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Margaret Chase Smith Character Traits

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Margaret Madeline Chase Smith was an American politician. As a member of the Republican Party, she served as a U.S Representative and a U.S. Senator from Maine. She was the first woman to serve in both houses of the United States Congress, and the first woman to represent Maine in either. As a moderate Republican, she is probably most remembered for her 1950 speech, "Declaration of Conscience.”
Smith was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination in the 1964 presidential election, but was the first woman to be placed in nomination for the presidency at a major party's convention. She was the longest-serving female Senator in history. To date, Smith is ranked as the longest-serving Republican woman in the Senate. If everyone in the whole world was like her the world would be perfect. …show more content…
Her father was the town barber and her mother was a store clerk, shoe factory worker, and a waitress. When Smith was a little older, she would sometimes help her father shave his customers when he was gone or busy. For an education, for elementary school, she went to Lincoln Elementary and Garfield Elementary School. In her teens, she went to Skowhegan High School and graduated in 1916. She played on the girls’ basketball team and was captain in her senior year.
When she was in high school, she worked as a substitute operator with a telephone company. This is where she met Clyde Smith, her future husband that she soon married on May 14, 1930. Clyde Smith was 21 years older than Margaret. From 1917-1918, she coached girls’ basketball team. Smith was also a business executive for the Maine Telephone and Telegraph Company from 1918-1919 before joining the staff of Independent Reporter for whom she was the circulation manager from 1919-1928. She co-founded Skowhegan chapter of Business and Professional Women’s Club in 1922 and was editor of the club’s

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