VICE PRESIDENT CHARLES CURTIS - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 12/24/1914 - HFSID 266532
Sale Price $625.00
Reg. $750.00
CHARLES CURTIS
A letter from the future Vice President during his time as a US
Congressman, asking that a document be sent on his associate's behalf
Typed letter signed: "Charles Curtis", ¾p, 8½x10¾. Topeka,
Kansas, 1914 December 14. On imprinted "Charles Curtis/Lawyer" letterhead
to Mr. Carl A. Loeffler, Washington, D.C. In full: "I am
handing you a letter from Daniel C. Hockman of Beattie, Kansas, and I wich
(sic, wish) that you would send him the document he desires. I think that
the vote is given in the Senate Manual and the platforms are all in a document
issued on the House side, by McDowall while he was clerk and I think that the
Democrats have kept it up since they have been in control of the House. With
compliments of the season, I am, Very truly yours". Written between
Curtis' terms as U.S. Congressman. CHARLES CURTIS (1860-1936), the
grandson of a Kaw Indian, became a U.S. Congressman (1893-1907) and
Senator (1907-1913, 1915-1929) from Kansas. Curtis, the first Native
American nominated for the Vice Presidency, served as Herbert Hoover's
Vice President from 1929-1933. He had announced he would again be the
candidate in 1932, and the Hoover-Curtis ticket was renominated at the
Republican National Convention, held in Chicago Stadium, June 14-16, 1932. The
Republicans were soundly defeated in the November elections by Democrats
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John Nance Garner. At the time of this letter,
CARL A. LOEFFLER was Assistant Doorkeeper to the U.S. Senate. Loeffler, who
had begun his government service as a Senate Page at the age of 15, later
became Assistant Sergeant of Arms (1928), and in 1929, Senate Republicans
elected him as their Party Secretary. Loeffler served in the position
until 1947, when he was elected Secretary of the Senate, serving from
1947-1949, when he retired from government service to write his memoirs.
Loeffler's father, who had been the White House head doorkeeper during
presidential administrations from U.S. Grant to Theodore Roosevelt, was
responsible for his son's early entry into the workings of the U.S.
government. Lightly creased with folds, not at signature. Lightly soiled,
pinhead-size stain at mid left edge. 1-inch tear at upper right blank edge.
¾-inch tear at upper left blank edge. ½-inch tear at blank left edge. Light
soiling on verso (faint show through). Otherwise, fine
condition.
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