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M M Logan

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Preceded by
  
Ben M. Williamson

Name
  
M. Logan

Resigned
  
October 3, 1939

Signature
  

Succeeded by
  
Happy Chandler

Political party
  
Democratic

Preceded by
  
James Garnett

Party
  
Democratic Party


M. M. Logan

Born
  
January 7, 1874 Brownsville, Kentucky (
1874-01-07
)

Role
  
Former member of the United States Senate

Died
  
October 3, 1939, Washington, D.C., United States

Previous office
  
Senator (KY) 1931–1939

Marvel Mills Logan (January 7, 1874 – October 3, 1939), a Democrat, served as a member of the United States Senate from Kentucky.

Logan was born on a farm near Brownsville, Edmonson County, Kentucky. He taught school for two years and also conducted a training school for teachers. He then studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1896. He practiced law in Brownsville. He served as chairman of the board of trustees of Brownsville; as county attorney of Edmonson County 1902–1903; as assistant Attorney General of Kentucky 1912–1915; as Attorney General of Kentucky 1915–1917; and as chairman of the Kentucky Tax Commission 1917–1918. He then moved to Louisville, Kentucky in 1918 and then to Bowling Green, Kentucky in 1922, continuing to practice law. He served as a member of the State Board of Education, the State Board of Sinking Fund Commissioners, and the State Board of Printing Commissioners. He served as a justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals 1926–1930 and as Chief Justice in 1931.

Logan was elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1930 and reelected in 1936 and served from March 4, 1931, until his death. While in the Senate he served as chairman of the Committee on Mines and Mining (Seventy-third through Seventy-fifth Congresses) and on the Committee on Claims (Seventy-sixth Congress).

In 1933 Logan chaired the subcommittee dispatched to Louisiana by the United States Senate to investigate allegations of corrupt activities of the political machine of Huey Long during the 1932 election of John H. Overton to the Senate. Logan's inquiry reported that the election was impacted by fraud, specifically the involvement of dummy candidates and deducts (money taken from public employees' pay for use by the Long machine), but no action was taken against Overton.

Logan died in Washington, D.C. on October 3, 1939, and is buried in the Logan family cemetery near Brownsville.

References

M. M. Logan Wikipedia