Carlos Bee was an attorney and politician, serving as United States. Representative from Texas.
Background
He was a grandson of Hamilton P. Bee and a great-grandson of Thomas Bee, a politician and judge in South Carolina in the Revolutionary and Federal periods. Carlos Bee was born in 1869 in Saltillo, Mexico, where his parents Hamilton Prioleau Bee and Mildred Tarver Bee had moved from San Antonio after the collapse of the Confederacy and the end of the American Civil War. His father had been a general in the Confederate Army.
Education
He attended the public schools and the Agricultural and Mechanical College.
Career
In 1874, the family returned to San Antonio when Bee was five years old. He studied law while working as a railway mail clerk. After passing the bar, he started a practice.
After being admitted to the bar in 1893, Bee started a law practice in San Antonio.
He joined the Democratic Party and was appointed as United States commissioner for the western district of Texas in 1893. He was appointed as district attorney of the thirty-seventh judicial district, serving 1898–1905.
He served as delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1904 and 1908, and was elected as chairman in 1904. He was appointed as president of the county school board of Bexar County, Texas from 1912 to 1914.
In 1918, he was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1919 – March 3, 1921).
In 1920, he ran unsuccessfully in the primary for re-election to the Sixty-seventh Congress. After his defeat in the primary, Bee returned to the practice of law in San Antonio. He worked there until his death there on April 20, 1932.
He was interred in the Confederate Cemetery.
Membership
In his first electoral office, Bee served as a member of the city school board of San Antonio 1906–1908. In 1914, Bee was elected as a member of the State senate, serving 1915–1919.