C. Wesley Roberts
C. Wesley Roberts | |
---|---|
Chair of the Republican National Committee | |
In office January 17, 1953 – March 27, 1953 | |
Preceded by | Arthur Summerfield |
Succeeded by | Leonard W. Hall |
Personal details | |
Born | Charles Wesley Roberts December 14, 1902 Oskaloosa, Kansas, U.S. |
Died | April 9, 1976 Oskaloosa, Kansas, U.S. | (aged 73)
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Ruth Patrick |
Children | Pat (son) |
Charles Wesley Roberts (December 14, 1902 – April 9, 1976) was a Kansas businessman who was Chairman of the Republican National Committee for four months in 1953 under Dwight D. Eisenhower.
C. Wesley Roberts (or Wes Roberts) was born in Oskaloosa, Kansas, where he died, the son of Daisy Marian (née Needham) and Francis Henry "Frank" Roberts.[1] The Roberts family has published the smalltown weekly Oskaloosa Independent for more than a century.
He was the father of U.S. Senator Pat Roberts.
Alvin Scott McCoy of The Kansas City Star won a Pulitzer Prize in 1954 for local reporting for a series of articles that drove Roberts to resign his RNC chairmanship.[2] Roberts was accused of collecting a $10,000 commission on the sale of a hospital to the State of Kansas which the state already owned.[3]
Footnotes
- ^ Charles Patrick "Pat" Roberts, at rootsweb, an ancestry.com community
- ^ 1954 Winners, Awards, The Pulitzer Prizes website
- ^ "Republicans: Storm in Kansas". Time. March 30, 1953. Retrieved March 12, 2009.