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George J. Bates

by Jen Ratliff on 2022-05-31T10:29:00-04:00 | 0 Comments

George Joseph Bates was born in Salem, Massachusetts on February 25, 1891, to Annie (Byrnes) and Thomas Francis Bates. He attended Salem public schools and later attended night classes at the Bentley School of Accounting and Finance in Boston. Bates began his working life as an iron moulder; he held positions at the Locke Regulator Co., the United Shoe Machinery Corp., the Eagle Iron Foundry, and the Salem Foundry. Long interested in politics, Bates was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1918. In the House, he served as chairman of the Committee on Municipal Finance and became known for his ready understanding of the budget difficulties faced by cities. This expertise, along with his general popularity among the people of his hometown, led to his election as Mayor of Salem. He served in this position from 1924 -1937. During his tenure as mayor, Bates was known for his success at reducing the city’s debt and for his ability to attract funding for public works projects. Indeed, he was one of the first mayors in the country to obtain governmental approval for a WPA public works program. According to Thomas Lane (a fellow Congressman from Massachusetts), Bates was asked to run for the empty Sixth District Congressional seat in 1936 against John E. Taffe. He won handily and took his seat in the Seventy-fifth Congress in January of 1937. He was appointed to four committees during his first term: Naval Affairs, District of Columbia, Rivers and Harbors, and Expenditures in the Executive Departments. In 1939, when Republicans gained a significant number of seats in the House, he had to give up two of his committees. He remained on the Naval Affairs and the District of Columbia committees. In 1946, the Naval Affairs committee and the Military Affairs committee joined to form the Armed Services committee. Bates became a member of that committee and was the fifth ranking Republican when he died in 1949. He was the first ranking Republican member of the District of Columbia committee; he became known as the “Mayor of Washington” for his efforts to put the finances of that city in order. In 1945, he was appointed by the Speaker as a member of the Select Committee on Post War Military policy; he also served on the special House Naval Affairs committee to study the matter of the disposition of various islands in the Pacific areas not under control of the Allied Nations. In 1946, Bates was the ranking Republican member in the congressional delegation appointed to witness the two atomic bomb tests at Bikini Atoll.

Bates remained popular in his home district until the end of his life; in his final election in 1948, he ran unopposed. On November 1, 1949, Bates, while at home in Salem, received a call to attend a meeting of the Armed Services committee. The ill-fated voyage ended with the collision of two planes over the Washington, D.C. airport. Bates and fifty-four others aboard the Eastern Airlines flight died in the crash. Thousands attended his funeral on November 5th in his hometown of Salem. Bates was married to the former Nora Jennings, with whom he had nine children: Thomas (died in childhood); Mary Louise (Sawtell); Catherine Teresa (Ginty); William Henry; Margaret (died in childhood); George Joseph; Raymond Henry; Carolyn Ann (Stanton); and Francis. His son, William Henry Bates, won a special election to fill his father’s seat in Congress.

George J. Bates is the great grandfather of comedian John Mulaney.
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Digitized Archives

Bates Family Photographs and Ephemera
George Joseph Bates Papers


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