-40%
WILLIAM VANDERBILT RHODE ISLAND GOVERNOR RICH DYNASTY POLITICAL PINBACK BUTTON
$ 18.41
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
I AM PLEASED TO OFFER SOME OF THE MOST UNCOMMON STATE/LOCAL/MISC. POLITICAL BUTTONS THAT YOU WILL SELDOM EVER SEEON EBAY OR
ANYWHERE ELSE....
HELLO FELLOW COLLECTORS....
I LOVE TO TRADE!!
I COLLECT STATE & LOCALS POLITICAL BUTTONS FOR GOVERNOR, U. S. SENATOR & CONGRESS FROM ALL STATES.....LET'S EXPLORE A DEAL IF YOU HAVE SOME TO OFFER!!!
AND...
I BUY COLLECTIONS---
BIG OR SMALL!!!! IF YOU HAVE ANY POLITICAL BUTTONS TO OFFER, LOCALS, PRESIDENTIALS, OLDER ADVERTISING OR CAUSE ITEMS THAT MAY MEAN LITTLE OR NOTHING TO YOU, CONTACT ME!!! WE'RE DEALING
$
$$$$$
PLUS...I AM ALWAYS GLAD TO COMBINE SHIPPING FOR ALL PURCHASES HERE ON EBAY
----
THE MORE YOU BUY....THE MORE YOU
$AVE
ON
$HIPPING!!
ONLY PAY ONE LOW SHIPPING FEE FOR ALL PURCHASES SHIPPED TOGETHER WITHIN A 5-DAY PERIOD!!
CONSIDERING THIS,
I RARELY MAIL WINNINGS NEXT DAY AFTER PURCHASE BUT OFTEN WAIT A FEW DAYS TO ALLOW BUYERS TO MAKE MORE PURCHASES OF NEWLY LISTED ITEMS IF DESIRED
, WHICH CAN BE ADDED TO THE ONE PACKAGE GOING OUT, SAVING BUYERS FROM FURTHER SHIPPING COSTS...SO PATIENCE IS A VIRTUE AND I AM GRATEFUL FOR YOUR COURTESY IN WAITING! I DON'T MIND WAITING A FEW DAYS FOR PAYMENT, IF YOU PLAN TO BID ON OTHER ITEMS OR ARE WAITING FOR OTHERS TO END. WHEN YOU'RE DONE BIDDING FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS, I'LL INVOICE THE WINS.
ONCE PAYMENT IS FINALLY MADE, THE SHIPPING CLOCK STARTS TICKING
AND I HAVE TO MAIL THE WINNINGS WITHIN 5 BUSINESS DAYS OR I GET PENALIZED AS A SELLER.
****PLEASE NOTE:
AT TIMES I AM TRAVELING...OCCASIONALLY I AM AWAY FROM HOME AND UNABLE TO SHIP PACKAGES FOR AT MOST 4-5 BUSINESS DAYS (OTHER THAN VACATIONS)....FOR THIS REASON MY
HANDLING TIME IS SET FOR UP TO 5 BUSINESS DAYS
TO ALLOW ME TO FULFILL ORDERS IN A TIMELY WAY IN THE FEW INSTANCES WHERE I'M AWAY FOR AN EXTENDED PERIOD....
USUALLY I SHIP THE 2ND OR 3RD DAY AFTER PURCHASE FOR THE ABOVE REASONS. SO IF THIS TIME FRAME IS A CONCERN TO YOU, YOU WILL NEED TO ALTER YOUR EXPECTATION A BIT.
TO THE WINNER OF MULTIPLE ITEMS--
PLEASE DELAY SENDING PAYMENT
IF BUYING MORE THAN ONE AUCTION ITEM PER WEEK
SO THAT I CAN ADJUST THE TOTAL FOR COMBINED SHIPPING COST FOR ALL AUCTIONS.
IF BUYING 2 OR MORE "BUY IT NOW" ITEMS
, PLEASE USE THE "ADD TO CART" FEATURE FOR EACH ITEM, THEN WHEN YOUR CART IS READY FOR CHECKOUT, MY AUTOMATIC SHIPPING DISCOUNT SHOULD KICK IN FOR FINAL PAYMENT OF ONLY ONE SHIPPING FEE.
THANK YOU!!
Skip Morgan
THIS LISTING:
Offering another
NICE & ELUSIVE VERSION
vintage U. S. political election
campaign pinback button for Rhode Island Governor William Vanderbilt
William Vanderbilt
Chair of the National Governors Association
In office=
June 2, 1940 – January 7, 1941
Preceded by
Lloyd C. Stark
Succeeded by
Harold Stassen
59th Governor of Rhode Island
In office=
January 3, 1939 – January 7, 1941
Lieutenant
James O. McManus
Preceded by
Robert E. Quinn
Succeeded by
J. Howard McGrath
Personal details
Born
William Henry Vanderbilt III
November 24, 1901
New York City, U.S.
Died
April 14, 1981 (aged 79)
Williamstown, Massachusetts, U.S.
Nationality
American
Political party
Republican
Spouse(s)
Emily O'Neill Davies
(m. 1923; div. 1928)
Anne Gordon Colby
(m. 1929; div. 1969)
Helen Cummings Cook (m. 1970)
Children
4
Parents
Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt
Ellen French
Education
Princeton University
Military service
Allegiance
United States
Branch/service
United States United States Navy Reserve
Rank
Midshipman
Unit
USS Vesuvius
USS Evans
Battles/wars
World War I
William Henry Vanderbilt III
(November 24, 1901 – April 14, 1981) was Governor of Rhode Island and a member of the wealthy and socially prominent Vanderbilt family.
Early life
William Henry Vanderbilt III was born in New York City on November 24, 1901. He was the son of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt and Ellen "Elsie" French. Vanderbilt's father was a great-grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt, who founded the family fortune in railroads and shipping. William Vanderbilt's parents divorced in 1908, and through his father's second marriage he had two half-brothers, Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt Jr., and George Washington Vanderbilt III. In 1915, his father perished in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania.
Education
Vanderbilt was educated at St. George's School in Middletown, Rhode Island (Class of 1919) and the Evans School in Mesa, Arizona, he attended Princeton University but dropped out during his first year. In 1940, Vanderbilt received an honorary LL.D. from Bates College.
Inheritance
When he turned 21, the then legal age of majority, in 1922, Vanderbilt inherited a million trust fund plus the 450 acre (1.8 km²) Oakland Farm in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, one of his father's estates that included a number of thoroughbred horses. He made the farm his permanent home until the end of the Second World War.
Career
First World War
Shortly before the United States declared war on Germany during the First World War, Vanderbilt dropped out of St. George's School upon his appointment as a midshipman in the U.S. Naval Coast Defense Reserve to rank from March 20, 1917. As he was only 15 at the time, he was one of the youngest Americans to have served in the war. (It is unclear how he was able to join the service at such a young age but, probably, his family connections were a factor. Another curiosity is that he was the only person to hold the rank of midshipman in the Naval Reserve.)
During his service in the Navy, Vanderbilt served on the torpedo test ship USS Vesuvius from April 17 to May 31, 1917, the Naval Torpedo Station in Newport from June 1, 1917 to March 7, 1918, aide for information Second Naval District from March 7 to July 15, 1918, in Norfolk, Virginia from July 23 to September 16, 1918, New London, Connecticut from September 19 to November 14, 1918 and as a plank owner of the newly commissioned destroyer USS Evans from November 11, 1918 to August 30, 1919. While serving on the Evans, Vanderbilt went on a cruise to Europe from June to August 1919. He was discharged from the Navy shortly after the end of the cruise.
The Short Line
In 1925, Vanderbilt started a coach bus company, called The Short Line, carrying passengers between Newport and Providence. Within a few years he expanded the business to serve points throughout New England and New York. The Short Line was purchased by George Sage in 1955 and, in 1970, was renamed Bonanza Bus Lines. Bonanza eventually merged with the Coach USA bus line in 1998 and was sold to Peter Pan Bus Lines in 2003. The Short Line's original terminal building in Newport still stands and is located near the intersection of Spring and Touro streets.
As a state senator and successful business leader, Vanderbilt was also a champion of the Mount Hope Bridge which connects Aquidneck Island with the mainland on the road north to Providence, Rhode Island from Newport. He was named the Chairman of the Mount Hope Bridge Commission and gave the opening address at the bridge's dedication on October 24, 1929
Political career
Vanderbilt was a member of the Republican Party. In 1928 he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention from Rhode Island and that year was elected to the Rhode Island State Senate. Vanderbilt served in the State Senate for six years (1929–1935) and then took time off to be with his ailing wife, Anne Gordon Colby. On her recovery, he re-entered political life and successfully ran for Governor of Rhode Island in 1938. He served one two year term from January 1939 to January 1941. His refusal to dole out patronage to fellow Republicans, however, weakened his power base and a scandal over wire-tapping by a private detective firm he had hired to investigate election fraud, cost him re-election in 1940.
Navy service during World War II
In May 1941 Vanderbilt, an officer in the Naval Reserve, was called to active duty in June 1941 with the rank of lieutenant commander and initially assigned to the Panama Canal Zone. He was promoted to commander on August 15, 1942. In 1942 Vanderbilt was assigned as executive officer of the Special Operations Branch of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) under General William J. Donovan. In May 1944 he was assigned to the staff of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. He was promoted to the rank of captain prior to the end of the war.
Later life
After his discharge from the Navy at the end of the war, Vanderbilt left Rhode Island and retired to a farm in South Williamstown, Massachusetts. Oakland Farm and its 150 acres in Portsmouth, Rhode Island was sold and divided into housing lots by the end of the 1940s.
Vanderbilt died of cancer on April 14, 1981, at the age of 79. He was buried in the Southlawn Cemetery in Williamstown, Massachusetts. He is one of the few descendants of William Henry Vanderbilt not to be buried in the family tomb on Staten Island.
Personal life
Vanderbilt in 1940
Vanderbilt married Emily O'Neill Davies (1903–1935),[12] granddaughter of Daniel O'Neill, owner of the Pittsburgh Dispatch newspaper, and daughter of Frederick Martin Davies on November 1, 1923 at Grace Church, New York. Emily was the grandniece of Frederick Townsend Martin, a prominent writer of the 1920s. The couple gave birth to a daughter:
Emily "Paddy" Vanderbilt (b. 1925), who married Jeptha Wade, both graduates of MIT.
The couple's marriage was troubled and Emily sued for divorce in Paris in the summer of 1926, but reconciled. She again sued for divorce in Newport, Rhode Island which was granted in June 1928. She later married Sigourney Thayer (1896–1944), for less than a year, and then Raoul Whitfield (1896–1945), shortly before her death in 1935.
On December 27, 1929, Vanderbilt married for the second time to Anne Gordon Colby (1909–1974) of West Orange, New Jersey. Together, they had three children:
Anne Vanderbilt (d. 2014), who was married Samuel Adams Hartwell, Sr.
Elsie Vanderbilt, who married Andre Walter George Newburg (1928–2018) in 1954 and M. Bernard Aidinoff (1929–2016) in 1996.
William H. Vanderbilt Jr. (b. 1945)
This marriage also ended in divorce in 1969 after 40 years of marriage, and Vanderbilt promptly re-married the following year to Helen Cummings Cook (d. 1997), who was previously married to John R. Cook, founder of Warren Cable Co., who survived him in death.
SIZE==largest APPROX. 7/8" celluloid
"A PICTURE SPEAKS A THOUSAND WORDS"
***PLEASE SEE MY OTHER CURRENT LISTINGS---LISTED IN SEVERAL CROSSOVER/RELATED CATEGORIES....
FOR GREAT POLITICAL BUTTONS/OTHER ITEMS!! I WILL BE LISTING STUFF FOR PRESIDENT, HOPEFULS, COATTAILS, LOCALS, CAUSE and even a few NON-POLITICAL items in the coming weeks. Add me to your 'Favorite Sellers' list---I WILL DO MY BEST TO PLEASE!
****ATTENTION****
As with all vintage collectibles, they will show various degrees of aging, wear and tear, discoloration etc.
THE TIME FOR CLARIFICATION OF AN ITEM'S FEATURES OR CONDITION IS
BEFORE
THE AUCTION CLOSES,
NOT AFTERWARD
.
If you have ANY concerns about the particulars of this item, please ask any questions before close of auction.
NOT ACCEPTING RETURNS AT THIS TIME. ALL SALES FINAL.
Please let photos be your guide as to condition of this item.
THANKS!
Items will be packaged securely in bubblewrap mailer or small box.
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PAYMENT MUST BE RECEIVED BY PAYPAL WITHIN 3 DAYS OF AUCTION CLOSING.
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THANKS FOR LOOKING AND HAPPY BROWSING!!
MAY GOD BLESS YOU ALL...
He Leadeth Me
In pastures green?
Not always; sometimes He
who knoweth best, in kindness leadeth me
In many ways where heavy shadows be.
Out of the sunshine warm and soft and bright...
Out of the sunshine into the darkest night,
I oft would faint with sorrow and affright,
Only for this...I know He holds my hand;
so whether in the green or desert land
I trust although I may not understand.
And by still waters?
No, not always so;
Ofttimes the heavy tempests round me blow,
And o'er my soul the waters and billows go.
But when the storms beat loudest and I cry
aloud for help, the Master standeth by
And whispers to my soul, "Lo, it is I."
Above the tempest wild I hear Him say,
Beyond this darkness lies a perfect day.
In every path of thine I lead the way.
So whether on the hilltops high and fair
I dwell, or in the sunless valleys where
The shadows lie...what matters? He is there.
And more than this, where'er the pathway lead
He gives to me no helpless broken reed,
But His own hand, sufficient for my need.
So where He leads me, I can safely go,
And in the blest hereafter I shall know
Why in His wisdom, He hath led me so.
Author Unknown
"BE NOT OVERCOME BY EVIL BUT OVERCOME EVIL WITH GOOD" Romans 12:21