Robert Reyburn “R. R.” Butler | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
Former U.S. Representative from Oregon's 2nd Congressional District From: November 6, 1928 – January 7, 1933 | |||
Predecessor | Nicholas J. Sinnott | ||
Successor | Walter M. Pierce | ||
Former State Senator from Oregon From: 1925–1929 | |||
Predecessor | ??? | ||
Successor | ??? | ||
Former State Senator from Oregon From: 1913–1917 | |||
Predecessor | ??? | ||
Successor | ??? | ||
Former Circuit Judge from the 11th Judicial District of Oregon From: February 1909 – January 1911 | |||
Predecessor | ??? | ||
Successor | ??? | ||
Former Mayor of Condon, Oregon From: ???–??? | |||
Predecessor | ??? | ||
Successor | ??? | ||
Information | |||
Party | Republican |
Robert Reyburn Butler (September 24, 1881 – January 7, 1933), also known as R. R. Butler,[1] was a lawyer[2] and Republican originally from Tennessee who represented Oregon's 2nd congressional district from 1928 to 1933. He was previously a circuit court judge and a state senator.
Butler was born in eastern Tennessee to William R. Butler, a physician,[3] and the former Rebecca Caroline Grayson. His paternal grandfather was Roderick R. Butler, a colonel for the Union Army during the American Civil War who later became a U.S. representative from Tennessee's 1st congressional district during and after Reconstruction. The town he was born in had been renamed in Roderick R. Butler's honor.
Rebecca C. Grayson, Butler's mother, also came from a distinguished family, as his maternal grandfather J. W. Grayson had been colonel in the Union Army who held a command during the war.[3]
After attending public schools, Butler enrolled in Holly Springs College, and later graduated from Cumberland University in 1903. Following admission to the state bar, he commenced practice as a lawyer in Mountain City, Tennessee. Over time, he garnered a reputation as an expert lawyer.[3]
Following three years of practice in Mountain City, Butler moved to Oregon.[3] He became known as a top lawyer at the region he presided in, which would quickly propel his political career.
Butler moved to Condon, Oregon, and was the mayor of the city for an unspecified period of time. After moving to The Dalles (located in Wasco County), Butler was elected in 1912 as a Republican to the Oregon State Senate, where he served from 1913 to 1917.[3]
He was also appointed to become a judge for a state circuit court; according to a biography:[3]
“ | For two years he served as judge of the circuit court, bringing to the duties and responsibilities of that public trust a clear legal vision and an upright method of handling the business of his court. | ” |
—History of Oregon Illustrated, Vol. 3 |
In the 1928 U.S. House elections, Butler sought the seat from Oregon's 2nd congressional district, located the majority of the state on the eastern side. He won the Republican nomination in a slate of seven candidates, polling a plurality of 35% of the vote.[4] In the general election, he faced former progressive Democrat governor and Ku Klux Klan ally Walter Pierce, and won the race by a margin of thirteen percentage points.[5]
Due to the resignation of congressman Nicholas J. Sinnott to serve in the Coolidge Administration, there was meant to be a simultaneous special election held on the same date as the 1928 general election to fill the remainder of Sinnott's term prior to the new congressional session. However, there was no separate "special election," as the two races were essentially merged.[6]
Butler easily won re-election to a second House term in the 1930 midterms, defeating Democrat Robert E. Bradford by a landslide.[7] However, he faced defeat in 1932 amidst backlash against Republicans over the Great Depression, and lost to former opponent Pierce by eight points.[8]
After reportedly suffering an ailment in both lungs and being in a coma state,[9] Butler died of heart disease and pneumonia on January 7, 1933.[2] He is interred at Odd Fellows Cemetery, located in The Dalles, Oregon.[2] Butler's grave contains the following inscription:
ROBERT REYBURN BUTLER MEMBER OF CONGRESS 1881 - 1933 HE WAS A MAN, TAKE HIM FOR ALL IN ALL, I SHALL NOT LOOK UPON HIS LIKE AGAIN. Shakespeare
Categories: [Oregon] [Tennessee] [Lawyers] [Judges] [Republicans] [United States Mayors] [State Senators] [Former United States Representatives]