Northeast Ohio Journal of History
Fall 2012
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The University of Akron

Book Reviews

Politician Extraordinaire: The Tempestuous Life and Times of Martin L. Davey.
By Frank P. Vazzano. (Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press, 2008. xiv, 322 pp. Cloth, $45.00, ISBN 978-0-87338-920-4.)

Nearly all Ohioans are at least somewhat familiar with the Davey Tree Expert Company and its ubiquitous green trucks.  But few are aware that Martin L. Davey, the son of the company’s founder, served in a number of political offices, most notably the Ohio governorship from 1935 to 1939.  Seeking to rectify this gap in the collective knowledge, historian Frank P. Vazzano, who calls Davey “the most interesting man I’ve never met,” has produced a masterfully-written biography of the state’s fifty-third governor.   He draws upon a voluminous collection of primary sources, including contemporary news accounts, Davey Company records, and government documents from the local, state, and national levels to paint a colorful portrait of a controversial man.  Unfortunately, as well-written and thoroughly-researched as this book is, readers may disagree that Martin L. Davey was in any way extraordinary.  On the contrary, what emerges from the pages is a stereotypical portrait of a cynical politician: an ambitious job-seeker climbing the political ladder – vain, hypocritical, self-aggrandizing, and not above employing “mean” campaign tactics, to use the author’s term.

The Martin L. Davey portrayed in the early chapters of Vazzano’s book is actually quite admirable.  Born in 1884 in Kent, Ohio, Davey grew up in poverty, as his father, John, “far more a dreamer than a realist” (4), struggled to transform the craft of tree surgery into a respectable profession and profitable business.  The family moved from house to house, and Davey suffered the taunts of schoolmates who considered the elder Davey little more than an eccentric.  This hard upbringing fostered in Davey a spirit of independence and self-reliance.  He worked to help the family survive, most notably by going door-to-door selling his father’s book, The Tree Doctor.  During his late teens Davey sold typewriters in Cleveland, and Vazzano makes it clear that the skills at salesmanship and “sizing up” prospective customers which he honed at this time would later serve him effectively during his campaigns for public office.  Forced to drop out of Oberlin College to help manage the fast-growing Davey Company, Martin Davey also developed a fascination with politics; his admiration for William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson drew him to the Democratic Party.

Davey’s first political victory came in 1913 when, at age 29, he won election as mayor of Kent.  One questions whether Davey was really a “Boy Wonder,” as Vazzano dubs him.  The improvements he oversaw, such as the construction of a modern sewage plant, were typical of dozens of Ohio cities during the Progressive Era, and Davey actually fulfilled few of his promises and quickly tired of the low-paying, mundane position.  After an unsuccessful bid for Congress in 1914, Davey won election to the House of Representatives in 1918.  His term was distinguished by his Red-baiting and support for the excesses of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer during the post-war crackdown on radicals.  Davey joined the fray by introducing a draconian anti-leftist sedition bill which went nowhere in Congress.  He also supported immigration restrictions, despite being the son of an immigrant himself.  In his unsuccessful reelection bid in 1920, Davey ran newspaper ads boasting that he was “virile” and “100% American,” even though he had dodged the World War I draft.

Davey again won election to the House in 1922, serving Ohio’s Fourteenth Congressional District for six more years.  Despite his conviction that “the gutter appeal of anti-Catholicism” was “wicked and detestable” (70), Davey balked at the opportunity to denounce Ohio’s powerful Ku Klux Klan during his 1924 reelection bid because, as Vazzano tells it, “doing so might jeopardize his chances for reelection” (125).  Davey did little of substance during his second tenure in the House, save for a widely-ridiculed government reorganization bill he introduced in 1925.  What most distinguished Martin Davey’s congressional career was his appalling attendance record, as his continued oversight of the Davey Tree Expert Company necessitated constant travel between Washington and Kent.  “In seven years,” Vazzano notes, Davey “had missed more than five hundred roll calls out of a thousand” (272).  Little wonder, then, that Davey remained “better known as a tree man than as a congressman” (128).  He left Congress in 1929 after an unsuccessful bid for Ohio’s governorship, during which he once again resisted pleas from party officials to denounce the KKK.

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