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Claude Brinegar

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Preceded by
  
John A. Volpe

Education
  
Stanford University

Name
  
Claude Brinegar


Years of service
  
1945-1947

Alma mater
  
Stanford University

Resigned
  
February 1, 1975

Claude Brinegar cachebostoncomresizebonzaifbaGlobePhoto200

President
  
Richard Nixon Gerald Ford

Born
  
December 16, 1926 Rockport, California (
1926-12-16
)

Service/branch
  
United States Army Air Forces

Role
  
Former United States Secretary of Transportation

Died
  
March 13, 2009, Palo Alto, California, United States

Previous office
  
United States Secretary of Transportation (1973–1975)

Succeeded by
  
William Thaddeus Coleman, Jr.

People also search for
  
Richard Nixon, Karen Bartholomew, Ray LaHood

Claude Stout Brinegar (December 16, 1926 – March 13, 2009) was the third United States Secretary of Transportation, serving from February 2, 1973, to February 1, 1975. Holding a PhD from Stanford University in economic research, Brinegar had previously been an oil company executive. Brinegar was Secretary of Transportation during the 1973 oil crisis.

Contents

Early life and education

Claude Brinegar was born Claude Rawles Stout on December 16, 1926, to Lyle Rawles Stout and Claude Leroy Stout in Rockport, California, a small lumber town on the coast, 25 miles north of Fort Bragg. After her husband abandoned her and her toddler, Lyle Stout got a teaching job on an Indian reservation. Following her marriage, in 1932, to Butler Brinegar, the boy had a disjointed education, attending a different school each year as his stepfather moved around Northern California for jobs with the Works Progress Administration and other agencies. He legally took his stepfather’s last name in 1951. He served in the United States Army Air Forces, 1945–47, then attended Stanford University, where he received a B.A. in Economics with Great Distinction (1950), an M.S. in Mathematics and Statistics (1951), and a Ph.D. in economic research (1953). He was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa. While pursuing his Ph.D., Mr. Brinegar was a Research Assistant with the Food Research Institute in Stanford, California, and an Economic Consultant to the Emporium-Capwell Corporation in San Francisco, California.

Brinegar joined the Union Oil Company (later called Unocal Corporation) in 1953 as an economic analyst and held several positions in economics, planning and research until 1965, when he was elected vice president for corporate planning. In October 1965, Union Oil and the Pure Oil Company merged. Brinegar was appointed president of Pure Oil and remained in that position when Pure became Union 76. He was also elected senior vice president of the firm and a member of Union Oil's board of directors and executive committee.

Political life

Brinegar was nominated to the post of United States Secretary of Transportation by Richard Nixon. He also served under Gerald Ford, but when Ford said he intended to seek the presidency, Brinegar resigned and returned to an executive position at Union Oil. In 1980–81, Brinegar was on Ronald Reagan's transition team.

References

Claude Brinegar Wikipedia