Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Frank S Tavenner, Jr

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Nationality
  
American

Died
  
October 21, 1964

Occupation
  
Lawyer

Education
  
Princeton University


Years active
  
1927–circa 1960

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Name
  
Frank Tavenner,

Succeeded by
  
Harry F. Byrd

Born
  
July 12, 1895 (
1895-07-12
)
Woodstock, Virginia, US

Known for
  
Counsel for the House Un-American Activities Committee

Frank S. Tavenner (1895–1964) was a Virginia lawyer who was U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia, along with other high profile government legal positions, particularly as chief counsel to the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC).

Contents

Background

Frank Stacy Tavenner, Jr., was born in Woodstock, Virginia on July 12, 1895. (His father, F. S. Tavenner, Sr., was a lawyer, member of the Senate of Virginia, and judge. The elder Tavenner held the same Senate seat later occupied by Harry Byrd, Sr. and Harry Byrd, Jr..) He took an A.B. degree at Roanoke College in 1916. He served in World War I as an Army lieutentant. He received an A.M. at Princeton University in 1917 and an LL.B at the University of Virginia Law School in 1927.

Career

Shortly after graduating, Tavenner began to practice law in his home town.

In 1931, he became Assistant U.S. Attorney in Roanoke, Virginia. In 1933 Tavenner was appointed assistant U.S. attorney in the Western District of Virginia. In 1938, he along with A.C. Buchanan were the choices of Virginia Senators Carter Glass and Harry Byrd, Sr., to a vacancy on the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, to which Franklin D. Roosevelt named instead Floyd H. Roberts. In 1940, Tavenner became U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia, nominated by Roosevelt.

Following World War II, he was assigned by the Department of the Army to be Counsel under Joseph B. Keenan and later Acting Chief of Counsel of the International Prosecution Section for the International Military Tribunal for the Far East from late 1945 to the end of the trial in 1948. He defended former Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo.

From May 1949 until the mid-1950s, Tavenner served as Chief Counsel for the House Un-American Activities Committee, where he replaced Robert E. Stripling. During this period, HUAC conducted more than 100 hearings that resulted in 35 volumes and 11 reports. Among its documents was a first-ever "Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications."

Personal and death

Tavenner died age 69 on October 21, 1964, of a heart attack and was buried in the Massanutten Cemetery in Woodstock.

Legacy

Dartmouth College law professor Robert K. Carr wrote of Tavenner that in him HUAC had "obtained perhaps the best­qualified and most dispassionate assistant it ever had."

References

Frank S. Tavenner, Jr. Wikipedia