| |||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
| ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, Joseph Gurney Cannon was born in Guilford County, | ||||||
3 | North Carolina on May 7, 1836; his parents, Gulielma | ||||||
4 | Hollingsworth and physician Horace F. Cannon, moved the family | ||||||
5 | to Indiana when he was four; and
| ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, After his father's death, Joe Cannon apprenticed | ||||||
7 | himself to an attorney and then studied at the Cincinnati Law | ||||||
8 | School; and
| ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon moved to Tuscola and was named States | ||||||
10 | Attorney for the 27th Judicial District; in 1868, he ran for | ||||||
11 | Congress and began a 46 year Congressional career; and
| ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, In 1876, Joe Cannon moved to Danville, where he | ||||||
13 | resided for the rest of his life; he married Mary P. Reed in | ||||||
14 | 1862, and they had two daughters; and
| ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon's first leadership post was as | ||||||
16 | chairman of the Appropriations Committee; in 1903, he was | ||||||
17 | elected Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, | ||||||
18 | and throughout his speakership, he remained a fierce defender | ||||||
19 | of the rights of the House; and
| ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Members chafed under Joe Cannon's iron-fisted |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | rule; in 1911, a coalition of reform-minded Republicans joined | ||||||
2 | with the Democrats to depose him from the speakership; he was | ||||||
3 | defeated for re-election the following year, but like a true | ||||||
4 | political survivor, he ran and won again in 1914; he served | ||||||
5 | another four terms in Congress before retiring permanently in | ||||||
6 | 1922; and
| ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon declined to run in the 1922 | ||||||
8 | congressional election and retired at the end of his last term | ||||||
9 | in 1923; he was featured on the cover of the first issue of | ||||||
10 | Time magazine on the last day of his last term in office; and
| ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon is the second longest-serving | ||||||
12 | Republican representative, surpassed only by Alaska | ||||||
13 | congressman Don Young; he was the first member of Congress, of | ||||||
14 | either party, to surpass 40 years of service | ||||||
15 | (non-consecutive); his congressional career spanned 46 years | ||||||
16 | of cumulative service, a concurrent 50 years, and held a | ||||||
17 | record not broken until 1959; and
| ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon died in his residence in Danville on | ||||||
19 | November 12, 1926; and
| ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Joe Cannon was one of the most effective Speakers | ||||||
21 | of the House in American history, so it was not a surprise when | ||||||
22 | he was chosen as the namesake for the first House office |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | building; later, buildings would be named for Speakers Sam | ||||||
2 | Rayburn and Nicholas Longworth as well former Congressman and | ||||||
3 | President Gerald Ford; therefore, be it
| ||||||
4 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
5 | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE | ||||||
6 | SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that we designate the section of | ||||||
7 | Illinois Route 1 in Danville beginning at Gibson Drive and | ||||||
8 | ending at West Steidl Road as "Speaker Joe Cannon Highway"; | ||||||
9 | and be it further
| ||||||
10 | RESOLVED, That the Illinois Department of Transportation | ||||||
11 | is requested to erect at suitable locations, consistent with | ||||||
12 | State and federal regulations, appropriate plaques or signs | ||||||
13 | giving notice of the name "Speaker Joe Cannon Highway"; and be | ||||||
14 | it further
| ||||||
15 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
16 | presented to the family of Joe Cannon, the Mayor of Danville, | ||||||
17 | and the Secretary of Transportation.
|