighton (February 23, 194). Courtesy
of the Boston Public Library, Print Department.
|
Thoroughly Bostonian and thoroughly patrician, Leverett
Saltonstall was born in Middlesex County, Massachusetts to a family
deemed the wealthiest in the state.
He was educated at Noble and Greenough School and Harvard University,
where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1914 and a law degree
three years later. The gubernatorial opponent who accused Saltonstall
of being "born with a diamond-studded spoon in his mouth" was
hardly exaggerating; "Salty" was a tenth-generation Harvard
graduate. He was also the descendant of no fewer than eight
governors of Massachusetts, including a leader of the Massachusetts
Bay Colony, as well as one Lord Mayor of London from the reign
of Elizabeth I. As Governor and U.S. Senator of Massachusetts,
however, Saltonstall distinguished himself in his own right,
fulfilling the old ideal of the gentlemanly "Boston brahmin."
Always sociable and active, Saltonstall rowed and played hockey
while at school and built a reputationas he would as Speaker
of the House in Massachusetts, as Governor, and as a senior
U.S. Senatorfor extraordinary personability. Upon graduating
from law school he joined the army as a lieutenant, serving
in France but, as he later recalled, seeing "no actual conflict
except those following strenuous evenings in Bordeaux and elsewhere."
Saltonstall returned to the United States in 1918 and began
to practice law in the following year.
|
|
| Senator
Saltonstall and a lobter in 1961. Courtesy of the Boston
Public Library, Print Department. |
He soon moved ever deeper into politics, winning the election
for Alderman of Newton, the town in which he was born, in 1920.
Three years later he won a race for Massachusetts State Representative,
and his political career took off from there. "Salty," as he
was known in Massachusetts politics, became Speaker of the House
in 1926, serving until shortly after a 1936 unsuccessful
run for Lieutenant Governor. Saltonstall was President of the
Unitarian Club of Boston, a trustee of Massachusetts Eye and
Ear Infirmary, and Director of Perkins School for the Blind.
In 1938 Saltonstall accomplished a feat that has always been
difficult for Republicans: he defeated a Democrat in the Massachusetts
gubernatorial election. His opponent, Boston Mayor James Curley,
had seen fit to call Salty "a man with a Harvard accent and
a South Boston face." The label appealed to Massachusetts voters,
and Salty's image of aristocracy coupled with identification
with the average Bostonian helped him win reelection in 1940
and 1942. He had a distinguished career as Governor; in his
six years in office he lowered the state's deficit by 92%, mediated
a massive teamster strike, and built a reputation for an ability
to work well with Democrats and Republicans alike.
His social concern remained strong, as well; proof of Irish
ancestry gained him admission to the Charitable Irish Society,
and he used his power as Governor to establish an interfaith
committee to combat discrimination, particularly anti-Semitism.
Described as a "liberal Republican," he was even popular enough
to win nomination as chair of a national conference of Governors
in 1943.
 |
|
Senator
Leverett Saltonstall speaks from pulpit of 1st Parish
Church (September 14, 1953). Courtesy of the Boston Public
Library, Print Department.
|
When Henry Cabot Lodge resigned from the Senate in 1944, Salty
decided to make a bid for Washington. He pulled off what one
contemporary journalist called the "political miracle" of winning
Boston (and the rest of the district), thus beginning a long
and distinguished career in the United States Senate.
Politically, Saltonstall tended in some issues toward the more
typical Republican stance, and others the more Democratic. He
argued for states' rights, for instance, and often favored corporate
rights in antitrust and labor cases.
Seen as a moderate by both parties, he also tended to take
the typically Democratic positions of favoring foreign aid and
international cooperation, and advocated such policies as disarmament,
increasing civil liberties, and supporting a minimum wage. He
served on seven committeesAppropriations, Defense, Legislative,
Armed Services, Preparedness, Small Business, and Government
Procurementand helped to pass such legislation as the
National Act against Discrimination in Employment, the Cape
Cod National Park, and a bill for improving children's access
to health care. By all accounts universally popularor
at least not dislikedin the Senate, Salty served as Republican
whip, remaining, as one biographer recalled, on speaking terms
with all the members of the Senate.
 |
| Saltonstall
in 1966. Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Print Department. |
Saltonstall retired from the Senate in 1966; he commented that
he "wanted to quit when he was still doing the job rather than
just fade away in the Senate." He returned to his Dover, Massachusetts
farmhis old retreat from his days in the State Housewith
his wife, Mary, whom he'd met in dancing school as a teenager.
The farm had always been a sanctuary for the Saltonstalls and
their six children, and Salty had always been an avid rider and
farmer, reportedly selling 1600 eggs in his penultimate year as
Governor.
Known to his death as "New England's
favorite son," Saltonstall remained active and sociable. His political
legacy of compromise and personability have helped him remain
known as "a senator's senator," a man who did his job with duty
and grace. As Salty summarized his love of his work: "I love people
and you see plenty of them in politics and government. No job
is more satisfactory than one of working out problems with people
that affect us all."
Salty: Recollections of a
Yankee in Politics by Leverett Saltonstall, as told to Edward
Weeks (Boston: The Boston Globe, 1976).

|
Years
of Service: 1945-1967
Party:
Republican
SALTONSTALL,
Leverett,
(great-grandson of Leverett Saltonstall [1783-1845]), a Senator
from Massachusetts; born in Chestnut Hill, Middlesex County,
Mass., September 1, 1892; attended the public schools and
Noble and Greenough School, Dedham, Mass.; graduated from
Harvard University in 1914 and from its law school in 1917;
during the First World War served in the United States Army
as a first lieutenant 1917-1919; was admitted to the bar in
1919, and commenced practice in Boston, Mass.; member of the
board of aldermen of Newton, Mass., 1920-1922; assistant district
attorney of Middlesex County, Mass., 1921-1922; member, State
house of representatives 1923-1936, serving as speaker 1929-1936;
unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor of Massachusetts
in 1936; Governor of Massachusetts 1939-1945; chairman of
the National Governors Conference in 1944; elected as
a Republican to the United States Senate, November 7, 1944
to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1949, caused
by the resignation of Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., but did not
assume office until January 4, 1945, after completion of his
term as Governor; reelected in 1948, 1954, and again in 1960,
and served from January 4, 1945, to January 3, 1967; was not
a candidate for reelection in 1966; Republican whip 1949-1957;
chairman, Committee on Armed Services (1953-55), Republican
Conference (1957-67); trustee and director of several mutual
investment funds and charities; resided in Dover, Mass., where
he died June 17, 1979; interment in Harmony Grove Cemetery,
Salem, Mass.
Bibliography
American
National Biography; Saltonstall, Leverett. Salty: Recollections
of a Yankee in Politics. (Boston: Boston Globe, 1976); U.S.
Congress. Tributes to the Honorable Leverett Saltonstall.
89th Cong., 2d sess., 1966. (Washington: Government Printing
Office, 1966).
Courtesy
of the U.S. Senate Historical Office
|
UNITARIAN
NOTE
Why I Believe in Advancing Unitarianism
by Leverett Saltonstall
My
family for several generations have been members of the Unitarian
Church. I attended Sunday School and then church with my father
and mother throughout my childhood. I have always felt that a
man's religion was his personal and private affair. I have the
utmost respect for the different faiths professed by my fellow
men. I personally have always found the Unitarian faith a source
of comfort and help in my daily life. I have confidence that the
Unitarian Church will steadily grow and will help to sustain many
of my fellow citizens in these important days that lie ahead of
us.
From
The Christian Register, May 1946
|