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  1. Arthur Pue Gorman (March 11, 1839 – June 4, 1906) was an American politician. He was leader of the Gorman-Rasin organization with Isaac Freeman Rasin that controlled the Maryland Democratic Party from the late 1870s until his death in 1906. [3]

  2. Arthur Pue Gorman (1839-1906) represented Maryland in the U.S. Senate from 1881 to 1899 and again from 1903 until his death in 1906. Gorman informally led the Senate Democrats throughout the 1890s and was unanimously elected as the first official chairman of the Senate Democratic Conference on March 6, 1903.

  3. ARTHUR PUE GORMAN: PAST-MASTER IN POLITICS AND PRESIDENTIAL POSSIBILITY By John F. Brownell (H. L. Mencken) John F. Brownell was a pseudonym employed by H. L. Mencken when he wrote for Leslie's Monthly Magazine. In 1904 Mencken was promoted to city editor of the Baltimore Evening Herald and in this issue of Leslie's he profiles a prominent

  4. Arthur Pue Gorman, 1839–1906, American legislator, b. Woodstock, Md. After serving from 1869 to 1879 in the Maryland legislature, he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1880. Gorman had by this time virtually become Democratic boss of Maryland.

  5. Arthur Pue Gorman was an American politician. He was leader of the Gorman-Rasin organization with Isaac Freeman Rasin that controlled the Maryland Democratic Party from the late 1870s until his death in 1906.

  6. Biography. GORMAN, ARTHUR PUE, a Senator from Maryland; born in Woodstock, Howard County, Md., March 11, 1839; attended the public schools; appointed a page in the House of Representatives in 1852; transferred to the Senate through the influence of Stephen A. Douglas, who made him his private secretary, and subsequently served the Senate as ...

  7. 8 de ene. de 2012 · The story of baseball in the nation’s capital is interlinked with the career of Arthur P. Gorman, a name unrecognizable to today’s fans.