Sneha Girap (Editor)

Raymond Joseph Cannon

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Preceded by
  
John C. Schafer

Role
  
Attorney

Children
  
Robert C. Cannon

Name
  
Raymond Cannon

Resigned
  
January 3, 1939

Political party
  
Democratic

Succeeded by
  
John C. Schafer

Nationality
  
American

Party
  
Democratic Party


Raymond Joseph Cannon

Spouse(s)
  
Alice (nee Carey); 3 children

Alma mater
  
Marquette University Law School

Profession
  
Baseball player, attorney

Died
  
November 25, 1951, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States

Education
  
Marquette University Law School

Raymond Joseph Cannon (August 26, 1894 – November 25, 1951) was an attorney, baseball player and Democratic politician who represented Wisconsin's 4th congressional district in the Congress from 1933 to 1939.

Contents

Early life

Born in Ironwood, Michigan, Cannon lost both of his parents when he was six months old and he spent most of his early life in an orphanage.

He played baseball semi-professionally from 1908 to 1922, primarily as a pitcher. He also taught school in Minocqua, Wisconsin in 1910 and 1911.

He attended Marquette University Law School in Milwaukee and was admitted to the bar in 1914. He became an early sports attorney whose clients included Jack Dempsey. After the Black Sox Scandal, he was retained by one of the blacklisted players, Happy Felsch (a Milwaukee native), who sued Charles Comiskey and the Chicago White Sox for back pay, World Series money, and damages. Felsch's teammates Buck Weaver, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and Swede Risberg also became Cannon’s clients.

In 1922, he helped put together the short-lived National Baseball Players Association of the United States, one of several unsuccessful attempts to create a union for pro ball players. It is believed that his association with the Black Sox hurt the NBPA, and may have contributed to its collapse. In 1929 his law license was suspended, and Cannon was prevented from practicing until it was reinstated in 1931.

Politics

In 1932, Cannon was the Democratic nominee for the 4th District seat in the 73rd United States Congress, unseating Republican incumbent John C. Schafer with 61,038 votes to 33,609 for Schafer and 24,377 for Socialist Assemblyman Walter Polakowski.

In 1934, after Cardinal Dougherty of Philadelphia called for a Roman Catholic boycott of all films, Cannon (himself a Catholic) announced plans to introduce a congressional bill, supported by both Democrats and Republicans, which would introduce Government oversight of film censorship.

Cannon was re-elected in 1934 with a 38.56% plurality in a five-way race (against Schafer, a Socialist, a Progressive, and an independent Communist; and in 1936 (a 47.25% plurality vs. Progressive Paul Gauer and Schafer).

In 1938, Cannon was unseated in the Democratic primary by Thaddeus F. Wasielewski, but ran anyway as an independent. He lost his seat to Schafer, polling only 7,498 votes (7.02%) to Schafer's 34,196 (32.00%), Wasielewski's 33,559 (31.40%), and Progressive Gauer's 30,817 (28.84%); a Union Party candidate polled 794 votes (0.74%).

Cannon later ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1940 and 1942.

Personal life

He married Alice Carey in 1915, and they had three children: Robert, Mary Alice and Jeanne. Robert, the eldest, also became an attorney, and was elected as a Wisconsin Circuit and Wisconsin Appeals Court Judge, and served as legal advisor to the Major League Baseball Players Association.

Death

Cannon died in Milwaukee after suffering a heart attack. He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery & Mausoleum in Milwaukee.

References

Raymond Joseph Cannon Wikipedia