A. Paul Kitchin was a United States. Congressional representative from North Carolina.
Background
Kitchin was born in Scotland Neck, North Carolina on September 13, 1908, the grandson of former congressman William H. Kitchin and the nephew of congressman Claude Kitchin and of North Carolina Governor William Walton Kitchin. His father, Alvin Paul Kitchin, Senior, was a member of the North Carolina House of Representatives.
Education
He was educated in the public schools. Attended Oak Ridge Military Academy 1923-1925. Graduated from Wake Forest College Law School in 1930.
Was admitted to the bar in 1930 and commenced the practice of law in Scotland Neck.
Career
Beginning in 1933, he worked for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He served as special-agent-in-charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation"s offices in several major cities, including Newark, New Jersey, New Orleans, Los Angeles, and Dallas, Texas. He retired from the Federal Bureau of Investigation in August 1945, and then resumed the practice of law in Wadesboro, North Carolina, his wife"s hometown. In 1956, Kitchin was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-fifth Congress (January 3, 1957 - January 3, 1959), and was subsequently re-elected to the Eighty-sixth Congress (January 3, 1959 - January 3, 1961) as well as the Eighty-seventh Congress (January 3, 1961 – January 3, 1963).
He was the unsuccessful candidate for election in 1962 to the Eighty-eighth Congress.
Kitchin resumed the practice of law and was a resident of Wadesboro, North Carolina, until his death there on October 22, 1983.