David L. Lawrence Explained

David L. Lawrence
Order:37th
Office:Governor of Pennsylvania
Term Start:January 20, 1959
Term End:January 15, 1963
Lieutenant:John Morgan Davis
Predecessor:George M. Leader
Successor:William Scranton
Order2:51st
Office2:Mayor of Pittsburgh
Term Start2:January 7, 1946[1]
Term End2:January 15, 1959[2]
Predecessor2:Cornelius D. Scully
Successor2:Thomas Gallagher
Office3:9th President of the United States Conference of Mayors
Term Start3:1950
Term End3:1952
Preceded3:Cooper Green
Succeeded3:Martin H. Kennelly
Office4:Member of the
Democratic National Committee
from Pennsylvania
Term Start4:May 22, 1940
Term End4:November 21, 1966
Preceded4:George Howard Earle III
Succeeded4:Joseph M. Barr
Office5:Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Term Start5:January 15, 1935
Term End5:January 17, 1939
Governor5:George Earle
Preceded5:Richard Beamish
Succeeded5:Sophia O'Hara[3]
Office6:Chair of the
Pennsylvania Democratic Party
Term Start6:June 8, 1934[4]
Term End6:May 22, 1940[5]
Predecessor6:Warren Van Dyke
Successor6:Meredith Meyers
Birth Name:David Leo Lawrence,
Birth Date:18 June 1889
Birth Place:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Place:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Spouse:Alyce Lawrence
Profession:Party delegate, Civil servant, Politician
Party:Democrat

David Leo Lawrence (June 18, 1889 – November 21, 1966) was an American politician who served as the 37th governor of Pennsylvania from 1959 to 1963. The first Catholic elected as Pennsylvania's governor, Lawrence is the only mayor of Pittsburgh to have also been elected as Governor of Pennsylvania. He served four terms as mayor, from 1946 through 1959. A panel of 69 scholars in 1993 ranked him third among the ten best mayors in American history.[6]

Early life

Lawrence was born into a working-class Irish Catholic family in the downtown Golden Triangle neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Too poor to attend college, Lawrence instead took a job as a clerk for Pittsburgh attorney William Brennan, the chairman of the local Democratic party and a labor movement pioneer. Brennan became a personal friend and mentor to the teenage Lawrence.

Lawrence entered the insurance business in 1916. In 1918 he entered the Army in World War I, serving as an officer in the adjutant general's office in Washington, D.C.

Pittsburgh politics

When he returned home from the army in 1919, Lawrence was elected as chairman of the Allegheny County Democratic Party. At the time, Pittsburgh was a Republican bastion, with Democrats holding wide support only in the lower class and among recent immigrants, who were concentrated in industrial jobs. With the help of Joe Guffey, a future US Senator, Lawrence led the rising Pennsylvania Democratic party that would soon dominate local and statewide politics. In the 1928 presidential election, Lawrence worked hard for Alfred E. Smith from New York, another Irish Roman Catholic politician who had also risen from the slums without the benefit of a formal education. The vicious anti-Catholic campaign that defeated Al Smith that year had a profound effect on Lawrence. He believed that Roman Catholicism was an insurmountable handicap in United States presidential politics.[7] Consequently, at the 1932 Democratic National Convention, Lawrence deserted Al Smith's presidential campaign and delivered the Pennsylvania delegation to Franklin D. Roosevelt, solely because of his fear of the religious issue.

Meanwhile, in 1931, Lawrence had run for Allegheny County Commissioner but lost. It was one of his last losses, as the effects of the Great Depression and a series of scandals rapidly eroded support for the Republican party in Pittsburgh. Two years later, Lawrence was appointed U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for Western Pennsylvania by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1934, he helped elect George Earle as the first Democratic governor of Pennsylvania in the 20th century. Earle appointed him as the Secretary of the Commonwealth. That same year, Lawrence became state chairman of the Democratic Party.

Mayoralty

In 1945, Lawrence was elected mayor of Pittsburgh by a narrow margin. At the time, Pittsburgh was considered one of the most polluted cities in America, with smog so thick that it was not unusual for streetlights to burn during the daytime. Its industries had worked overtime during the war, adding to the pollution of air and water. Lawrence developed a seven-point program for Pittsburgh during his first days in office, making him one of the first civic leaders to implement a dedicated urban renewal plan. Republicans still controlled much of city politics and business at the time, so Lawrence had to forge bipartisan alliances to accomplish his objectives. His most famous partnership was with Richard Mellon, chairman of one of the largest banks in America and a staunch Republican. Despite their political differences, Mellon and Lawrence were both interested in the revival of Pittsburgh and both were early environmentalists. This partnership drove what came to be called the Pittsburgh Renaissance (later Renaissance I).

From 1950 through 1952, Lawrence served as president of the United States Conference of Mayors.[8]

A 1993 survey of historians, political scientists and urban experts conducted by Melvin G. Holli saw Lawrence ranked as the third-best American big-city mayor to serve between the years 1820 and 1993.[9]

Pennsylvania politics

After an unprecedented four terms as mayor of Pittsburgh, Lawrence was drafted by Democrats to run for governor in 1958. He was initially reluctant, citing his age (nearing 70) as a potential drawback. He eventually accepted his party's nomination and narrowly defeated Reading businessman Arthur McGonigle to become Pennsylvania's 37th governor and its first Catholic one.

During his four-year term as governor, Lawrence passed anti-discrimination legislation, environmental protection laws, expanded Pennsylvania's library system, passed Pennsylvania's fair housing law, and advocated historic preservation. He also passed vigorous highway safety legislation, which some attribute to the fact that two of his sons were killed in an automobile accident. His expansion of state bureaucracies came at the price of budget deficits and tax increases, a move that angered many fiscal conservatives.

In 1960, Lawrence was among a group of political leaders who created the Finnegan Foundation, which provide practical training in government and politics for outstanding undergraduate students by offering ten-week paid internships in the state government in Harrisburg each summer.

National politics

Lawrence had attended his first Democratic National Convention as a page in 1912 and would attend every subsequent convention until his death. He was instrumental in the nominations of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1932 and John F. Kennedy in 1960, and became known as the "maker of presidents". In the weeks leading up to the 1948 Democratic National Convention, Lawrence was one of the few urban bosses to support Harry S Truman's attempts to win the Presidential nomination.

At the 1948 Democratic Convention in Philadelphia, where Harry Truman sought the Democratic presidential nomination with Lawrence's support, however, Lawrence would surprise liberals and conservatives alike by shifting the Pennsylvania delegation away from the more tepid civil rights plank that the Administration preferred to a more aggressively liberal one.[10] Lawrence is often credited with convincing John F. Kennedy to choose Lyndon Johnson as his running mate to balance the ticket and mend a rift between northern and southern Democrats.[11]

In 1958 (during the heat of the Governor's race), then Mayor Lawrence was eventually exonerated of influencing the Federal Communications Commission along with the U.S. Senator from Florida, George Smathers. The charges involved the granting of a television license to WTAE-TV between its ownership group and that of WPXI. The U.S. House hearings with Lawrence present were high drama.[12]

Later life

Limited to one term under existing state law, Lawrence retired from elected office in 1963. He continued to be active in Democratic politics and served the Kennedy and Johnson administrations as Chairman of the President's Committee on Equal Opportunities in Housing.[13]

Death

Lawrence fell ill and collapsed on November 4, 1966, at a campaign rally held at Pittsburgh's Syria Mosque for gubernatorial candidate Milton Shapp. He was rushed to a local hospital. He died 17 days later, having never regained consciousness. He was 77 years old. His death brought eulogies from both President Johnson and Harry S. Truman.[14] [15] Funeral services were held at St. Mary of Mercy Church in downtown Pittsburgh on November 25, 1966. The 2,000 attendees included Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Mayors Joseph M. Barr of Pittsburgh, Jerome Cavanagh of Detroit, James Tate and Richardson Dilworth of Philadelphia, Govs. William Scranton, James H. Duff, Raymond P. Shafer and John S. Fine, along with President Lyndon B. Johnson staff members Robert E. Kintner and W. Marvin Watson, Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman and Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall. After the services all guests and family joined a 250-car motorcade following the hearse down the Boulevard of the Allies, across Grant Street and up I-376 for the burial.[15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20]

He is buried in Pittsburgh's Calvary Cemetery, behind the plot of his longtime friend Harry Greb and beside the plots of his two eldest sons, who had died years before.[17]

Lawrence's death was subsequently ascribed to the cramped conditions and limited resuscitation equipment in the hearse-type ambulance in which he was taken to hospital. This catalyzed reform and improvement in Pittsburgh's ambulance service and those of other American cities.[21]

Family

Lawrence's two eldest sons both died as passengers in a joyriding car accident on April 19, 1942, north of Pittsburgh near Zelienople along U.S. Route 19.[22]

Another son, Gerald Lawrence, became the long-time Vice President and General Manager of Churchill Downs, the prominent racetrack in Louisville, Kentucky.[23]

His grandson Tom Donahoe served as General Manager for the hometown Pittsburgh Steelers from 1991 until 1999, helping take the team to Super Bowl XXX. He later served as GM for the Buffalo Bills from 2001 until 2005, as well as a contributor to ESPN.com.[24]

Another grandson, Gerald"Jerry" Lawrence, is the chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party’s seven-county Southeast Caucus and candidate to be Chairperson of the statewide Democratic Party.[25]

Honors

Buildings named in honor of Lawrence include The David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh, the David Lawrence Hall of the University of Pittsburgh, Lawrence Hall in the Governor's Quad at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and Lawrence Hall of Point Park University. Lawrence is also honored at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, as it named two dormitories the Lawrence Towers. The David L. Lawrence Library, later the David L. Lawrence Administration Center, at La Salle University was dedicated by Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

Electoral history

References and further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Kirk. Rachel. Wives Sit In Background As City Officials Take Oath. December 29, 2010. The Pittsburgh Press. January 7, 1946.
  2. News: Allan. William. The Pittsburgh Press. January 15, 1959. 1. Gallagher 'Crowned' as Mayor.
  3. News: James Picks Miss S.M.R. O'Hara To Be Secretary of Pennsylvania. January 8, 2012. The New York Times. January 12, 1939.
  4. News: Townley. John B.. Martin Gives Up Chairman Post, Recommends Taylor. January 9, 2012. The Pittsburgh Press. June 8, 1934.
  5. News: Meyers Gets Party Post. January 9, 2012. Reading Eagle. May 22, 1940.
  6. Melvin G. Holli, The American Mayor: The Best and the Worst Big-City Leaders (Pennsylvania State UP, 1999), p. 4–11.
  7. Book: Caro, Robert. Robert Caro. The Passage of Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson. 2012. 978-0679405078. 99.
  8. Web site: Leadership . November 23, 2016 . July 24, 2020 . The United States Conference of Mayors.
  9. Book: Holli, Melvin G. . The American Mayor . PSU Press . 1999 . University Park . 0-271-01876-3 .
  10. Web site: Oral History Interview with David L. Lawrence. June 30, 1966. Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum. August 18, 2014.
  11. News: Don't Call Me Boss. Matthews. Frank. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 8, 1988. 17–18. August 18, 2014.
  12. News: Smathers Exonerated in Pittsburgh TV Case. St. Petersburg Times. September 26, 1958. 2A. 2014-08-18.
  13. Web site: John F. Kennedy. The American Presidency Project. August 18, 2014.
  14. Web site: The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search . 2023-08-16 . news.google.com.
  15. Web site: The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search . 2023-08-16 . news.google.com.
  16. Web site: The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search.
  17. Web site: The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search.
  18. Web site: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search.
  19. Web site: The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search.
  20. Web site: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search.
  21. Book: Bell, Ryan Corbett. The Ambulance: A History. 2009. 9780786473014. 256–7. McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers.
  22. News: Lawrence's Two Sons Die as Car Swerves Into Tree. The Pittsburgh Press. April 20, 1942. August 18, 2014.
  23. News: Steelers Mourn Rooney's Death. Steve. Halvonik. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. August 26, 1988. 15–22. August 18, 2014.
  24. Web site: A Theory on the Steelers and Todd Haley. Steigerwald. John. John Steigerwald. February 12, 2008. Just Watch the Game. August 18, 2014.
  25. Web site: Pa. Democratic Party faces civil war for leadership as it meets in Gettysburg this weekend . 17 June 2022 .