|
|
BRANN, LOUIS J.
of Lewiston, born in Madison on July 6, 1876, was elected
Maine's first Democratic governor in two decades during depression era sweeps in
1932 and again in 1934. He defeated first Burleigh Martin of Augusta, then
Alfred Ames of Machias.
Brann attended local schools in Gardiner and worked his
way through the University of Maine graduating in 1898. After studying law, he
was admitted to the bar in 1902 and became a highly successful trial lawyer.
Originally a Republican, he switched to the Democratic
Party to protect his practice in predominantly Democratic Lewiston. He soon was
elected to a series of local offices culminating in becoming Mayor in 1915 and
serving five terms in that office. He chaired the Democratic Party and was a
losing candidate for governor in the primary of 1926. However, in 1932 in won
the primary and the general election becoming the first popularly elected
Democratic governor in eighteen years.
Brann, as part of his efforts to promote Maine,
entertained many celebrities at the Blaine House.
His "Maine Summer Visitor' Day" each year attracted throngs, including
Rudy Vallee, Boston Braves President Camil Fuchs, and authors Ben Ames Williams,
Kenneth Roberts, and Gladys Hasty Carroll.
With his connections to the Roosevelt Administration in
Washington, he brought substantial federal resources to Maine. Brann worked very
well with the Republican legislature and promoted the state to attract summer
visitors. As a result, he handily won reelection in 1934. Nevertheless, he was
turned back in his bid for the U.S. Senate in 1936, his attempt to return to the
governor's office in 1938, another run for the Senate in 1940, and one for
Congress in 1942.
Retiring permanently from politics, he served as chair of
the Federal Solid Fuel War Council in 1942 and practiced law in Maine. Brann
died on February 3, 1948.
Additional resources
Hunt,
H. Draper. The Blaine House - Home of Maine Governors, 1994.
|