Edwin Jaeckle
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edwin_Jaeckle an entity of type: Thing
Edwin Frederick Jaeckle (October 27, 1894 – May 14, 1992) was a Republican politician and party chairman in New York State during the 1930s. During his tenure as chairman, Jaeckle enforced strict adherence to party discipline, which significantly bolstered the party's standing in the state.
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Edwin Jaeckle
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Edwin F. Jaeckle
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Edwin F. Jaeckle
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1992-05-14
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1894-10-27
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2962425
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Forest Lawn Cemetery, Buffalo, New York
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1894-10-27
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1992-05-14
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Chair of the New York Republican Party
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Chair of the Erie County Republican Party
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Clerk of Erie CountyBoard of Supervisors
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Member of the Erie County Board of Supervisors from Buffalo's 13th ward
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William S. Murray
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Glen R. Bedenkapp
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Harry J. Forehead
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1920
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1927
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1948
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November 1944
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1917
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1920
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1935
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April 1940
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Edwin Frederick Jaeckle (October 27, 1894 – May 14, 1992) was a Republican politician and party chairman in New York State during the 1930s. During his tenure as chairman, Jaeckle enforced strict adherence to party discipline, which significantly bolstered the party's standing in the state. As chairman, Jaeckle exerted an outsized influence on the state's political landscape. In the 1944 book The Big Bosses, by Charles Van Devander, Jaeckle was portrayed as single-handedly controlling the state legislature and helping shape and execute the party's platform. According to the book, the Albany Legislative Correspondents' Association included in its annual satirical show a song with the refrain: "You've gotta get Jaeckle's O.K." Jaeckle also sometimes played kingmaker; for instance, he selected New York City District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey as the Republican candidate for the New York governorship. Dewey won the race and served three terms as governor; Jaeckle is credited with helping lift him onto the national stage. Dewey later lost two unsuccessful campaigns for the White House in the 1940s. Jaeckle was Dewey's campaign chairman during his first presidential run. "'I was not Dewey's man,' Mr. Jaeckle recalled in an interview. 'Nor was he mine. Events brought us together. We were a strong combination. There was mutual respect. I was like a trainer with a good horse.'" Jaeckle attributed his success as Republican Party leader in New York to integrity, tight fiscal control and tight control of his office holders. He also was a successful lawyer in private practice. His law firm, Jaeckle, Fleischmann & Mugel, which was perhaps the most stellar name in the Western New York legal firmament for decades, announced on September 30, 2015, that, as of January 1, 2016, it would cease to exist. The remnants of the partnership were joined into a Syracuse, N.Y.-based firm and, in a move that stunned observers of the legal profession, the iconic Jaeckle Fleischmann name was not retained.
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15200
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Chair of theErie CountyRepublican Party
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ClerkofErie CountyBoard of Supervisors
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Member of theErie County Board of SupervisorsfromBuffalo's 13th ward
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Chair of theNew York Republican Party