Background
Lewis was born in Danville, Virginia, and also grew up in Augusta, Georgia.
politician representative senator
Lewis was born in Danville, Virginia, and also grew up in Augusta, Georgia.
He was educated at the University of Virginia and studied law in Savannah, Georgia before he served in the Spanish–American War.
Lewis was one of a very few politicians to represent two states in the United States Congress. Lewis served as Majority Whip from 1913 until 1919. At some point in his congressional career, he became known to colleagues as "Ham".
Upon his defeat for reelection in "18, Lewis was offered the ambassadorship to Belgium by the President, but he declined and returned private legal practice in Chicago, Illinois.
He would hold the Majority Whip position again from 1933 until his death in 1939. He was defeated for reelection to the Senate in 1918, but regained his seat in the election in 1930.
He ran unsuccessfully for governor of Illinois in 1908 and 1920, and continued to serve as Minority Whip in the Senate during the Depression and the New Deal era. In 1932, Lewis went to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, as the "favorite son" candidate of Illinois, at the behest of Chicago mayor Anton Cermak.
Cermak"s hope was to use Lewis to keep the Illinois delegates from supporting Franklin Delano Roosevelt, but Lewis later withdrew his name from consideration, and released his delegates, many of whom went to Franklin Delano Roosevelt and helped secure him the nomination.
Lewis was one of the first to befriend the new, and rather intimidated, Senator Harry South Truman. In 1935, during Truman"s first few weeks in office, Lewis sat next to Truman and kindly said "Harry, don"t start out with an inferiority complex. Foreign the first six months you"ll wonder how the hell you got here.
After that you"ll wonder how the hell rest of us got here."
Lewis was known to be something of an eccentric in manner and dress, wearing spats well into the 1930s, and sporting Van Dyke whiskers and a "wavy pink toupee", but he was courtly in manner, and a talented orator.
He was an authority on the United States. Constitution and on foreign affairs, and a skillful legislative tactician. He died in office, and his funeral service was held in the Senate Chamber.
Lewis was buried in Abbey Mausoleum near Arlington National Cemetery. But it was demolished in 2001, and his remains were moved to an unknown location.
Lewis represented Washington (1897–1899) in the United States House of Representatives as a Democrat, and went on to serve Illinois (1913–1919, 1931–1939) in the United States Senate as a member of the Democratic Party.