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Biography Glenn Davis was born on October 28, 1914, on a small farm to a poor family in Vernon, Wisconsin. Davis excelled academically despite pressure from his father to forsake school for farming. He skipped several grades and was a teacher of the younger children in his one-room school house before graduating (three years early) from Mukwonago High School in 1930. Davis attended the Platteville State Teachers College (now the University of Wisconsin-Platteville) with a donation from his mother (who had been hiding the money from her husband for just such an occasion). Davis majored in education and went on to teach high school at Cottage Grove and Waupun for five years. Davis then went back to school himself, earning a law degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1940. After his admittance to the bar, Davis opened a law firm in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Davis launched his first campaign for public office with a successful bid for the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1940. After a year in the legislature, Davis resigned his seat to join the U.S. Navy after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Lieutenant Davis served as the Communications officer aboard the USS Sangamon (CVE-26), an escort carrier. The ship sustained a Kamikaze attack in the latter days of the war off of Okinawa. Although a third of the crew were casualties, Davis was uninjured. Notably, the Sangamon began the war in Operation Torch on November 9, 1942. When the Sangamon was to be transferred to the Pacific, Davis' late assignment to the ship required him to chase the ship down the East Coast until he caught up with it in Panama. Davis was honorably discharged from the Navy on December 12, 1945. After the war he resumed his law practice. He also stepped up his involvement in politics, serving briefly as a local court commissioner and attending Republican Party functions. Davis was elected as a delegate to every Republican National Convention from 1952 to 1972. In 1947, Davis ran in the special election to succeed Rep. Robert K. Henry, a Republican who died just weeks after being elected to a second term. Davis served five terms before deciding to seek higher office in 1956. Instead of running for reelection, he launched an unsuccessful primary challenge to incumbent Sen. Alexander Wiley, R-Wisconsin. The following year, Davis lobbied unsuccessfully to become the GOP candidate in the special election to replace the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wisconsin. The Republican nod instead went to former Gov. Walter J. Kohler, Jr., who went on to lose the seat to Democrat William Proxmire. Davis subsequently returned to his law practice. Eight years later, in 1964, Davis made a successful comeback bid by winning the open Ninth Congressional District created by reapportionment. He served another four terms before losing in the 1974 primary to a conservative up-and-comer, future U.S. Sen. Robert W. Kasten, Jr. Davis felt he was hurt by the then unpopular pardon of Richard Nixon by then President Gerald Ford on the Sunday before the primary election. Davis had been closely associated with Ford. Davis's congressional service was marked by a generally conservative record that grew more moderate in the early 1970s. He achieved perhaps his greatest mark a close friend and golf partner of then-House Minority Leader Gerald Ford. Davis was also the star shortstop for the "Washington Senators," a recreational baseball team made up solely of congressmen. To this day, Davis remains the sole native of Waukesha County to have held Congressional office. After his loss in the primary, Davis resigned on December 31, 1974 - just days before his term would have otherwise ended. He moved permanently to Arlington, Virginia, where he died on September 21, 1988. Part of Davis's legacy is the Glenn R. Davis Charitable Foundation, a scholarship organization funded and administered by his family. The Glenn Davis Charitable Foundation gives a monetary award to one graduating student in each Waukesha County high school every year. The award is granted to a student who has done something to overcome substantial obstacles, reflecting Davis's own rise from pickle farmer to congressman.
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