Birth of Everett Dirksen 

U.S. #1874 was issued on Dirksen’s 85th birthday.

Statesman Everett McKinley Dirksen was born on January 4, 1896, in Pekin, Illinois.

Born to German immigrants, Dirksen had a fraternal twin and another brother.  His father died when he was just nine years old.  The Dirksen family farm was on the outskirts of Pekin in an area known as Beantown, because they grew beans instead of flowers.

After receiving his early education, Dirksen briefly attended the University of Minnesota Law School.  He then left school to join the Army in World War I.  During the war, he served as a second lieutenant in a field artillery battery.

After WWI, Dirksen explored a variety of business and personal interests.  He invested in an electric washing machine business, ran a bakery with his brothers, and wrote short stories and plays.  He also became an active member of the American Legion, which helped him to develop his public speaking skills.

U.S. #1874 FDC – 1981 Dirksen Silk Cachet First Day Cover.

Dirksen entered politics in 1926 when he was elected to the Pekin City Council.  Having received the most votes of the eight candidates, Dirksen was also made Pekin’s commissioner of accounts and finance.  He served in both roles until 1931.

U.S. #3185e from the Celebrate the Century series.

In 1932, Dirksen won a congressional seat, and was re-elected seven times.  During his tenure, Dirksen studied law on his own and was admitted to the bar in the District of Columbia and Illinois.  He supported many of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal programs and lobbied for additional staff during World War II.  Dirksen then helped pass an amendment to the Lend Lease Act that gave the House and Senate the authority to revoke powers given to the president.

Dirksen briefly left politics in 1948, but returned after just two years when he was elected to represent Illinois in the Senate in 1950.  Dirksen became known for his keen political skills and over-the-top speaking, which earned him the nickname “The Wizard of Ooze.”

U.S. #1874 FDC – Dirksen Plate Block First Day Cover.

Dirksen was elected Senate Minority Leader in 1959 and held that position until his death.  In that role, he worked to unite different groups within the Republican Party, namely by giving younger members more representation in the Senate and better appointments.  Dirksen became one of the most vocal members of Republican Party during the 1960s, appearing on television frequently.  He supported president Lyndon Johnson’s decision to escalate the war in Vietnam.

U.S. #3937g – The Civil Rights Act of 1964 forbids discrimination in public facilities, government, and employment.

Dirksen was also crucial to the passage of 1960s Civil Rights legislation.  In 1964, Southern Democrats led a 54-day filibuster to prevent the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  Dirksen, along with two other senators, created a new bill in the hopes that it could swing enough votes to stop the filibuster.  After much debate and the introduction of an amendment, the act was approved and the filibuster ended.

In addition to his political career, Dirksen recorded four spoken-word albums.  For this work, he won a Grammy for Best Documentary Recording and became the oldest person at the time to appear on the Billboard Hot 100’s top 40.

In August 1969, Everett discovered he had lung cancer.  Although he had it removed, he suffered complications and died on September 7, 1969.

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8 Comments

  1. Imagine that A republican working to stop a Democratic filibuster trying to
    block the Civil Rights act of 1964 and everyone calling Republicans racist.

    1. The Democrats who participated in the filibuster against the Civil Rights bill were all from the segregated South. The southern Democrats soon changed their party affiliation and became Republicans and remain so to this day, over fifty years later. The Democratic “solid South” became the solid South for the Republican Party.

  2. I remember him in the 60’s. He seemed caught between the Vietnam War and Civil Rights,
    Although his generation failed to understand the war- they really came through on civil rights.
    His party could use a clear head like him about now.

    thanks mystic for remembering the small things that helped change America.

  3. Very interesting, but just try to explain the 60’s to some libs and they will denie that it ever happened.

  4. I grew up in a Democratic family, but always enjoyed the “Ev and Charlie Show” (Sen. Everett Dirksen and Congressman Charlie Halleck) giving the Republican point of view as minority leaders in Congress. Those were the days of civility in Washington. I miss them.

  5. In winter of 1967 I was in Washington D C on a snowy day and Congress was shut down. But the
    senate open for the afternoon so I went in and sat listen to this great guy give a speech on the parking
    lot at the Justice Department. What a great time to be there and listen to his speech.

  6. I used to deliver the Star newspaper yo him at his house in norttheren Va, As a young boy i was always impressed with the beautiful Marigold flowers in his garden.

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