Earl W. Vincent (March 27, 1886 – May 22, 1953) was a Republican U.S. Representative from Iowa's 9th congressional district in 1928–29, a delegate to the Republican State convention in 1930, and was appointed judge of the fifth judicial district of Iowa in February 1945.
In 1923, Vincent was elected to the Iowa House of Representatives, where he served two two-year terms, the last ending in 1927.
In early 1928, Republican Congressman William R. Green resigned his congressional seat in the ninth district when he was appointed as a federal judge. To fill what was left of Green's term, a special election was scheduled. After 194 ballots, a convention of ninth district Republicans selected Vincent as their nominee in April 1928.[1] In the June 4, 1928 special election, Vincent defeated Democrat William J. Burke, and served in the remainder of the Seventieth Congress. Vincent also tried, and failed, to win his party's nomination for the next full term, but was defeated by Charles Swanson in a July 11, 1928 nominating convention. Vincent was ahead of the balloting until the close, when after 246 ballots, Swanson pulled ahead by the required number of votes.[2] In all, Vincent served in Congress from June 1928, to March 3, 1929.
Returning to Iowa, Vincent resumed the practice of law in Guthrie Center, Iowa. He served as delegate to the Republican State convention in 1930. He was appointed judge of the fifth judicial district of Iowa in February 1945, and served until his death in Guthrie Center on May 22, 1953.
He was interred in Union Cemetery.
External links
Earl W.Vincent's papers are housed at The University of Iowa Special Collections & Archives
References
^"Take 194 ballots in Ninth District; Vincent Nominated," Muscatine Journal and News Tribune, 1928-04-13, at p. 12.
^'Swanson, Here as Prosecutor in the Black Case, Wins Congressional Nomination," Waterloo Courier, 1928-07-12, at p. 7.