Difference between revisions of "Culbert Olson"
(Created page with "{{person |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culbert_Olson |spartacus=http://spartacus-educational.com/USAolsonCB.htm |image= |birth_date= |death_date= |constitutes= }} {...") |
(unstub) |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culbert_Olson | |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culbert_Olson | ||
|spartacus=http://spartacus-educational.com/USAolsonCB.htm | |spartacus=http://spartacus-educational.com/USAolsonCB.htm | ||
− | |image= | + | |image=Culbert L. Olson-1942.png |
− | |birth_date= | + | |religion=atheist |
− | |death_date= | + | |description=29th governor of California from 1939 to 1943. |
− | |constitutes= | + | |birth_date=November 7, 1876 |
+ | |death_date=April 13, 1962 | ||
+ | |constitutes=lawyer,politician | ||
+ | |political_parties=Democratic Party (United States) | ||
+ | |alma_mater=Brigham Young University,University of Michigan,George Washington University | ||
+ | |employment={{job | ||
+ | |title=Governor of California | ||
+ | |start=January 2, 1939 | ||
+ | |end=January 4, 1943 | ||
+ | }}{{job | ||
+ | |title=Member of the California Senate from the 38th district | ||
+ | |start=January 7, 1935 | ||
+ | |end=January 2, 1939 | ||
+ | }}{{job | ||
+ | |title=Member of the Utah State Senate from the 6th district | ||
+ | |start=January 8, 1917 | ||
+ | |end=January 10, 1921 | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | '''Culbert Levy Olson''' was an American lawyer and politician. A [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic Party]] member, Olson was involved in [[Utah]] and [[California]] politics and was elected as the [[29th governor of California]] from 1939 to 1943. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Early life and education== | ||
+ | Olson was born in [[Fillmore, Utah]], the son of Delilah Cornelia (née King) and George Daniel Olson, on November 7, 1876. Olson's mother was a [[suffragette]] and became the first female elected official in Utah. His first cousin was U.S. Senator [[William H. King]], and both were descendants of [[Edmund Rice (1638)|Edmund Rice]], an early immigrant to [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]].<ref>Edmund Rice (1638) Association, 2012. Descendants of Edmund Rice: The First Nine Generations. [http://www.edmund-rice.org/books.htm (CD-ROM)]</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson's mother and father belonged to [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]]. However, Culbert was unconvinced of the existence of [[God]], and became an [[atheist]] at the age of ten. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Leaving school at the age of 14, Olson worked briefly as a telegraph operator. In 1890, he enrolled at [[Brigham Young University]] in [[Provo, Utah|Provo]], where he studied law and journalism. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Career == | ||
+ | Upon graduating at the age of 19 in 1895, Olson embarked on a career as a journalist with the ''[[Ogden Standard-Examiner|Daily Ogden Standard]]''. During the [[1896 United States presidential election|1896 Presidential Election]], Olson campaigned for [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic]] candidate [[William Jennings Bryan]]. After the election, Olson moved briefly to [[Michigan]], studying law at the [[University of Michigan]], and then later to [[Washington, D.C.]], where he worked as a newspaper correspondent and secretary for the [[U.S. Congress]]. During his time in the capital, Olson attended law school at [[George Washington University]], and he was admitted to the Utah Bar in 1901.<ref name="AmericanAtheists">http://www.atheists.org/The_Hon._Atheist_Governor%3A_Culbert_L._Olson</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Utah and California Legislature=== | ||
+ | Olson moved back to Utah in 1901, settling in [[Salt Lake City]] to join a law practice. Building a reputation of defending [[trade unionists]] and political progressives, Olson was elected to the [[Utah State Senate]] in 1916. During his four years in the State Senate, Olson wrote and endorsed legislation to end [[child labor]] in the state, guarantee [[old age pensions]], and expand government control of [[public utilities]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson declined to run again for the State Senate in the 1920 general election. Instead, Olson relocated to [[Los Angeles, California]], beginning another law practice, where he again gained a reputation of investigating corporate fraud. Politics never remained far. Olson campaigned openly for [[Progressive Party (United States, 1924)|Progressive Party]] candidate [[Robert M. La Follette, Sr.|Robert La Follette]] in the [[1924 United States presidential election|1924 Elections]], and for [[United States Democratic Party|Democrat]] [[Franklin Roosevelt]] in the [[1932 United States presidential election|1932 Elections]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1934, in the middle of the [[Great Depression]], Olson ran as a Democrat for the [[California State Senate]], representing [[Los Angeles]]. During the 1934 state general elections, Olson campaigned for former [[Socialist Party of America|Socialist Party]] member and [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic]] nominee for [[Governor of California|governor]], [[Upton Sinclair]], participating in Sinclair's [[End Poverty in California movement|End Poverty in California]] campaign.<ref name=AmericanAtheists /> While Sinclair lost the gubernatorial election to [[United States Republican Party|Republican]] [[Frank Merriam]], Olson was elected to the State Senate that year. | ||
+ | |||
+ | While in the [[California State Senate]], the second [[State legislature (United States)|state legislature]] he was elected to, Olson openly supported Roosevelt's [[New Deal]] policies towards the unemployed. Seeing large business interests as a barrier to change, Olson wrote the Olson Oil Bill to cut down oil company monopolies in the state. | ||
+ | |||
+ | With the open support of President Roosevelt, Olson ran for [[governor of California]] in the 1938 general elections against conservative Republican and anti-labor incumbent Governor [[Frank Merriam]]. Merriam, known for suppressing the [[1934 West Coast Longshore Strike|1934 Longshore Strike]] and his conservative fiscal policies, was a highly unpopular candidate among progressives and unionists, with even conservative Republicans angered by his 1935 tax reforms. Merriam lost soundly to Olson. He was the first Democrat to win the governorship since [[James Budd]]'s election in 1895, breaking the 40-year Republican dynasty over the governorship. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Governor of California=== | ||
+ | Olson was inaugurated as California's twenty-ninth executive on January 2, 1939, and was the first Democrat to serve as governor of California in 40 years. In his inaugural address, Olson pointed at progressives and the [[Left wing|Left]] for his inspiration, citing that "[t]hey point the way forward - toward the achievement of the aspiration of the people for an economy that will afford general employment, abundant production, equitable distribution, social security and old age retirement, which our country, with its ample resources, great facilities and the genius of its people, is capable of providing."<ref name=address>http://governors.library.ca.gov/addresses/29-olson.html</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson refused to say "so help me God" during his [[oath of office]] to state Supreme Court Justice [[William H. Waste]]. Olson remarked earlier to Justice Waste that "God couldn't help me at all, and that there isn't any such person." Instead, Olson said, "I will affirm."<ref name=AmericanAtheists/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson's tenure in the governorship got off to a rocky start. He collapsed four days after his [[inauguration]], and doctors discovered that he was suffering from an ailing heart. On top of personal health matters, Kate Jeremy Olson, the Governor's wife of nearly thirty-nine years, died shortly after he assumed the office.<ref name="time">https://web.archive.org/web/20070930073853/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,761572,00.html</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Contrasting with the conservative policies of Governor [[Frank Merriam]], Olson promoted friendly relations with the state's labor unions. In September 1939, he officially pardoned [[Thomas Mooney|Tom Mooney]], a labor activist and [[political prisoner]] accused of plotting the [[Preparedness Day Bombing|1916 Preparedness Day Bombing]] in [[San Francisco]]. Olson cited scant evidence against Mooney as the reason for his pardon. The next month, Olson pardoned Mooney's alleged accomplice, [[Warren Billings]].<ref name=AmericanAtheists/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson's relationship with the [[California State Legislature]] was often bitter. With conservative [[United States Democratic Party|Democrats]] controlling the [[California State Assembly|Assembly]], and business-friendly Republicans in the [[California State Senate|Senate]], Olson had little room to promote his [[New Deal]] politics, while the Legislature remained wary of Olson's [[leftist]] agenda. In the first year of his governorship, Olson's proposed budget was cut by nearly 100 million dollars, and his proposal of compulsory [[universal health insurance]] for every Californian was defeated. The Legislature also defeated legislation to raise income, bank and corporate taxes, as well as Olson's bills to regulate [[lobbyists]] and reform the state penal system. State-subsidized relief for farmers was cut nearly in half.<ref name="time"/> Olson installed a telephone [[hotline]] to the Legislature to get immediate word of lawmakers' positions on bills in committee or on the floor for a vote.<ref name=CALibrary>http://governors.library.ca.gov/29-Olson.html</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | During his tenure, Olson grew increasingly critical of the [[Roman Catholic Church]] and its presence in the state educational system, and raised the ire of Archbishops [[John J. Cantwell]] of Los Angeles and [[John J. Mitty]] of San Francisco. A [[secular]] [[atheist]], Olson was disturbed by the state legislature's passage of two bills in 1941, one to give free transportation to students attending Catholic schools, and the other to release Catholic children from public schools in the middle of the school day in order to attend [[catechism]], leaving the schools and other students idle until the Catholic students' returned. Olson signed the first bill into law, later citing the enormous pressure of the Catholic Church on his office and on state lawmakers, but he vetoed the second ("early release") bill.<ref name=AmericanAtheists/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | After the Japanese attack on [[Pearl Harbor]] in December 1941, and the entry of the United States into the [[Second World War]], many in California feared a [[Imperial Japan|Japanese]] invasion. In the wake of the attack, Olson urged calm from Californians.<ref>https://archive.org/details/justiceforallear0000newt/page/122 122</ref> In a plea for racial tolerance, broadcast on December 14, he stated he had assurances from "every racial group" of their loyalty and devotion to the United States, even reading a telegram he had received from a Japanese citizen.<ref>Burke, Robert Eugene. ''[https://archive.org/details/olsonregcal00robe The Olson Regime in California (1946-1947)]'', pp 201.</ref> Olson attempted to revoke the business licenses of "enemy alien" Japanese in California.<ref name=Newman>http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Culbert%20Olson/</ref> (Japanese immigrants were prohibited by law from becoming U.S. citizens and were therefore permanent aliens, although many had resided in California for decades.) On February 19, 1942, President [[Franklin Roosevelt]] issued [[Executive Order 9066]], allowing U.S. military commanders to create zones from which "any or all persons may be excluded." Based on that, all West Coast [[Japanese American]]s, including American-born [[Nisei]] and [[Sansei]], in addition to the non-citizen [[Issei]], were forcibly relocated to isolated [[Japanese American internment|internment camps]] over the next several months. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The pro-internment recommendations of General [[John L. DeWitt]] (head of the [[Western Defense Command]]) were embarrassing for Governor Olson. On February 2, 1942, the Governor, following a meeting with Dewitt, said that mass evacuation would not be necessary; DeWitt pursued his plans regardless of Olson's disagreement.<ref>Burke, Robert Eugene. ''[https://archive.org/details/olsonregcal00robe The Olson Regime in California (1946-1947)]'', pp 482-85.</ref> However, despite his preference for excluding Japanese Americans only from "coastal California", and allowing adult men to work in labor camps as an alternative to incarceration, Olson wholeheartedly supported the eviction.<ref name=Newman/> A long-time supporter of nearly every Roosevelt position on economics, politics and foreign policy, on March 6, 1942, he testified before a [[U.S. House]] committee on the danger of allowing Japanese Americans to remain free: "Because of the extreme difficulty in distinguishing between loyal Japanese Americans, and there are many who are loyal to this country, and those other Japanese whose loyalty is to the [[Emperor of Japan|Mikado]]. I believe in the wholesale evacuation of the Japanese people from coastal California."<ref>http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist8/evac3.html</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | By the 1942 general elections, Republicans were accusing Olson of blatant partisan politics during wartime, citing Olson's often bitter divides with the State Legislature. The Republican Party nominated [[California Attorney General]] [[Earl Warren]] as the party's nominee for the governorship. Warren, a centrist Republican, campaigned as a moderate voice that would appeal to both liberals and conservatives during a time of war, where California was considered as a possible front line, while accusing Olson of being an uncompromising, [[left-wing]] Democrat. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Olson lost to Warren by a large margin. In later years, Olson blamed "the active hostility of a certain privately owned power corporation and the [[Roman Catholic Church]] in California" for his defeat. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Later career=== | ||
+ | Following his departure from the governorship, Olson returned to law. He regained the public spotlight again in the 1950s, when the Legislature voted to exempt Catholic schools from real estate taxes. Olson filed an [[amicus curiae]] brief to the [[Supreme Court of California|state Supreme Court]], asking the court to explain how the state's exemption of a religious organization from civil taxes was constitutional. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1957, Olson became president of the [[United Secularists of America]], a body of [[secularist]]s, [[atheist]]s, and [[Freethought|freethinkers]]. | ||
+ | |||
{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
− | {{ | + | {{PageCredit |
+ | |site=Wikipedia | ||
+ | |date=01.01.2022 | ||
+ | |url=https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culbert_Olson | ||
+ | }} |
Revision as of 23:11, 22 January 2022
Culbert Olson (lawyer, politician) | |
---|---|
Born | November 7, 1876 |
Died | April 13, 1962 (Age 85) |
Alma mater | Brigham Young University, University of Michigan, George Washington University |
Religion | atheist |
Party | Democratic Party (United States) |
Culbert Levy Olson was an American lawyer and politician. A Democratic Party member, Olson was involved in Utah and California politics and was elected as the 29th governor of California from 1939 to 1943.
Contents
Early life and education
Olson was born in Fillmore, Utah, the son of Delilah Cornelia (née King) and George Daniel Olson, on November 7, 1876. Olson's mother was a suffragette and became the first female elected official in Utah. His first cousin was U.S. Senator William H. King, and both were descendants of Edmund Rice, an early immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.[1]
Olson's mother and father belonged to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. However, Culbert was unconvinced of the existence of God, and became an atheist at the age of ten.
Leaving school at the age of 14, Olson worked briefly as a telegraph operator. In 1890, he enrolled at Brigham Young University in Provo, where he studied law and journalism.
Career
Upon graduating at the age of 19 in 1895, Olson embarked on a career as a journalist with the Daily Ogden Standard. During the 1896 Presidential Election, Olson campaigned for Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan. After the election, Olson moved briefly to Michigan, studying law at the University of Michigan, and then later to Washington, D.C., where he worked as a newspaper correspondent and secretary for the U.S. Congress. During his time in the capital, Olson attended law school at George Washington University, and he was admitted to the Utah Bar in 1901.[2]
Utah and California Legislature
Olson moved back to Utah in 1901, settling in Salt Lake City to join a law practice. Building a reputation of defending trade unionists and political progressives, Olson was elected to the Utah State Senate in 1916. During his four years in the State Senate, Olson wrote and endorsed legislation to end child labor in the state, guarantee old age pensions, and expand government control of public utilities.
Olson declined to run again for the State Senate in the 1920 general election. Instead, Olson relocated to Los Angeles, California, beginning another law practice, where he again gained a reputation of investigating corporate fraud. Politics never remained far. Olson campaigned openly for Progressive Party candidate Robert La Follette in the 1924 Elections, and for Democrat Franklin Roosevelt in the 1932 Elections.
In 1934, in the middle of the Great Depression, Olson ran as a Democrat for the California State Senate, representing Los Angeles. During the 1934 state general elections, Olson campaigned for former Socialist Party member and Democratic nominee for governor, Upton Sinclair, participating in Sinclair's End Poverty in California campaign.[2] While Sinclair lost the gubernatorial election to Republican Frank Merriam, Olson was elected to the State Senate that year.
While in the California State Senate, the second state legislature he was elected to, Olson openly supported Roosevelt's New Deal policies towards the unemployed. Seeing large business interests as a barrier to change, Olson wrote the Olson Oil Bill to cut down oil company monopolies in the state.
With the open support of President Roosevelt, Olson ran for governor of California in the 1938 general elections against conservative Republican and anti-labor incumbent Governor Frank Merriam. Merriam, known for suppressing the 1934 Longshore Strike and his conservative fiscal policies, was a highly unpopular candidate among progressives and unionists, with even conservative Republicans angered by his 1935 tax reforms. Merriam lost soundly to Olson. He was the first Democrat to win the governorship since James Budd's election in 1895, breaking the 40-year Republican dynasty over the governorship.
Governor of California
Olson was inaugurated as California's twenty-ninth executive on January 2, 1939, and was the first Democrat to serve as governor of California in 40 years. In his inaugural address, Olson pointed at progressives and the Left for his inspiration, citing that "[t]hey point the way forward - toward the achievement of the aspiration of the people for an economy that will afford general employment, abundant production, equitable distribution, social security and old age retirement, which our country, with its ample resources, great facilities and the genius of its people, is capable of providing."[3]
Olson refused to say "so help me God" during his oath of office to state Supreme Court Justice William H. Waste. Olson remarked earlier to Justice Waste that "God couldn't help me at all, and that there isn't any such person." Instead, Olson said, "I will affirm."[2]
Olson's tenure in the governorship got off to a rocky start. He collapsed four days after his inauguration, and doctors discovered that he was suffering from an ailing heart. On top of personal health matters, Kate Jeremy Olson, the Governor's wife of nearly thirty-nine years, died shortly after he assumed the office.[4]
Contrasting with the conservative policies of Governor Frank Merriam, Olson promoted friendly relations with the state's labor unions. In September 1939, he officially pardoned Tom Mooney, a labor activist and political prisoner accused of plotting the 1916 Preparedness Day Bombing in San Francisco. Olson cited scant evidence against Mooney as the reason for his pardon. The next month, Olson pardoned Mooney's alleged accomplice, Warren Billings.[2]
Olson's relationship with the California State Legislature was often bitter. With conservative Democrats controlling the Assembly, and business-friendly Republicans in the Senate, Olson had little room to promote his New Deal politics, while the Legislature remained wary of Olson's leftist agenda. In the first year of his governorship, Olson's proposed budget was cut by nearly 100 million dollars, and his proposal of compulsory universal health insurance for every Californian was defeated. The Legislature also defeated legislation to raise income, bank and corporate taxes, as well as Olson's bills to regulate lobbyists and reform the state penal system. State-subsidized relief for farmers was cut nearly in half.[4] Olson installed a telephone hotline to the Legislature to get immediate word of lawmakers' positions on bills in committee or on the floor for a vote.[5]
During his tenure, Olson grew increasingly critical of the Roman Catholic Church and its presence in the state educational system, and raised the ire of Archbishops John J. Cantwell of Los Angeles and John J. Mitty of San Francisco. A secular atheist, Olson was disturbed by the state legislature's passage of two bills in 1941, one to give free transportation to students attending Catholic schools, and the other to release Catholic children from public schools in the middle of the school day in order to attend catechism, leaving the schools and other students idle until the Catholic students' returned. Olson signed the first bill into law, later citing the enormous pressure of the Catholic Church on his office and on state lawmakers, but he vetoed the second ("early release") bill.[2]
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, and the entry of the United States into the Second World War, many in California feared a Japanese invasion. In the wake of the attack, Olson urged calm from Californians.[6] In a plea for racial tolerance, broadcast on December 14, he stated he had assurances from "every racial group" of their loyalty and devotion to the United States, even reading a telegram he had received from a Japanese citizen.[7] Olson attempted to revoke the business licenses of "enemy alien" Japanese in California.[8] (Japanese immigrants were prohibited by law from becoming U.S. citizens and were therefore permanent aliens, although many had resided in California for decades.) On February 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, allowing U.S. military commanders to create zones from which "any or all persons may be excluded." Based on that, all West Coast Japanese Americans, including American-born Nisei and Sansei, in addition to the non-citizen Issei, were forcibly relocated to isolated internment camps over the next several months.
The pro-internment recommendations of General John L. DeWitt (head of the Western Defense Command) were embarrassing for Governor Olson. On February 2, 1942, the Governor, following a meeting with Dewitt, said that mass evacuation would not be necessary; DeWitt pursued his plans regardless of Olson's disagreement.[9] However, despite his preference for excluding Japanese Americans only from "coastal California", and allowing adult men to work in labor camps as an alternative to incarceration, Olson wholeheartedly supported the eviction.[8] A long-time supporter of nearly every Roosevelt position on economics, politics and foreign policy, on March 6, 1942, he testified before a U.S. House committee on the danger of allowing Japanese Americans to remain free: "Because of the extreme difficulty in distinguishing between loyal Japanese Americans, and there are many who are loyal to this country, and those other Japanese whose loyalty is to the Mikado. I believe in the wholesale evacuation of the Japanese people from coastal California."[10]
By the 1942 general elections, Republicans were accusing Olson of blatant partisan politics during wartime, citing Olson's often bitter divides with the State Legislature. The Republican Party nominated California Attorney General Earl Warren as the party's nominee for the governorship. Warren, a centrist Republican, campaigned as a moderate voice that would appeal to both liberals and conservatives during a time of war, where California was considered as a possible front line, while accusing Olson of being an uncompromising, left-wing Democrat.
Olson lost to Warren by a large margin. In later years, Olson blamed "the active hostility of a certain privately owned power corporation and the Roman Catholic Church in California" for his defeat.
Later career
Following his departure from the governorship, Olson returned to law. He regained the public spotlight again in the 1950s, when the Legislature voted to exempt Catholic schools from real estate taxes. Olson filed an amicus curiae brief to the state Supreme Court, asking the court to explain how the state's exemption of a religious organization from civil taxes was constitutional.
In 1957, Olson became president of the United Secularists of America, a body of secularists, atheists, and freethinkers.
References
- ↑ Edmund Rice (1638) Association, 2012. Descendants of Edmund Rice: The First Nine Generations. (CD-ROM)
- ↑ a b c d e http://www.atheists.org/The_Hon._Atheist_Governor%3A_Culbert_L._Olson
- ↑ http://governors.library.ca.gov/addresses/29-olson.html
- ↑ a b https://web.archive.org/web/20070930073853/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,761572,00.html
- ↑ http://governors.library.ca.gov/29-Olson.html
- ↑ https://archive.org/details/justiceforallear0000newt/page/122 122
- ↑ Burke, Robert Eugene. The Olson Regime in California (1946-1947), pp 201.
- ↑ a b http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Culbert%20Olson/
- ↑ Burke, Robert Eugene. The Olson Regime in California (1946-1947), pp 482-85.
- ↑ http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist8/evac3.html
Wikipedia is not affiliated with Wikispooks. Original page source here