J. Henry
Roraback
Born: North
Canaan; April 5, 1870
Died: Harwinton; May 19, 1937
Entry
by Herbert F. Janick
From
1894 until 1930 the Republican party dominated Connecticut politics.
From the time he took over as party chairman in 1912 after the
Bull Moose embarrassment until his retirement in 1935, J. Henry
Roraback dominated the Republican party in the state. Without
ever holding public office, this astute businessman-politician
set legislative priorities and decided on the occupants of all
major political offices. In the 1920s, when his power was unchallenged,
he was the most influential political figure in Connecticut.
Roraback
does not fit the stereotype of the political boss. North Canaan
remained his lifelong home. Trained as a lawyer he found greater
challenge as an entrepreneur in the expanding electric power industry.
He was the chief lobbyist and after 1925 the president of the
Connecticut Light and Power Company, the largest utility in the
state. At the same time that he pursued a business career, he
worked diligently but unobtrusively for the Republican party as
town chairman in North Canaan, state committeeman, and beginning
in 1912 as state chairman. Roraback took over the Republican party
at a difficult time. Because of the Taft-Roosevelt split in the
national GOP ranks, Connecticut Democrats were able to win the
governorship twice with Simeon Baldwin as the candidate. Exploiting
his contacts in the small towns, Roraback unified the party and
returned it to power in 1914. By 1922 he had silenced all rivals
within the GOP, and until the Depression struck, Roraback controlled
state government from his office on the third floor of the Allyn
House in Hartford.
Connecticut
government in the 1920s was an expression of Roraback's political
philosophy. He believed that the best men, particularly able
business
executives, should be brought into state service. Examples of
those whom Roraback enticed into politics were: John Trumbull
(1873-1961), a manufacturer and three-time governor; Frederick
C. Walcott (1869-1949), investment banker and United States
senator;
and Hiram Bingbam (1875-1956), Yale professor, governor, and
United States senator. Roraback was a conservative who was
wedded to
low taxes, cuts in state services, efficient administration,
and, above all, pay-as-you-go financing. "There is a feeling of
appreciation," he reminded party officials, "for any
organization, business or political, which pays its bills."
At one point in 1927 he cut short a Florida vacation and rushed
back to Hartford in order to block a proposed bond issue to finance
a building program for recreation and public health needs. After
this incident he reportedly chided the General Assembly for its
irresponsibility. "Good Lord," he said, "Can't
I be out of the state for three weeks without you boys plunging
the state into a debt for millions of dollars."
The
world that Roraback understood and was proud of came to an end
in 1929. His insistence on limited, frugal government in the face
of economic depression made possible the victory of Wilbur Cross
in 1930. It would be almost a decade before younger, more liberal
Republicans would regain control of state government. By that
time Roraback, ill for over a year, had committed suicide.
For
Further Reading
Even
though Roraback's impact on Connecticut was great, there is
no
published book or article about him. Edwin Dahill, "Connecticut's
J. Henry Roraback," Ph.D. Dissertation, Columbia University
Teachers College, 1971, is a perceptive treatment based on available
Roraback papers.
*
Entry under revision.
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