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THEODORE E. BURTON
Theodore E. Burton was born at
Jefferson, Ohio, December
20, 1851; was graduated from Oberlin College in 1872; received
the degree of LL. D. from Oberlin and
Dartmouth Colleges and
from New York University, Ohio
University and other insti-
tutions; was admitted to the bar and commenced the
practice of
law in Cleveland in 1875; was elected to
the National House of
Representatives and served through the
fifty-first, fifty-fourth to
sixtieth, and sixty-sixth and
sixty-eighth Congresses; reelected
to the sixty-ninth Congress by
approximately sixty thousand
plurality; his entire service in the House extending
over the fol-
lowing periods: 1889-1891, 1895-1909, 1921- ; was
United
States Senator 1909 to 1915; was
appointed by President Roose-
velt Chairman of Inland Waterways
Commission, 1907-1908, and
of the National Waterways Commission,
created by Congress,
1908-1912; member of the National Monetary Commission;
member Executive Committee
Interparliamentary Union, and
as such participated in meetings at St,
Louis, London, Paris,
Geneva, The Hague, Vienna, Copenhagen,
and Berne; ap-
pointed member of Debt Funding
Commission by President
Harding, 1902; Chairman of the Delegation from
the United
States to the Conference for the Control
of International Traffic
in Arms, Geneva, 1925. He was a delegate to the Republican
National Conventions of 1904, 1908 and 1912, and received
unanimous support of the Ohio delegation
for the presidential
nomination in the Republican National
Convention of 1916. He
was president of the Merchants' National
Bank of New York
City, January, 1917, to January, 1919. He was Lecturer at
Princeton in 1919, and at Rochester
University in 1922.
He is a member of the following clubs:
Union (Cleveland);
Metropolitan (Washington); Union League,
Authors (New
York). He is author of the following:
"Financial Crises and
Periods of Industrial and Commercial
Depression"; "Life of John
Sherman"; "Corporations and
the State"; "Some Political Ten-
dencies of the Times and the Effect of
the War Thereon"; "The
Constitution, Its Origin and Distinctive
Features".
He delivered the principal address at
the Dedication of the
Memorial Wing of the Museum and Library
Building of the
Ohio State Archaeological and Historical
Society. This address
is given in full on succeeding pages.
Congressman Burton is
one of the most scholarly of Ohio's
statesmen. He placed the
Society under lasting obligations when
he consented to deliver
the dedicatory address.
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