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Senate Years of Service: 1946-1966 Party: Democrat
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ROBERTSON, Absalom Willis, a Representative and a Senator from Virginia; born in Martinsburg, Berkeley
County, W.Va., May 27, 1887; moved to Lynchburg, Va., with his parents in 1891; attended the
public schools of Lynchburg and Rocky Mount, Va.; graduated from the University of Richmond,
Richmond, Va., in 1907, and from its law department in 1908; admitted to the bar in 1908 and
commenced practice in Buena Vista, Rockbridge County, Va.; moved to Lexington, Rockbridge
County, Va., in 1919 and continued the practice of law; member, State senate 1916-1922; during the
First World War served in the United States Army as assistant camp adjutant at Camp Lee, Va., and
in the Adjutant Generals Office, Washington, D.C., with the rank of major 1917-1919; served as
Commonwealths attorney for Rockbridge County 1922-1928; chairman of the State commission of
game and inland fisheries 1926-1932; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-third Congress;
reelected to the six succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1933, until November 5, 1946,
when he resigned; was nominated to the Eightieth Congress in 1946 but withdrew, having received the
nomination for United States Senator; elected on November 5, 1946, as a Democrat to the United
States Senate to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1949, caused by the death of Carter
Glass; reelected in 1948, 1954 and 1960 and served from November 6, 1946, until his resignation
December 30, 1966; unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1966; co-chairman, Joint Committee
on Defense Production (Eighty-fifth, Eighty-seventh, and Eighty-ninth Congresses), chairman,
Committee on Banking and Currency (Eighty-sixth through Eighty-ninth Congresses); served as
consultant to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development 1966-1968; retired and
resided in Lexington, Va., until his death there November 1, 1971; interment in Stonewall Jackson
Memorial Cemetery.
BibliographyU.S. Congress. Memorial Addresses.
92nd Cong., 2nd sess., 1972. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1972.
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