Politics Of Conscience

Overview

Margaret Chase Smith was the most influential woman in the history of American politics. Her goal was to be a United States senator, not a woman senator, and she succeeded by overcoming gender, not by championing it. Smith began her political career as Maine's daughter and demonstrated nationally the New England virtues of honesty, hard work, frugality, and reticence. She became America's heroine when she courageously confronted Senator Joe McCarthy at the height of his power with her Declaration of Conscience ...

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Overview

Margaret Chase Smith was the most influential woman in the history of American politics. Her goal was to be a United States senator, not a woman senator, and she succeeded by overcoming gender, not by championing it. Smith began her political career as Maine's daughter and demonstrated nationally the New England virtues of honesty, hard work, frugality, and reticence. She became America's heroine when she courageously confronted Senator Joe McCarthy at the height of his power with her Declaration of Conscience speech. In her statement she championed the American right to criticize, to hold unpopular beliefs, and to practice free speech. Associating herself with the politics of conscience, Smith won three more terms in the Senate and sat on the powerful Armed Services, Appropriations, Space, Government Operations, and Intelligence committees. Altogether, she was in Congress 32 years and by the time her career ended she had established an enduring prototype for female and minority politicians.

This biography of Margaret Chase Smith is the first historical treatment of Smith to use her voluminous private papers as well as extensive interviews with Smith and her colleagues in Congress. As Maine's daughter, Smith was frugal, hard-working, reticent, and caustic. At age thirty-two she married, in scandal, state-politician Clyde Smith with whom she had been involved since she was sixteen and who was twenty-one years her senior. Smith came to Washington when Clyde was elected to Congress and, against his wishes, she became his secretary. When Clyde died in office in 1940, Smith played the widow's game and successfully ran for his seat. In the House during World War II, Smith sat on the powerful Naval Affairs Committee and, tutored by committee counsel Bill Lewis, developed a national constituency, the military, which in turn allowed her to better serve Maine's interests. Lewis directed Smith's first Senate campaign in 1948 when she won an upset victory by an astonishing margin. Overnight she became the darling of the Republican party, the heroine of women everywhere, and the only woman in the United States Senate. Immediately, she became embroiled with Joseph McCarthy and courageously confronted him with her Declaration of Conscience speech four years before a Senate majority censored him. Associating herself with politics of conscience, Smith was elected to three more terms and sat on the powerful Armed services, Appropriations, Space, Government Operations, and Intelligence committees. America's heroine was a political icon by the time she was defeated in 1972 at the age of seventy-four.

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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
The first woman to serve in both houses of Congress, Smith (1897-1995) began her career in 1940 when she replaced her husband, a Republican representative from Maine, after his death. Wallace (The Threat of Peace), a history professor at Baylor University, conducted many interviews with Smith, but her account is objective, although written in flat prose and flawed by fictionalized conversations. Smith served eight years in the House and was a senator from 1948 until her defeat in 1972. Early in her career, she forged a political and personal relationship with William Lewis, counsel to the House Naval Affairs subcommittee. The two lived together amid unconfirmed rumors that they were lovers, and Lewis honed her image as a feisty, hardworking Maine independent. This image was strengthened in 1950, when Smith delivered one of the first attacks against red-baiting Senator Joseph McCarthy. According to the author, Smith, ``the first female cold warrior,'' was supersensitive to press criticism and deliberately separated herself from the women's movement. She was an outspoken hawk during the War in Vietnam. Illustrations not seen by PW. (Oct.)
Library Journal
With her "Declaration of Conscience" before the U.S. Senate in 1950, Senator Margaret Chase Smith became one of the first to reject publicly the extremism of Senator Joseph McCarthy and thereby established herself as a symbol of common sense and independent thinking. Basing this biography on numerous interviews with Smith (who died earlier this year at the age of 97), with her former colleagues, and on research of Smith's official and personal papers, Wallace (U.S. history, Baylor Univ.) reveals a fuller picture. Although Smith was one of the few nationally recognized women politicians of her time, she was never as effective as she might have been in the "boy's club" of the Senate. Well written and insightful, Wallace's book will be the standard biography of a woman significant to women's history as well as U.S. political history.-Pamela R. Daubenspeck, Warren-Trumbull Cty. P.L., Warren, Ohio
Booknews
A historical treatment of the life of the Republican congresswoman, drawing on her private papers and interviews with Smith and her colleagues. Smith began her career in 1940, when she successfully ran for her deceased husband's seat in the House, and went on to sit on numerous committees related to the military. As the only woman in the Senate, she challenged Joseph McCarthy with her Declaration of Conscience speech. Includes b&w photos. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
From the Publisher

"Basing this biography on numerous interviews with Smith, with her former colleagues, and on research of Smith's official and personal papers, Wallace reveals a fuller picture. Well written and insightful, Wallace's book will be the standard biography of a woman significant to women's history as well as U.S. political history."

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Library Journal

"Wallace has done sound research and has an admirably skeptical approach to evidence."

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Kirkus Reviews

"Wallace conducted many interviews with Smith, but her account is objective."

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Publishers Weekly

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780275951306
  • Publisher: ABC-Clio, LLC
  • Publication date: 9/30/1995
  • Pages: 274
  • Lexile: 1590L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 6.14 (w) x 9.21 (h) x 0.63 (d)

Meet the Author

PATRICIA WARD WALLACE is a Professor of United States History at Baylor University.

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Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: Showcasing a Legend
Ch. 1 Maine's Daughter 1
Ch. 2 In Training 29
Ch. 3 The Widow's Game 45
Ch. 4 America's Heroine 75
Ch. 5 Declaration of Conscience 99
Ch. 6 The First Female Cold Warrior 131
Ch. 7 The Wilted Rose 157
Conclusion: Retirement 191
Notes 203
Bibliography 231
Index 239
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