John Hubbard Chafee served Rhode Island as State Representative
(1957-1962), Governor (1963-1968), and as United States Senator
(1977-1999). He also served as Secretary of the Navy under President
Richard Nixon for three years (1969-1972). He died on October 24,
1999, two days after his 77th birthday, after having spent
most of his working years in public service.
Born in Providence, Rhode Island on October 22, 1922, John Chafee
was descended from one of the original six families to settle Rhode
Island and came from a family long prominent in politics. Two
relatives on his mothers side had served as governors of Rhode
Island, great grandfather, Henry Lippitt (1875-77) and, great uncle,
Charles Warren Lippitt (1895-97). Another great-uncle, Henry Frederick
Lippitt (1911-17), had been a United States Senator from Rhode Island.
Zechariah Chafee, Jr., an uncle, was a noted Harvard law professor.
John H. Chafee obtained his early education in the public
elementary schools of Providence, the Providence Country Day School,
and Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, Massachusetts. After graduating from
Deerfield Academy in 1940, he entered Yale University, but left Yale
in his sophomore year to enlist in the United States Marine Corp. He
served first as a private and landed with the first assault troops at
Guadalcanal. In November 1943, he attended Officers Candidate School
and was commissioned as second lieutenant, United States Marine Corps
Reserve, in June 1944. The following January he went to Guam and
served with the Sixth Marine Division in the battle of Okinawa in
April 1945; he left active duty in December 1945.
Chafee returned to Yale University in 1946 and graduated with a
B.A. in 1947. He continued his studies at Harvard Law School from
which he graduated in 1950, in the top quarter of his class. He
married Virginia Coates of Bayville, New York, shortly after
graduating. He passed the Rhode Island bar and was practicing in
Providence when the Korean War broke out. Recalled to active duty by
the Marines in 1951, he served as a Rifle Company commander with the
First Marine Division in Korea. In June 1953 he was released from
active duty and he returned to civilian lifeafter nearly six years
of active duty with the Marines in two wars.
Newly returned from Korea, Chafee helped in the successful campaign
of Christopher DelSesto--then the Republican candidate for Mayor of
Providence in 1952. Chafee became campaign manager in 1954 for Camilo
Rodriquez, a council candidate for the Republican ticket in the 9th
Ward in Warwick. In 1956, Chafee won the endorsement of the
third district committee for Rhode Island House of Representatives and
went on to win in the general election by a margin of 2 to 1. He was
reelected in both 1958 and 1960. At the start of his second term in
the General Assembly in 1958, he was chosen by the Republican members
of the House to be the House Minority leader (1959-62). Working
closely with DelSesto, now Governor of Rhode Island (1958-1960),
Chafee shepherded a Republican program through an overwhelmingly
Democratic assembly.
Chafee was elected for a third term in 1960 and was again chosen as
House Minority Leader. He served as a member of the Judiciary
Committee, Secretary of the Commission to reapportion the House of
Representatives and Secretary of the Legislative Council. The election
of 1960, however, saw the defeat of Governor DelSesto--who had been
the only Republican in 22 years to win a statewide election--to the
Lieutenant Governor, John A. Notte Jr. (Democrat). A small group of
Republicans began holding a series of meetings to select the best
possible gubernatorial candidate to represent the party in the next
election. Despite his young age--he was only 39 at the time--John H.
Chafee was chosen to be a candidate.
In February 1962, Chafee officially declared his candidacy and
began campaigning. He personally sought the vote of each delegate to
the Rhode Island Republican State Convention which was held in June.
The Convention gave the endorsement to John Chafee over Louis Jackvony
after three ballots (by a margin of 59 to 54a 57 vote total of the
113 committee members was required for endorsement). Jackvony had led
on the first ballot with 55 votes to Chafees 52 and Joseph ODonnells
5, but on the second vote Chafee went into the lead with 56 votes,
Jackvony dropped to 53 and ODonnell dropped to 3. ODonnell then
released his votes and with only two candidates left, a decision
became certain on the third ballot. Despite Chafees win, Jackvony
informed the committee that he was not convinced it had picked the
right man and announced that he would run in the state primary on
September 11. Chafee won the Republican primary with 18,624 votes to
Jackvonys 11,156, carrying Providence, Cranston, Pawtucket and 23
towns. The Republicans then chose Joseph ODonnell, whose withdrawal
made Chafees nomination possible, to be their nominee for
Lieutenant Governor.
Immediately after the convention, Chafees
"Meet-the-People" campaign rolled into high gear and he
spent up to 18 hours a day stumping the state, taking a firm stand
principally against Governor Nottes attempts to establish a
personal state income tax. Chafee promised that if he were elected he
would impose no new taxes and would bring more jobs and higher wages
to Rhode Islanders. By Election Day, November 6, 1962, it was
estimated that he had met nearly 100,000 of the approximately 860,000
people in the state. When the votes were finally tabulated from the
more than 1200 voting machines, John Chafee was leading by 66 votes.
On November 30, 1962, the Board of Elections declared John Chafee the
winner by 398 votes.
During his first two-year term, Chafee pushed though important
legislation, including a comprehensive medical aid program for the
aged, an expanded state vocational training program, authorization for
the acquisition of land for state woodlands and waterfront parts, and
provision for the establishment of a new state junior college. He
remained adamant against a state income tax, but he did request a rise
in the state sales tax from 3 to 3 ½ percent. Despite Democratic
opposition to his plan and its eventual defeat, Chafees personal
popularity rose. In 1964 he easily won the election for governor again
over his Democratic opponent, Lieutenant Governor Edward Gallogly, by
capturing 61.1 percent of the vote, the greatest plurality of any
Republican governor in the history of the state. The election was won
by a record margin of 87,336 votes during a presidential election in
which the Democrat, Lyndon Johnson, won in a landslide victory over
the Republican, Barry Goldwater. Johnson won in Rhode Island by the
highest plurality (82%) of any state in the United States.
Although still faced with a Democratic-controlled Legislature,
Governor Chafee worked with the General Assembly and managed to get a
majority of his programs accepted. He worked for state health
programs, vocational education, fair housing, and school construction
bills. He was also able to get the state sales tax increased to 4
percent. He fought for fair housing laws and fair employment practices
well in advance of any federal initiatives along these lines. He also
fostered the establishment of the Rhode Island Public Transportation
Administration and was instrumental in the construction of Route 95
through Rhode Island.
As the election of 1966 came closer, Governor Chafee declared his
intention to run for another term as governor instead of attempting to
unseat Claiborne Pell in the US Senate, as many thought he might. The Washington
Post on Mar 17, 1966, had reported that "Gov. John H. Chafee,
a Republican phenomenon in a heavily Democratic state, has his own
Party as well as the Democrats guessing as to whether he will seek
re-election this November or run for Democrat Claiborne Pell's Senate
seat." Chafee ran for governor in 1966 and easily won (by 63.3%) against the Democratic candidate, Warwick mayor, Horace Hobbs
(36.7%), with a plurality of 88,340. For the first time in 28 years,
the Republican candidates for Lieutenant Governor and Attorney General
were also victorious.
Following his victory in 1966, Chafee began to garner national
attention. With the presidential election looming in 1968, many
speculated that Chafee might be nominated as a "favorite
son" delegate at the national convention. He had many
qualifications to capture the nomination. He had a reputation as a
young, vigorous, conciliatory, and wildly popular politician. As Time
magazine wrote about him in July 14, 1967, "Chafee has steered
through a Democratic legislature a dazzling assortment of programs to
improve education, health, transit and recreation services."
Chafee's major disadvantage was being from such a small state with its
attendant shortage of delegates and electoral votes. Barring a possibility
of a presidential nomination, Chafee, however, did not disallow the possibility
of accepting a vice-presidential nomination. He
astonished an audience of reporters by replying to a convoluted
question about his willingness to be considered for the vice president
by bluntly saying, "Oh, sure." (Washington Post, Jan.
7, 1969).
Chafees political popularity and executive ability also led him
to become prominent in the movement among Republican governors to
take some of the policy-making power away from Republican
Congressional legislators. In 1964 the Republican Governors
Association was set up in Washington, DC, and in 1966, Chafee ran for
chairman of the Association, although it elected Governor John Love of
Colorado. Both Love and Chafee wished to attain the chairmanship of
the committee for the national attention they would gain. They
compromised by accepting Love as chairman for a year, with a
promise that Chafee would succeed to the chairmanship of the Association
the following year beginning in December 1967. During the strife-torn summer
of 1967, Chafee was one of eight Republican governors who issued
recommendations for the control of racial riots and the alleviation of
the causes behind urban unrest. He continued to take unpopular, and
often unsuccessful, stands on the Republican civil rights platform and
on having a governor appointed vice-chairman on the platform committee
for the 1968 national convention which nominated Richard Nixon to be
their candidate for president.
Chafees run for re-election as governor in 1968 should have been
easily accomplished. He was a very popular governor and had never lost
any election he had run in. He was often referred to as "the
winningest GOP governor" by the press. In fact, the campaign was plagued by
personal tragedy, as well as unpopular, but pragmatic, political
decisions. His 14-year old daughter was killed in a horse-riding
accident a month before the election. After running strenuously on the
ticket that he would oppose any state income tax in 1962, 1964, and
1966, he took the stand in 1968 that an income tax was imperative to
the running of Rhode Islands government. His opponent, Frank Licht,
just as strongly took up the position that he would not initiate a
state income tax and that position probably won Licht the election in
a surprise upset. Interestingly, Chafee had won his first term as
governor as an anti-income tax candidate.
Not only had Chafee backed unpopular political agenda, he had
backed unsuccessful political nominations on the national scene.
Chafee was an early supporter of George Romney for the 1968 Republican
presidential nomination and then switched to Nelson Rockefeller when
Romney dropped out of the race. Once Nixon was nominated at the
convention, Chafee organized the abortive floor fight against the
choice of Spiro Agnew as Nixon's running
mate. Chafee's relations with Melvin Laird were equally as stormy.
In 1964, Chafee was one of the liberal Republicans who rebelled
against the platform Laird, as head of the GOP convention's resolution
committee, had drafted; Chafee spoke on behalf of stronger civil
rights, a plank the Goldwater delegates turned down. Laird had also
turned down Chafee's demand for the co-chairmanship of the platform
committee in 1968.
Chafee's
chances in 1968--after his gubernatorial defeat in Rhode Island--at
being appointed to a position in the Republican national government,
once so bright, were at that point dim. His appointment as
Secretary of the Navy under the presidency of Richard Nixon came as
something of a surprise to insiders, but some believed that his
appointment was an appeasement to Eastern liberal Republicans. Not
only had he sided with the losing side in the presidential campaign,
he had antagonized Melvin Laird, the controversial and conservative
chairman of the 1964 Republican platform committee, who as Secretary
of Defense, would be Chafees superior in the Navy Department. The
Washington Post noted that Chafee "has been at odds with
the President-elect and the Secretary of Defense-designate more often
than he has been allied with them" (Jan 7, 1969). Nonetheless, it
was Agnew who called Chafee to ask him if he would be interested in a
job with the Nixon administration and it was Laird who urged him to
take the Navy post instead of the post on the domestic side of the
government in which Chafee was originally interested.
Chafee went on, after his appointment as Secretary of the Navy, to
run for the United States Senate representing Rhode Island. He was
defeated by Claiborne Pell--the popular and incumbent Democrat--in the
election of 1972. After working for a private law firm for four years,
he launched a successful election campaign in 1976 for the seat of the
retiring Senator John Pastore. After 1976, he never lost an election.
Despite the lasting impact on national government which Chafee
effected as Senator, he tellingly wrote in a letter to Deerfield
Academy in 1990, "tell your children and grandchildren that being
Governor is the best of all jobs." (John H. Chafee to Deerfield
Academy, February 12, 1990.)
For a Historical Note on Chafee's tenure as Secretary of the Navy,
1969-1972, see Historical Note: Secretary
of the Navy.
For an Historical Note on Chafee's Campaign for the Senate in 1972,
see Historical Note: Senate Campaign,
1972.
Information taken from Richmond Vialls May 14, 1963 statement, Current
Biography 1967, various Chafee news releases, and from accounts in the Providence
Journal.