Fontaine Maury Maverick Sr. (October 23, 1895 – June 7, 1954) was a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from Texas, representing the 20th district from January 3, 1935, to January 3, 1939.[1] He is best remembered for his independence from the party and for coining the term "gobbledygook" for obscure and euphemistic bureaucratic language.[2][3]
In the 1920s, he was involved in the lumber and mortgage businesses.
Government service
From 1929 to 1931, he was the elected tax collector for Bexar County.
He was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress in 1934,[5] with support from the Hispanic population of his district, and re-elected in 1936 to the Seventy-fifth.[6] During his 1934 campaign, Maverick enlisted Lyndon Johnson, a then little-known congressional secretary, to work for him during the Democratic primary.[7] In the House, he was an ardent champion of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal. He angered the conservative Democrats running the party back in Texas, including John Nance Garner.[citation needed]
A split between FDR and Vice president John Nance Garner over Supreme Court reorganization put Congressman Maverick in an extremely weakened position, leaving him unable to fund his reelection, which lead to his defeat in the primary for a third term in 1938. This was primally accomplished at the direction of Garner's reactionary Conservative allies in the district. Maverick returned to Texas where he was elected Mayor of San Antonio, again with support from minority voters, serving from 1939 to 1941, when he was labeled a Communist and defeated. Future president Johnson was running for senate and secretly made a pact with Maverick enemies: Johnson would help defeat Maverick if Maverick's enemies would back Johnson for senate. During World War II, he worked for the Office of Price Administration and the Office of Personnel Management, and served on the War Production Board and the Smaller War Plants Corporation.
While serving at the Smaller War Plants Corporation he sent a message to his staff telling them[3]
Memoranda should be as short as clearness will allow... Put the subject matter--the point--and even the conclusion in the opening paragraph and the whole story on one page... Stay off the gobbledygook language. It only fouls people up...
He married Terrell Louise Dobbs and had a daughter and a son, San Antonio newspaper editorialist Maury Maverick, Jr. (who died in 2003 at the age of 82).
Maverick died on June 7, 1954. His widow later married the distinguished Texas author and historian Walter Prescott Webb.