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MARCUS ALLEN COOLIDGE
Coolidge, Marcus Allen (1865-1947), (son of
Frederick Spaulding Coolidge), a Senator from Massachusetts; born in Westminster, Worcester County, Mass., October
6, 1865; attended the public schools and Bryant & Stratton Commercial College at Boston, Mass.; employed by his
father in the manufacture of chairs and rattan; moved to Fitchburg, Mass., in 1895; engaged in the contracting
business, building street railways, water works, and bridges 1883-1905, and in the manufacture of machine tools in
1905; mayor of Fitchburg 1916; appointed in 1919 by President Woodrow Wilson as special envoy to Poland representing
the Peace Commission; chairman of the Democratic State convention in 1920; trustee and president of Cushing Academy
at Ashburnham, Mass.; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1931, to January 3,
1937; was not a candidate for renomination in 1936; chairman, Committee on Immigration (Seventy-third and
Seventy-fourth Congresses); resumed his former business pursuits and resided in Fitchburg, Mass.; died at Miami
Beach, Fla., January 23, 1947; interment in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Westminster, Mass.
Parents: Frederick Spaulding Coolidge, Ellen D Allen
Spouse: Ethel Warren
Born: abt 1871
Marriage: 1 Oct 1898
Sources:
Vital Records U.S. Federal Census Family Collections LDS The Political Graveyard
Submitted by Deborah Crowell |