Everett Sanders Explained

Everett Sanders
Office:Chair of the Republican National Committee
Term Start:June 17, 1932
Term End:June 5, 1934
Predecessor:Simeon D. Fess
Successor:Henry P. Fletcher
Office1:Secretary to the President
President1:Calvin Coolidge
Term Start1:March 4, 1925
Term End1:March 4, 1929
Predecessor1:C. Bascom Slemp
Successor1:Walter Newton
State2:Indiana
Term Start2:March 4, 1917
Term End2:March 4, 1925
Predecessor2:Ralph Moss
Successor2:Noble J. Johnson
Birth Name:James Everett Sanders
Birth Date:8 March 1882
Birth Place:Coalmont, Indiana, U.S.
Death Place:Washington, D.C., U.S.
Party:Republican
Spouse:Ella Neal
Education:Indiana State University (BA)
Indiana University, Bloomington (LLB)

James Everett Sanders (March 8, 1882 – May 12, 1950) was an American political figure. He was Presidential secretary to President Calvin Coolidge and chairman of the Republican National Committee. He served four terms in the U.S House of Representatives from 1917 to 1925, representing Indiana.

Biography

Born in Coalmont, Indiana, Sanders attended the Indiana State Normal School (now Indiana State University) and then graduated from Indiana University. He practiced law in Terre Haute, Indiana.

Political career

From 1917 until 1925 Sanders represented Indiana in the United States Congress. He declined to be re-nominated in 1924, and instead became director of the Speakers' Bureau of the Republican National Committee. Subsequently, in 1925, he accepted the job and replaced C. Bascom Slemp as the personal secretary to President Coolidge early in his second term. During his time as presidential secretary (a position equivalent to the current White House Chief of Staff) Sanders amassed a collection of presidential speeches that became known as the 'Everett Sanders Papers', which contain speeches from June 22, 1925, until February 22, 1929. Sanders also became a member of the Alfalfa Club after 1926.

Sanders was so highly regarded that, after leaving the position in 1929 after Coolidge's second term, President Herbert Hoover appointed him to chair the Republican National Committee, a position he held from 1932 until he stepped down in 1934 after Hoover's disastrous re-election campaign.

Death

Sanders died in Washington, D.C., in 1950, and is buried in Indiana, in the Highland Lawn Cemetery in Terre Haute.

References

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