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Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
Public Utility Commission | Workers' Compensation Act | J. Henry Roraback



1905

General Assembly mandates equal service in all public places

1912
J. Henry Roraback elected chairman of the Republican State Central Committee

1912
General Assembly establishes the Public Utility Commission

1913
Passage of the Workman's Compensation Act

1917
America enters World War I

1919
19th Amendment gives women the right to vote

1925
General Assembly passes Bridgeport "Ripper Bill"

1929
Stock market crashes

 

Searching for the
Common Good, 1905-1929

Click on images for larger version

   
1. Portrait of Simeon Baldwin
   

A Resistance to Reform

"Time is the great reformer, but it cannot be hurried in its course."

Democratic Governor Simeon Baldwin,
inaugural address, 1913

A Yankee of impeccable reputation and a former Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court, Democrat Simeon Baldwin won the governorship in both 1910 and 1912, but his cautious approach to the issues of the day differed little from his Republican opponents. Democratic legislators did succeed in establishing a state Public Utility Commission in his first term, but Baldwin's calls for constitutional reform of the rotten borough system went unheeded. Picture 1

Workers' Compensation Act

Hazardous conditions in the state's industries took an annual toll of the state's workers, but the General Assembly resisted attempts at reform. In 1913, Governor Baldwin and Democratic leaders took advantage of their rare majority in the Senate to pass the state's first Workers' Compensation Act. Picture 2

The World of J. Henry Roraback

At the height of his power in the 1920's, J. Henry Roraback dominated Connecticut like no political leader before him. Picture 3

When it suited his political purposes, Roraback could bring the full weight of the legislature's authority down on his foes. In 1925, he engineered the passage of the Bridgeport "Ripper Bill" which punished local Republicans who challenged his authority by suspending the city's right to levy taxes.
Picture 4

Rural farmers were an important part of Roraback's political base. His legislative allies sponsored major road building programs and increased appropriations to the state agricultural college at Storrs throughout the 20's
. Picture 5

 

 
         
   
2. Chart depicting employee accidents for a single year in a Waterbury brass factory
   
         
   

3. Photo of Harry Roraback
   
         
   
4. Bridgeport Ripper Bill headline
   
         
   
5. Farmers loading hay onto oxen drawn wagon