Sneha Girap (Editor)

Guy J Swope

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President
  
Franklin D. Roosevelt

Succeeded by
  
John C. Kunkel

Party
  
Democratic Party

Preceded by
  
Isaac H. Doutrich

Role
  
Teacher

Name
  
Guy Swope

Preceded by
  
Jose Miguel Gallardo

Political party
  
Democratic Party


Born
  
December 26, 1892 Meckville, Berks County, Pennsylvania (
1892-12-26
)

Died
  
July 25, 1969, New York City, New York, United States

Education
  
Columbia University, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania

Succeeded by
  
Jose Miguel Gallardo

Guy Jacob Swope (December 26, 1892 – July 25, 1969) was an American teacher, accountant, and Democratic politician. His career included one term as a United States Congressman in the Seventy-seventh United States Congress, serving as a Director in the United States Department of Interior under Franklin D. Roosevelt, and serving for a brief period as (acting) Governor of Puerto Rico in 1941. He also served in the United States Naval Reserve, Military Government Branch, where he attained the rank of Commander.

Swope was born in Meckville, Berks County, Pennsylvania and studied in Keystone State Teachers College and Columbia University School of International Affairs. After graduation, he first worked as a teacher in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania and later as an agent for the Internal Revenue Service. In 1935, he became the budgetary secretary for Pennsylvania and served in that position for two years before being elected to congress in 1936. He failed to win re-election in 1938.

He was made auditor of Puerto Rico in 1940 and served in that capacity for only a year before being appointed acting Governor. He only worked as governor for less than a year before becoming a Director in the Division of Territories and Island Possessions for the Department of the Interior.

During the Second World War, he joined the United States Naval Reserve. After the war, he was a civilian chief of the National Government Division in Tokyo, Japan and later as an assistant to the American High Commissioner in Germany.

After the war, Swope returned to political life with a failed bid for re-election to Congress in 1956, but he was appointed Deputy State Treasurer of Pennsylvania from 1961 until his retirement in 1965.

References

Guy J. Swope Wikipedia