Background
Born in Joplin, Missouri, Nichols was the son of John Adams and Mary Catherine Conover Nichols. She was the daughter of William Buford and Nina Young of Eufaula.
United States representative lawyer politician
Born in Joplin, Missouri, Nichols was the son of John Adams and Mary Catherine Conover Nichols. She was the daughter of William Buford and Nina Young of Eufaula.
He attended the public schools in Joplin, Missouri, and Colorado Springs, Colorado, and the teachers college at Emporia, Kansas. He studied law in the office of his brother in Eufaula, Oklahoma. And was admitted to the bar association in 1926 and commenced practice in Eufaula, Oklahoma.
During World War I Nichols served in the 19th Infantry, United States Army from 1917 to 1919. Nichols was elected as a Democrat to the 74th Congress and to the four succeeding Congresses and served from January 3, 1935, until his resignation on July 3, 1943, to become vice president of Transcontinental & Western Airlines. While in office, he served on the Rivers and Harbors, Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Territories Committees.
His legislative interests focused on American Indians, soil conservation, old-age pensions, Civilian Conservation Corporation (Commodity Credit Corporation) camps, and aviation.
Still vice president of Transcontinental & Western Airlines, Nichols died in an airplane crash at Asmara, Eritrea, on November 7, 1945. He was interred in the United States military cemetery at Asmara, Eritrea.
And reinterred at Greenwood Cemetery, Eufaula, Oklahoma.
In 1935 and 1937 he was also a member of a special committee that went to Hawaii to hold hearings on statehood.