Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Bob Mollohan

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Preceded by
  
Robert L. Ramsay

Nationality
  
American

Resigned
  
January 3, 1983

Succeeded by
  
Arch A. Moore, Jr.

Political party
  
Democratic

Children
  
Alan Mollohan

Preceded by
  
Arch A. Moore, Jr.

Name
  
Bob Mollohan

Succeeded by
  
Alan Mollohan

Party
  
Democratic Party



Role
  
Member of the United States House of Representatives

Died
  
August 3, 1999, Fairmont, West Virginia, United States

Education
  
Glenville State College, Shepherd University

Grandchildren
  
Robert Homer Mollohan

Robert Homer Mollohan (September 18, 1909 – August 3, 1999) was a former member of the United States House of Representatives. A Democrat from West Virginia, Mollohan was succeeded in Congress by his son, Alan.

Mollohan was born in Grantsville, West Virginia. He attended Glenville State College, graduating with an accounting degree. After finishing his education, Mollohan was hired by the city of Parkersburg, West Virginia as a tax collector. In 1935, he was promoted to the rank of chief of the miscellaneous tax division. In 1939, the city reassigned Mollohan's duties, making him the local director of the Works Progress Administration. In 1940, he briefly worked for the Census Bureau.

For eight years, beginning in 1941, Mollohan was director of the West Virginia Industrial School for Boys at Pruntytown. He left this position in 1949 to become a clerk for the U.S. Senate. He made a name for himself in Washington, and he rode the momentum to an election victory that earned him a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives from the 1st District of West Virginia in 1953. After just two terms in Congress, however, Mollohan decided to run for Governor of West Virginia. He lost the election to Cecil Underwood. In 1958, Mollohan decided to run for his old seat, now held by future Governor Arch Moore, Jr., a Republican, but Mollohan was defeated. He temporarily retired from politics and set up an insurance agency.

In 1968, Mollohan made another run at Congress after Moore decided to run for governor. Despite his long absence from Congress, Mollohan was victorious. While in the House for a second time, Mollohan served on the Armed Services Committee and became famous for his ability to gain large sums for local 'pork barrel' projects. Mollohan retired from the House in 1983, after grooming his son, Alan, as his replacement; his son held the seat until his primary defeat in 2010.

References

Bob Mollohan Wikipedia