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state official to obtain advance notice of the nature and location of future highway projects. Law enforcement officials said
Hutcheson and the others had made an $ 81,000 profit by buying the land on which a highway was to be built and then selling it to the state. All three men turned their profits
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The conviction nearly led to
Hutcheson's removal from the AFL-CIO's Executive Council, but Meany—whom Hutcheson had strongly supported through the years—blocked the removal when Hutcheson threatened to pull his union from the federation.
64:. After the war, he returned to carpentry. He was appointed a financial auditor for the international union in 1928, and was elected an international vice president in 1938. After his father's death, Maurice was elected president.
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He was elected a vice president of the AFL in 1953 and served on the federation's executive council. After the merger of the AFL and CIO in 1955, he was elected a vice president of the merged organization as well.
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over to the state and were convicted in 1960. The
Indiana Supreme Court unanimously threw out the convictions in 1963, holding that there were no grounds for a conspiracy conviction.
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in 1913 when
William Hutcheson (his father) was elected president of the Carpenters' union. The younger Hutcheson apprenticed as a carpenter in 1914 and served in the
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95:, ending a 40-year dispute. In 1957, he was cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to appear before the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the
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110:. A federal district court judge converted the sentence to two years of probation in 1964. Hutcheson was later pardoned by President
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Hutcheson was convicted of contempt of
Congress in May 1960 and sentenced to six months in prison. The conviction was upheld by the
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He was nicknamed "Maurice the Silent" for his taciturn nature and ability to sit silently through long meetings or heated debates.
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and his wife Bessie Mae (King). He was educated in public schools. The
Hutcheson family moved to
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129:, Hutcheson voted against the resolution ejecting the union sponsored by AFL-CIO president
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164:. Hutcheson's wife, the former Ethel Hyatt, died in 1977. The couple had no children.
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List of people pardoned or granted clemency by the president of the United States
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In 1958, Hutcheson and two
Carpenters union officials were accused of bribing an
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Saxon, Wolfgang. "Maurice
Hutcheson, 85, Led Carpenters' Union 2 Decades."
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84:(CIO). However, he re-affiliated the union just three weeks later.
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United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America people
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The United
Brotherhood of Carpenters: The First Hundred Years.
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International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers
22:(May 7, 1897 – January 9, 1983) was a carpenter and an
76:(AFL) when, shortly after his election, the AFL signed a
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United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America
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In 1954, he signed a jurisdictional agreement with the
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Hutcheson immediately withdrew the Carpenters from the
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United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America
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Vice presidents of the American Federation of Labor
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Empire in Wood: A History of the Carpenters' Union.
133:in 1957. The resolution passed over his objection.
210:Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1983.
157:. Shortly before his death, he moved to Florida.
103:and answer questions about labor racketeering.
97:U.S. Senate Committee on Government Operations
189:Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1956.
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125:for permitting his union to be dominated by
357:Recipients of American presidential pardons
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194:Biographical Dictionary of American Labor.
196:Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1984.
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362:People from Saginaw County, Michigan
82:Congress of Industrial Organizations
153:After his retirement, he lived in
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302:Thirteenth Vice-President of the
274:Fourteenth Vice-President of the
29:leader. He was president of the
382:Vice presidents of the AFL–CIO
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372:Trade unionists from Michigan
367:Trade unionists from Indiana
342:American trade union leaders
304:American Federation of Labor
276:American Federation of Labor
117:Although he was critical of
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108:United States Supreme Court
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160:Maurice Hutcheson died in
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352:People from Indianapolis
46:Saginaw County, Michigan
20:Maurice Albert Hutcheson
54:Indianapolis, Indiana
16:American labor leader
232:Trade union offices
80:agreement with the
68:Tenure as president
33:from 1952 to 1972.
268:Position recreated
206:Galenson, Walter.
185:Christie, Robert.
58:United States Navy
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314:Federation merged
311:Succeeded by
283:Succeeded by
255:Succeeded by
240:William Hutcheson
225:January 10, 1983.
162:Lakeland, Florida
112:Lyndon B. Johnson
101:John L. McClellan
50:William Hutcheson
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308:1954–1955
293:Preceded by
280:1953–1954
265:Preceded by
252:1952–1972
237:Preceded by
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192:Fink, Gary, ed.
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223:New York Times.
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149:End of his life
127:organized crime
99:led by Senator
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44:He was born in
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337:1983 deaths
332:1897 births
286:Al J. Hayes
246:President,
123:Jimmy Hoffa
62:World War I
326:Categories
180:References
121:president
40:Early life
296:Dave Beck
119:Teamsters
168:See also
24:American
138:Indiana
78:no-raid
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48:, to
27:labor
212:ISBN
198:ISBN
60:in
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