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Edward P Costigan

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Preceded by
  
Lawrence C. Phipps

Profession
  
Law

Alma mater
  
Harvard University

Party
  
Democratic Party

Political party
  
Democratic

Education
  
Harvard University

Succeeded by
  
Edwin C. Johnson

Name
  
Edward Costigan


Edward P. Costigan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons55

Born
  
July 1, 1874 King William County, Virginia (
1874-07-01
)

Resting place
  
Fairmount Cemetery (Denver, Colorado)

Role
  
Former United States Senator

Died
  
January 17, 1939, Denver, Colorado, United States

Books
  
Public Ownership of Government: Collected Papers of Edward P. Costigan

Similar People
  
Ed Perlmutter, Doug Lamborn, Marilyn Musgrave, Tom Tancredo, John Salazar

Previous office
  
Senator (CO) 1931–1937

Edward Prentiss Costigan (July 1, 1874 – January 17, 1939) was a Democratic Party politician who represented Colorado in the United States Senate from 1931 until 1937. He was a founding member of the Progressive Party in Colorado in 1912.

Contents

Early life and education

Edward Prentiss Costigan was born in King William County, Virginia in 1874. He graduated from Harvard University in 1899.

Career

The following year, he moved to Denver, Colorado, where he had gotten his first position as a lawyer.

Costigan was a founding member of the Progressive Party in Colorado in 1912, but lost the election for governor. President Woodrow Wilson appointed Costigan as a member of the United States Tariff Commission in 1917.

He was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat in 1930. Oscar L. Chapman managed his campaign.

In 1934 he co-sponsored the Jones-Costigan amendment to the U.S. Sugar Act, protecting the U.S. sugar industry, including sugar from Colorado beets.

Costigan-Wagner Bill

Colorado Democratic Senator Edward P. Costigan and New York Democratic Senator Robert F. Wagner sponsored a federal anti-lynching law in 1934. In 1935 Senate leaders tried to persuade President Franklin D. Roosevelt to support the Costigan-Wagner Bill. Roosevelt was concerned about a provision of the bill that called for the punishment of sheriffs who failed to protect their prisoners from lynch mobs. He believed that he would lose the support of the white voters in the South by approving this, and lose the 1936 presidential election.

The Costigan-Wagner Bill received support from many members of Congress but the Southern bloc managed to defeat it in the Senate. The national debate that took place over the issue again brought renewed attention to the crime of lynching. By the mid-1930s, the rate of the crime had finally dropped, mostly below 20 annually.

Further-reading

  • Greenbaum, Fred. Fighting progressive: A biography of Edward P. Costigan (Public Affairs Press, 1971)
  • Greenbaum, Fred. "The Anti-Lynching Bill of 1935: The Irony of ‘Equal Justice—Under Law.’." Journal of Human Relations 15#3 (1967): 72-85.
  • References

    Edward P. Costigan Wikipedia