Allard K. Lowenstein
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Allard Kenneth Lowenstein, (January 16, 1929 – March 14, 1980[1][2]), was a liberal Democratic politician, a one-term congressman representing the 5th District in Nassau County, New York from 1969 until 1971. His work on civil rights and the antiwar movement has been cited as an inspiration by public figures including Congressmen John Kerry, Donald W. Riegle, Jr., Barney Frank, California gubernatorial candidate Phil Angelides, columnist William F. Buckley, Jr.,[3] actor Warren Beatty,[4] and songwriter Harry Chapin.[5]
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[edit] Political activism
Lowenstein was a graduate of Horace Mann School in New York City[citation needed] and of the University of North Carolina.[2] As an undergraduate, he was president of the National Student Association.[2] Lowenstein received a J.D. from Yale Law School in 1954.[2]
In 1959, Lowenstein made a clandestine tour of South-West Africa, now Namibia. While he was there, he collected testimony against the South African controlled government (South-West Africa was a United Nations Trust Territory). After his return, he spent a year promoting his findings to various student organizations, then wrote a book, A Brutal Mandate, with an introduction by Eleanor Roosevelt, with whom he had worked in 1957 at the American Association for the United Nations.
Along with Curtis Gans in 1967, and later that fall joined by Wisconsin's Midge Miller, Lowenstein started the Dump Johnson movement and approached Robert F. Kennedy about challenging President Johnson in the 1968 Democratic primaries. Lowenstein was himself elected to Congress in 1968, but was gerrymandered out of his seat by the legislature in 1970.[6] Lowenstein ran anyway in a new district in 1970, capturing a respectable 46% of the vote. In 1971, Lowenstein became head of the Americans for Democratic Action, and also spearheaded the Dump Nixon movement, earning himself a place on Nixon's Enemies List. In 1972, he ran unsuccessfully for Congress in Brooklyn against Congressman John J. Rooney, a conservative Democrat. Rooney narrowly won the primary, but Lowenstein continued in the race on the Liberal Party line, finishing with 28% of the vote. After an abortive 1974 U.S. Senate bid, Lowenstein unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Republican Congressman John Wydler in 1974 and 1976.
President Carter appointed Lowenstein to head the United States delegation to the thirty-third regular annual session of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1977. Lowenstein served with the rank of ambassador from August 1977 to June 1978 in the capacity of alternate United States Representative for Special Political Affairs to the United Nations. In 1978 he resigned to run for Congress again, narrowly losing the Democratic primary.
Lowenstein was married to Jennifer Lowenstein (nee Lyman, now Littlefield) from 1966 to 1977 and the two had three children: Frank Graham, Thomas Kennedy, and Katharine Eleanor.
[edit] Death
Lowenstein's political career—and life—ended when he was assassinated in his Manhattan office on March 14, 1980, at age 51 by a deranged gunman, Dennis Sweeney.
Lowenstein was well known for his ability to attract energetic young volunteers for his political causes. In the mid-1960s, he briefly served as dean of Stern Hall, then a men's dormitory at Stanford University, during which time he met and befriended undergraduate students David Harris and Sweeney. Over a decade later, in 1980, Lowenstein was shot in New York City by Sweeney, now mentally ill and convinced that Lowenstein was plotting against him; Sweeney subsequently turned himself in to the police. Lowenstein, Sweeney, and the shooting are discussed in Harris's autobiographical book Dreams Die Hard.
Sweeney was eventually found not guilty by reason of insanity and committed to full-time psychiatric treatment for schizophrenia. By 1992, Sweeney was on 16-hour-a-day furloughs. Family members expressed grave concern about the supervision Sweeney would receive and anger that a murderer was being given such privileges. Later, two of Lowenstein's children (Thomas and Katharine) would go on to work in the death penalty abolition movement.
Lowenstein is the last current or former United States congressman to be murdered.
A veteran of the United States Army, Lowenstein is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[1]
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ a b Lowenstein's gravestone, Arlington National Cemetery; photo online on the cemetery's official website. Accessed online 28 October 2006.
- ^ a b c d Biography of Allard K. Lowenstein, Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Law Clinic, Yale University. Accessed online 28 October 2006.
- ^ "Allard Lowenstein on Firing Line: A Retrospective", summary on the site of the Hoover Institution Archives: Firing Line Television Program, Stanford University, accessed 28 October 2006.
- ^ Warren Beatty Speech Upon Being Honored by Southern California Americans for Democratic Action at the Eleanor Roosevelt Annual Awards Dinner, Beverly Hilton Hotel, September 29, 1999. Accessed 28 October 2006.
- ^ Re: song title, posting on Harry Chapin Archive forum. Accessed online 28 October 2006.
- ^ William Chafe, author of Never Stop Running: Allard Lowenstein and the Struggle to Save American Liberalism, interviewed January 30, 1994 on C-SPAN's Booknotes. Transcript online accessed online 28 October 2006.
[edit] Further reading
- Douglas Lowenstein, Lowenstein: Acts of Courage and Belief (1983), Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0-15-154742-4. Edited by Lowenstein's nephew the book documents Lowenstein's life and times. It contains articles written by and about Lowenstein, as well as speeches he delivered and appearances he made.
- Cummings, Richard, The Pied Piper-Allard K. Lowenstein and the Liberal Dream (1985) Grove Press /Atlantic ISBN 0-394-53848-X. InPrint.com (2000) ISBN 0-9673514-1-3 Updated and revised paperback edition (2002)
- William H. Chafe, Never Stop Running: Allard Lowenstein and the Struggle to Save American Liberalism (Basic Books, 1993). IBSN 0-465-04985-0.
Preceded by Herbert Tenzer |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York's 5th congressional district 1969–1971 |
Succeeded by Norman F. Lent |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Members of the United States House of Representatives from New York | American anti-Vietnam War activists | African Americans' rights activists | Assassinated American politicians | Jewish American politicians | Burials at Arlington National Cemetery | Deaths by firearm in the United States | 1929 births | 1980 deaths | Watergate figures