Member Biography

Frederick T. Gelder 

Member

 Portrait: Senate of Pa

Sessions Office Position District Party
1925-1926       23 Republican
1927-1928       23 Republican
1929-1930       23 Republican
1931-1932       23 Republican
1933-1934       23 Republican
1935-1936       23 Republican
1937-1938       23 Republican
1939-1940     President Pro Tempore 23 Republican

Biography

06/04/1874 - 04/29/1955


Frederick Thomas Gelder (R23) Bradford, Susquehanna and Wayne Counties 1925-1940

Early Life: 

Frederick Thomas Gelder, born June 4, 1874, Carbondale, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania; son of Frederick T. and Katherine Blake Gelder; attended public and business schools; city editor, Carbondale Leader; editor and publisher, Forest City News; married, Edith L. Brown, 1903; postmaster, United States Postal Service, Forest City, 1907-1915; elected, justice of the peace, 4 years; elected, Republican, Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1920-1923; not a candidate for reelection, 1924; elected, Republican, Pennsylvania State Senate, 1925-1940; elected, Senate President pro tempore 1939-1940; member, State Highway Commission; member, Susquehanna County, State Committee of Public Safety, World War II; trustee, president of the Board, Fairview State Hospital for the Criminal Insane; unsuccessful campaign, Pennsylvania Auditor General, 1940; appointed, Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board 1940-1955, chair, 1941-1955; died, April 29, 1955, (aged 80) Carbondale General Hospital, Carbondale, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania; interment, Willow View Cemetery, Clifford, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania.

Early Career:

Journalist, city editor, Carbondale Leader; 1929; purchased, editor and publisher, Forest City News, 1898-1941.  

Professional titles; business ownership; board memberships; local government; club memberships:

Trustee, president, Board, Fairview State Hospital for the Criminal Insane; director, vice president, board, First National Bank of Forest City; member, Enterprise Hose Company No. 1; Mason; president, Kiwanis, member, Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association; Susquehanna County chair, World War I, Four Minute Men; member, State Highway Commission; member, Susquehanna County, State Committee of Public Safety, World War II. 

Pennsylvania Politics:

Appointed, Presidents Theodore Roosevelt Jr., William Howard Taft, Postmaster, United States Postal Service, Forest City, 1907-1915.   

Elected, justice of the peace, 4 years. 

Elected, Republican, Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1920-1923; not a candidate for reelection, 1924. 

Elected, Republican, Pennsylvania State Senate, 23rd district, Bradford, Susquehanna and Wayne Counties, 1925-1940; elected, Senate President pro tempore, 1939-1940; chaired Public Printing 1927-1928, Forestry, 1929-1930; Public Roads and Highways, 1931-1936; first Senate President pro tempore, chair a Rules Committee, 1939-1940, President pro tempore and member ex-officio all Standing Committees.

As pro tem, served as point man for the final assault on deactivating Governor George Howard Earle III, programs. Among his confederates were senators Charles Ealy, chair, Appropriations, Charles Mallery, chair, Judiciary General, Weldon Heyburn, chair Labor and Industry: who formed the “Four Horsemen,” who, with Senate floor leader and Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association vice president Mason Owlet, dismantled the General State Authority.

Unsuccessful campaign, Pennsylvania Auditor General, 1940. 

Appointed, Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board 1940-1955, chairman, Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board 1941-1955. 

Pennsylvania House of Representatives Biography:

Official Website - PA House Archives Official Website (state.pa.us)

Legacy: 

His pallbearers included governors, Arthur James, Edward Martin, James Duff and John Fine.

 Cited: 

Cox, Harold. "Senate Members "G""Wilkes University Election Statistics Project. Wilkes University.

The Pennsylvania Manual, (1939). Westbrook, C. H., (Editor). (Volume 84) Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, pages 693, 703, 710-712. 

Frederick Thomas Gelder (1874-1955) - Find a Grave Memorial