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Mary Norton of New Jersey - Congressional Trailblazer (Hardcover, New)
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Mary Norton of New Jersey - Congressional Trailblazer (Hardcover, New)
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Mary Norton of New Jersey: Congressional Trailblazer tells the
compelling story of Mary Norton, who served in the United States
House of Representatives for 13 terms from 1925 to 1951, featuring
her significant role as a congressional pioneer for women and
American workers. The daughter of Irish immigrants, Norton grew up
in a Roman Catholic, working-class family and was prodded to enter
politics by Jersey City mayor Frank Hague. One of the first five
women elected to the United States Congress, she cut a fresh path
for women of ordinary means as the first female elected to the
House from the Democratic Party, an eastern state, or urban center
east of the Mississippi River. Norton's political career paralleled
mayor Hague's tight control of Jersey City and president Franklin
Roosevelt's national leadership during the Depression and World War
II. Norton's connection with Hague's Jersey City Democratic Party
political machine clouded her career, but Hague seldom tried to
influence her legislative behavior. Norton, the first woman to
chair four House committees including a major committee,
consistently supported legislation helping economically
disadvantaged Americans and encouraged women to enter politics. At
the helm of the District of Columbia Committee from 1931 to 1937,
she served as unofficial mayor of Washington, D.C. and helped enact
long-needed political, economic, and social legislation for its
citizens. Her most valuable work came as head of the powerful Labor
Committee from 1937 to 1947. Norton helped secure House passage of
the landmark Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, establishing a
national minimum hourly wage and maximum workweek. She sought to
improve working conditions for America's newly industrialized
workers and defended the Wagner Act of 1935, allowing employees to
bargain collectively for the value of their work. Norton also
helped secure federal funding for several Hudson County projects
benefitting her Irish, Roman Catholic, working-class constituents.
The expansion of mayor Hague's gargantuan Medical Center Complex
and the construction of Roosevelt Stadium provided numerous jobs
for unemployed Hudson County residents. Norton, who never lost an
election and was reelected by decisive margins, was the first woman
elected as a freeholder in New Jersey and to direct a state
Democratic Party.
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