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Bingham, Hiram, 1875-1956


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    • Bingham, Mr. (Hiram), 1875-1956
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    • found: His Virginia letters on the Scots Darien colony, 1699, 1905.
    • found: Lost city of the Incas, 1967:t.p. (Hiram Bingham) p. 241 (Hiram Bingham (1875-1956), explorer; b. in Honolulu; educated at Yale, California, and Harvard; taught briefly at Harvard and Princeton; returned to Yale as Prof. of Latin Amer. History; dir. of Yale's Peruvian expeditions; interest in Republican politics; served as Lt. Gov. and Gov. of Conn. and U.S. Senator from Conn.)
    • found: Insular reorganization, 1930:t.p. (Mr. Bingham)
    • found: Biog. dir. of the U.S. Congress website, May 5, 2014(Bingham, Hiram, (father of Jonathan Brewster Bingham), a Senator from Connecticut; born in Honolulu, Hawaii, November 19, 1875; educated at Punahou School and Oahu College, Hawaii, 1882-1892, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., 1892-1894, Yale University 1894-1898, University of California at Berkeley 1899-1900, and Harvard University 1900-1905; professor of history and politics at Harvard and then Princeton Universities; South American explorer, credited with the discovery of the Incan ruins at Machu Picchu; delegate to the First Pan American Scientific Congress at Santiago, Chile, in 1908; captain, Connecticut National Guard 1916; became an aviator in the spring of 1917; organized the United States Schools of Military Aeronautics in May 1917; served in the Aviation Section, Signal Corps, and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel; commanded the flying school at Issoudun, France, from August to December 1918; lieutenant governor of Connecticut 1922-1924; elected Governor of Connecticut on November 4, 1924 but served only briefly; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate on December 16, 1924, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Frank B. Brandegee in the term ending March 3, 1927; reelected in 1926 and served from January 8, 1925, to March 3, 1933; unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1932; chairman, Committee on Printing (Seventieth Congress), Committee on Territories and Insular Possessions (Seventieth through Seventy-second Congresses); censured by the Senate in 1929 on charges of placing a lobbyist on his payroll; appointed a member of the President's Aircraft Board by President Calvin Coolidge 1925; engaged in banking and literary work in Washington, D.C.; during the Second World War, lectured at naval training schools 1942-1943; chairman of the Civil Service Commission's Loyalty Review Board 1951-1953; died in Washington, D.C., June 6, 1956; interment in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.)
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    • 1980-09-04: new
    • 2023-02-24: revised
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