Charles Webster Bell | |
State: | California |
Term: | March 4, 1913 – March 3, 1915 |
Preceded: | District Created |
Succeeded: | Charles H. Randall |
State Senate1: | California |
District1: | 36th |
Term1: | January 7, 1907 – January 6, 1913 |
Preceded1: | Benjamin W. Hahn |
Succeeded1: | William J. Carr |
Office2: | Majority Leader of the California State Senate |
Term2: | 1911 |
Birth Date: | June 11, 1857 |
Birth Place: | Albany, New York |
Death Place: | Pasadena, California |
Charles Webster Bell (June 11, 1857 – April 19, 1927) was an American politician who served one term as a U.S. Representative from California from 1913 to 1915.
Born in Albany, New York, Bell attended public schools. He moved to California in 1877 and settled in Pasadena, Los Angeles County, where he engaged in fruit growing and the real estate business. Moreover, he also served as a county clerk of Los Angeles County from 1899 to 1903. He was also a member of the state Senate from 1907 to 1913. In 1911 he was the Majority Leader in the California State Senate. Bell authored SCA 8 in 1911, which gave women the right to vote in California.[1] Bell was elected as a Progressive Republican to the Sixty-third Congress (March 4, 1913 – March 3, 1915). However, he lost his re-election campaign to Charles Hiram Randall of the Prohibition Party. Bell was member of the Pasadena Republican Club.
After the end of his political services, Bell resumed his former business pursuits in Pasadena, California and became secretary of the Pasadena Mercantile Finance Corporation.
On April 19, 1927, Bell died in Pasadena, California. Bell is interred in Mountain View Cemetery.[2]