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Edward H Cunningham

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Edward H Cunningham

Birth
Burlington, Racine County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
28 Nov 1930 (aged 60)
District of Columbia, USA
Burial
Newell, Buena Vista County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Plot
E-56
Memorial ID
View Source
Published in the Mason City Globe Gazette, November 29, 1930.

Career of Iowa Member of Federal Reserve Ends

Edward Cunningham Stricken by Heart Attack.

WASHINGTON, NOV. 29 (AP)-The career of Edward H Cunningham as "servant to agriculture" in Iowa and the nation was at an end today.
Cunningham, whose success as farmer and a leader of farm movements led to his appointment to the federal reserve board in 1923, died yesterday afternoon, a few minutes after he had been stricken with a heart attack at his desk in the treasury building. His body today lay in an undertaking establishment, pending the completion of funeral arrangements.

61 Years Old.

Born in Burlington, Racine county, Wisconsin, on Dec. 19, 1869, Cunningham was 61 years old. His widow, Mrs. Ida F. Scovel Cunningham, and a son, Lloyd, who since his father's appointment to the reserve board has operated the home farm near Cresco, survive.
The interim appointment which President Harding offered him in May, 1923, was enthusiastically received by Iowans here and in the west. At the time he was secretary of the Iowa Farm Bureau federation whose membership drive he had successfully completed, and the year before he had been elected president of the United States Grain Growers, Inc., a marketing organization.

"Dirt Farmer"

His place on the reserve board was the "dirt farmer's" position post, he post that he filled with militant enthusiasm, mindful of the needs of the farmers whose case he had espoused in Iowa and the middle west.
"Don't sell Iowa short," a phrase he used in an interview on one of this frequent visits to his Howard county, Iowa, farm, not only expressed his belief in Iowa agriculture, but also became a term of household usage referring to stability of Iowa land values.
His work on the reserve board was marked with signal success. In the words of Charles E. Hearst, president of the Iowa Farm Bureau federation:

Fought and Won.

"He fought and won many encounters where fortunes of agriculture were at stake. His fellow members of the federal reserve board have indicated to me their high appreciation for his integrity and business judgment used in the direction of the board's affairs. In his passing, agriculture has indeed lost a devoted friend."
Cunningham had served three terms in the Iowa house of representatives, one of them as speaker.
Starting as a farm laborer, he went in 1889 to Manson and three years later became manager of a stock farm near Newell. He served three terms as mayor of Newell. It was while he was there, as well, that he became a legislator, serving from 1909 to 1915. In 1917 he moved to Howard county, and the following year became an active organizer of the farm movements.
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FUNERAL PLANNED
WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. (AP)- Funeral services for Edward H. Cunningham, member of the federal reserve board, who died in his office yesterday, will be held at an undertaking parlor here tomorrow afternoon.
Immediately after the service, the body will be taken to Iowa for burial. Cunningham, the member for the Chicago district, has served since 1923.
Published in the Mason City Globe Gazette, November 29, 1930.

Career of Iowa Member of Federal Reserve Ends

Edward Cunningham Stricken by Heart Attack.

WASHINGTON, NOV. 29 (AP)-The career of Edward H Cunningham as "servant to agriculture" in Iowa and the nation was at an end today.
Cunningham, whose success as farmer and a leader of farm movements led to his appointment to the federal reserve board in 1923, died yesterday afternoon, a few minutes after he had been stricken with a heart attack at his desk in the treasury building. His body today lay in an undertaking establishment, pending the completion of funeral arrangements.

61 Years Old.

Born in Burlington, Racine county, Wisconsin, on Dec. 19, 1869, Cunningham was 61 years old. His widow, Mrs. Ida F. Scovel Cunningham, and a son, Lloyd, who since his father's appointment to the reserve board has operated the home farm near Cresco, survive.
The interim appointment which President Harding offered him in May, 1923, was enthusiastically received by Iowans here and in the west. At the time he was secretary of the Iowa Farm Bureau federation whose membership drive he had successfully completed, and the year before he had been elected president of the United States Grain Growers, Inc., a marketing organization.

"Dirt Farmer"

His place on the reserve board was the "dirt farmer's" position post, he post that he filled with militant enthusiasm, mindful of the needs of the farmers whose case he had espoused in Iowa and the middle west.
"Don't sell Iowa short," a phrase he used in an interview on one of this frequent visits to his Howard county, Iowa, farm, not only expressed his belief in Iowa agriculture, but also became a term of household usage referring to stability of Iowa land values.
His work on the reserve board was marked with signal success. In the words of Charles E. Hearst, president of the Iowa Farm Bureau federation:

Fought and Won.

"He fought and won many encounters where fortunes of agriculture were at stake. His fellow members of the federal reserve board have indicated to me their high appreciation for his integrity and business judgment used in the direction of the board's affairs. In his passing, agriculture has indeed lost a devoted friend."
Cunningham had served three terms in the Iowa house of representatives, one of them as speaker.
Starting as a farm laborer, he went in 1889 to Manson and three years later became manager of a stock farm near Newell. He served three terms as mayor of Newell. It was while he was there, as well, that he became a legislator, serving from 1909 to 1915. In 1917 he moved to Howard county, and the following year became an active organizer of the farm movements.
------------------
FUNERAL PLANNED
WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. (AP)- Funeral services for Edward H. Cunningham, member of the federal reserve board, who died in his office yesterday, will be held at an undertaking parlor here tomorrow afternoon.
Immediately after the service, the body will be taken to Iowa for burial. Cunningham, the member for the Chicago district, has served since 1923.


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  • Created by: JD
  • Added: Feb 21, 2012
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/85267850/edward_h-cunningham: accessed ), memorial page for Edward H Cunningham (19 Dec 1869–28 Nov 1930), Find a Grave Memorial ID 85267850, citing Newell Cemetery, Newell, Buena Vista County, Iowa, USA; Maintained by JD (contributor 47218247).