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Daniel Brewster
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Daniel Baugh Brewster Sr. (November 23, 1923 – August 19, 2007) was an American attorney and politician from the state of Maryland. A member of the Democratic Party, he served in both chambers of the United States Congress as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1959 to 1963 and as a member of the United States Senate from 1963 to 1969. Previously, he served as a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from 1950 to 1958 and from Maryland's 2nd congressional district from 1959 to 1963. After his Senate career, and following a lengthy court battle, Brewster pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of accepting an illegal gratuity.

Key Information

Early life, education, and military service

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Daniel Baugh Brewster, Sr. was born on November 23, 1923, in Baltimore County, Maryland, in the Green Spring Valley Region. He was the oldest of six children of Ottolie Y. (Wickes) and Daniel Baugh Brewster.[1][2] Brewster was born into a wealthy family and was "raised in comfort on a beautifully appointed farm in Maryland fox-hunting country". The Washington Post described him as an "inheritor of the Baugh Chemical fortune". His father died when he was 10 years of age.[2]

Education

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Brewster was educated at the Gilman School in Baltimore City and at St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. He attended college at Princeton University and Johns Hopkins University before the U.S. entry into World War II.[3]

After the war, Brewster again attended Johns Hopkins.[4] He then enrolled at the University of Maryland Law School, from which he graduated with an LL.B. degree in June 1949.[5] He was admitted to the bar in November 1949 and began practicing law in Towson, Maryland.[3][6]

19-year-old Marine Lieutenant Daniel B. Brewster was wounded seven times during the battles for Guam and Okinawa and was awarded both the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart.

Military service

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In 1942, Brewster enlisted in the United States Marine Corps.[3] He was commissioned from the ranks in 1943. During World War II, he served in the Pacific theatre, including participating in the Battle of Guam and the Battle of Okinawa. For his actions during the war, he received a Bronze Star. He was wounded seven times, receiving a Purple Heart and a Gold Star in lieu of a second award.[7] He left active duty in 1946 but continued in the Reserve until 1972, reaching the rank of colonel.[8]

Political career

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Maryland House of Delegates (1950-1958)

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Brewster, a Democrat,[8] was elected as to the Maryland House of Delegates in 1950.[3] At age 26, he was one of the youngest members of Maryland's state legislature in history.[2] He served in the House of Delegates until 1958.[3]

A 1958 campaign poster for Daniel Brewster in his run for the U.S. House of Representatives.

U.S. House of Representatives (1959-1963)

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In 1958, Brewster was elected to the House of Representatives from the 2nd district of Maryland, defeating the Republican Party candidate, J. Fife Symington Jr. He was a member of the House during the Eighty-sixth (1959–1961) and Eighty-seventh Congresses (1961–1963), serving on the United States House Committee on Armed Services and on the subcommittee on Military Personnel, Manpower Utilization, and Emergency Defense Transportation.[8] As a member of the House, Brewster voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1960.[9]

President John F. Kennedy invites Daniel Brewster to meet with him in the Oval Office after endorsing Brewster's campaign for the United States Senate in 1962.

U.S. Senate (1963-1969)

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In 1962, Brewster ran for the United States Senate seat vacated by the retiring Republican senator John Marshall Butler. He defeated Congressman Edward Tylor Miller to become the first Democrat elected to the Senate from Maryland since 1946.[8] Brewster served in the Senate from 1963 to 1969. In the Senate, Brewster voted in favor of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968,[10][11] as well as the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the confirmation of Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court of the United States.[12][13] Brewster was instrumental in the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[14]

Brewster sought re-election to the Senate in 1968. However, "his complicated personal life, his support of the Vietnam War and his increasingly serious problems with alcohol took their toll", and he was defeated by Republican Charles Mathias.[7]

In 1978, Brewster stated that the greatest mistake he made in his public life was his support for the Vietnam War.[2]

President Lyndon Johnson invites Senator Daniel Brewster to the Oval Office to thank him for running as Johnson's stand-in in the 1964 Maryland Democratic presidential primary.

1964 presidential election

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In 1964, Brewster ran in the Democratic presidential primaries against segregationist George Wallace. As Lyndon Johnson refused to run nationally, "favorite sons" were run in his place against Wallace, such as Matthew E. Welsh of Indiana and John W. Reynolds of Wisconsin. Brewster won his state's primary but was embarrassed by Wallace's showing of 43 percent; he barely carried Baltimore County.[15]

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In 1969, Brewster was indicted on 10 criminal counts of solicitation and acceptance of bribes while a United States senator,[16] as well as two counts of accepting illegal gratuities.[8] The charges stemmed from a campaign contribution by Spiegel, Inc., a mail-order firm. Brewster maintained his innocence.[17]

At trial, the judge dismissed five of the charges, saying that Brewster's actions were protected under the Speech or Debate Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The prosecution appealed directly to the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard the case in 1971 and 1972. In June 1972, the Court held 6 to 3 in United States v. Brewster that the taking of illegal bribes was not protected speech, as taking of a bribe was not part of the "performance of a legislative function".[16][18]

The charges were reinstated. Brewster stood trial and was found "not guilty" of the bribery charges but was convicted of accepting an unlawful gratuity "without corrupt intent." However, in August 1974,[16] his conviction was overturned on appeal due to the trial judge's improper instructions to the jury.[8] In 1975, he pleaded no contest to a single misdemeanor charge of accepting an illegal gratuity "without corrupt intent" and was fined and allowed to keep his law license. The government dropped the other charges.[19][20]

Daniel Brewster retired from the Marine Corps as a Colonel after thirty years of service.

Post-Senate career

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After leaving the Senate, Brewster took up farming in Glyndon, Maryland.[3]

As of 1978, Brewster operated his farm, worked as an alcoholism counselor at a veterans' hospital, led the Governor's Advisory Council on Alcoholism, and worked at "a quarter-way house in Baltimore".[2]

Personal life and death

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Brewster married Carol Leiper DeHavenon of Philadelphia in 1954. The couple had two sons, Daniel Baugh Brewster, Jr. (born 1956) and Gerry Leiper Brewster (born 1958).[21]

In 1967, Brewster "attended the funeral of William Bullitt, the U.S. ambassador to France. There, he became reacquainted with Anne Bullitt, Mr. Bullitt's daughter and Mr. Brewster's first fiancee, who had jilted the senator while he was overseas during the war". Brewster divorced his first wife.[7] On April 29, 1967, he married Anne Bullitt (1924–2007) at Glyndon, Maryland.[22] Brewster's second marriage also ended in divorce.[7]

Brewster was an alcoholic. According to his account, his drinking began to spiral out of control in 1964; by 1969, he was "'drinking with a vengeance'", and he almost died following an "alcoholic collapse". He sought inpatient rehabilitation multiple times, and reportedly became sober in 1973.[2]

In 1976, Brewster married Judy Lynn Aarsand after meeting her at an alcohol treatment facility.[7] The couple had three children, Danielle (born 1977) and twins Jennilie and Dana (born 1979).[8] Judy died on October 11, 2024, at her home in Stuart, Florida.[23]

Brewster survived large cell lymphoma and leukemia in the 1980s.[7]

Brewster died of liver cancer on August 19, 2007, at age 83. He was the last living former U.S. senator who left office in the 1960s.[14][17] He is buried at Saint Thomas' Episcopal Church Cemetery, Owings Mills, Maryland.[3]

Legacy

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Several individuals who served on Brewster's Senate staff in the 1960s later became politically prominent, including Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer.[24]

In 2023, a biography of Brewster by John W. Frece, Self-Destruction: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of U.S. Senator Daniel B. Brewster, was published by Loyola University Maryland's Apprentice House Press.[25]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Daniel Baugh Brewster (November 23, 1923 – August 19, 2007) was an American attorney and Democratic politician who represented in the United States House of Representatives from 1959 to 1963 and in the from 1963 to 1969. A decorated veteran of the who enlisted in 1942 and served through , Brewster practiced law in , after earning his degree from the University of Maryland Law School in 1949.
Brewster's rapid ascent in politics began with service in the from 1950 to 1958, followed by his election to , where he focused on armed services matters as a House member. In the , he aligned with President Lyndon B. Johnson's agenda, including support for civil rights legislation despite prior personal reservations and facing significant backlash from constituents who viewed it as a of Southern traditions. His tenure ended with a narrow defeat in the 1968 reelection campaign against Republican McC. Mathias Jr., amid emerging reports of erratic behavior linked to that undermined his public image. Post-Senate, Brewster faced federal in 1969 for related to influence peddling by lobbyists, leading to a conviction that was later reversed on appeal, and ultimately a 1975 no-contest plea to accepting an illegal gratuity.

Early life and family

Childhood in Baltimore County

Daniel Baugh Brewster Jr. was born on November 23, 1923, in . As the eldest of five children, he spent his early years in the prosperous Green Spring Valley region, an area known for its rural estates, horse farms, and fox-hunting traditions among Baltimore's elite. The family resided on an estate near Wickliffe Castle—now the site of Maryvale Preparatory School—constructed by his grandparents, reflecting the generational wealth tied to Philadelphia-connected society and landownership in the adjacent Worthington Valley. Brewster's childhood was marked by the privileges of this equestrian-centric environment, where his family participated in hunts and steeplechase activities emblematic of the local . His father, Daniel Baugh Brewster Sr., a vice president at Fidelity Trust Company and former master of the Green Spring Valley Hounds, died in May 1934, leaving the 10-year-old Brewster as the head of the household. Although his mother remarried, Brewster assumed early responsibilities amid the family's adjusted circumstances, shaping his sense of duty in the rolling hills of County's horse country.

Family background and wealth

Daniel Baugh Brewster was born on November 23, 1923, in , to Capt. Daniel Baugh Brewster Sr. (1896–1934) and Ottolie Young Wickes (1903–1989), the eldest of six children in a family of established social standing in the Green Spring Valley area. His father, a veteran and vice president of Fidelity Trust Company in , died when Brewster was 10 years old, leaving the family to manage inherited assets amid the . The Brewsters traced their lineage to early American notables, including descent from a passenger and Founding Father , which contributed to their prestige among Maryland's elite. The family's wealth originated primarily from the Baugh Chemical Company, a prominent Baltimore-based manufacturer of fertilizers and industrial chemicals founded in the by Daniel Baugh (1839–1921), a relative on the paternal side whose enterprise amassed a substantial fortune through agricultural and chemical production. Brewster inherited a share of this legacy, which described as the "Baugh Chemical fortune," enabling a lifestyle of comfort on a Green Spring Valley estate amid Maryland's horse-country . By 1964, his personal net worth exceeded $3 million, reflecting investments in land, thoroughbred horse breeding, and other assets typical of inherited industrial wealth. This underpinned his early political career, free from reliance on campaign fundraising in an era when many politicians lacked such buffers.

Education

Preparatory schooling

Daniel Baugh Brewster attended the , a private preparatory academy in , , during his early . He subsequently enrolled at St. Paul's School, an elite Episcopal boarding school in , where he served as president of his class.

College and advanced studies

Brewster attended Princeton University prior to enlisting in the United States Marine Corps during World War II. Following his military service, he resumed higher education at Johns Hopkins University, where he completed his undergraduate studies. He also attended George Washington University during this period, though no degree from that institution is recorded. Brewster then pursued legal training at the University of Maryland School of Law, earning an LL.B. degree in 1949. This advanced professional education prepared him for admission to the Maryland bar and his subsequent entry into state politics.

Military service

World War II enlistment and combat

Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Daniel Brewster left Princeton University to enlist as a private in the United States Marine Corps in 1942. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1943 and served actively until 1946. Brewster saw combat in the Pacific theater, including the Battle of Guam in July–August 1944 and the from April to June 1945. During the Okinawa campaign, he served as a in the of the 6th Marine Division, participating in intense fighting as a troop commander in a raider . His unit was the first to assault Sugar Loaf Hill, a key defensive position, where his platoon suffered 100% casualties amid heavy Japanese resistance. Brewster himself sustained seven wounds during the battle but continued to lead his men in the brutal close-quarters combat characteristic of the island's terrain and threats.

Awards and postwar impact

Brewster received the for valor in combat during the Battle of Sugar Loaf Hill on Okinawa in 1945. He was also awarded the Purple Heart, with two Gold Stars in lieu of additional awards, recognizing wounds sustained in action across Pacific Theater engagements including and Okinawa. Following , Brewster transitioned to the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve in 1945, continuing service concurrently with his political career and civilian pursuits. He advanced through the ranks over nearly three decades, retiring on July 1, 1972, as a after 30 years of total commissioned service. This extended reserve commitment reflected his sustained dedication to military preparedness amid the era. Brewster's frontline experiences as a Marine officer, involving intense amphibious assaults and multiple injuries, cultivated a resolute pro-military outlook that persisted into his congressional tenure. Initially, this manifested in firm backing for U.S. involvement in , aligning with his reserve status and loyalty to Democratic administrations emphasizing against . His veteran credentials enhanced his credibility on defense matters, aiding electoral appeals in districts valuing martial service.

State politics

Entry into Maryland House of Delegates

Daniel B. Brewster, a Democrat, was elected to the in the November 7, 1950, general election, representing Baltimore County. At age 26, he secured one of the county's seats in a multi-member , defeating Republican opponents amid a Democratic sweep in the state legislature that year. Brewster took office on January 8, 1951, as one of the youngest members of the General Assembly, following his recent admission to the Maryland bar in 1949 and the start of his legal practice in Towson. His entry into state politics marked the beginning of an eight-year tenure, during which he focused on fiscal and local issues as a junior member of the influential . Brewster's initial campaign leveraged his postwar credentials as a Marine Corps and his ties to County's Democratic establishment, though specific vote tallies for his district race remain sparsely documented in primary sources. He was reelected in 1954, continuing service until declining to seek another term in 1958 to pursue a congressional bid.

Legislative record (1950–1958)

Brewster was elected to the in November 1950 as a Democrat representing Baltimore County on a countywide basis, assuming office on January 3, 1951. At age 26, he was among the youngest individuals ever seated in the body. He won re-election in 1954 and served continuously through the 1958 session, concluding his state legislative tenure on January 14, 1959. His time in the General Assembly coincided with Maryland's post-World War II population boom and suburban expansion, particularly in County, where the legislature addressed funding for roads, schools, and local governance amid rising demands for infrastructure. As a junior member of the Democratic majority, Brewster contributed to routine committee deliberations on these matters, though no major bills sponsored or primarily authored by him are detailed in archival or contemporary press accounts from the era. This period served primarily to build his political profile as a war veteran and local figure, facilitating his transition to federal office.

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections and service (1959–1963)

In the 1958 midterm elections, Daniel Brewster, a Democrat from County, won the open seat in , which encompassed portions of County, Harford County, and Carroll County. The district had been held by Republican Edward T. Miller, who retired after serving since 1947. Brewster defeated Republican J. Fife Symington Jr., securing approximately 61% of the vote to Symington's 39%. Brewster was reelected in 1960 with about 58.6% of the vote against the same opponent, J. Fife Symington Jr., amid a national Democratic wave supporting President . His victories reflected the district's shift toward Democratic control during a period of party realignment in suburbs. During his tenure in the 86th (1959–1961) and 87th (1961–1963) Congresses, Brewster served on the House Armed Services Committee, leveraging his Marine Corps experience. As a committee member, he focused on military policy matters, though specific legislative initiatives from this period were limited compared to his later service. Brewster did not seek reelection to the House in 1962, instead pursuing a bid.

Key votes and positions

Brewster served on the House Committee on Armed Services during both the 86th and 87th Congresses (1959–1963), leveraging his experience to address military infrastructure, installations, and defense logistics. Reflecting a shift from his more conservative stance in state politics, Brewster aligned with federal Democratic priorities on civil rights, voting yes on final passage of the (H.R. 8601) on April 21, 1960, which expanded federal authority to protect voting rights through measures like suspensions and judicial referees. This support contrasted with opposition from many and positioned him as an early congressional advocate for such reforms amid Cold War-era emphasis on domestic unity. On fiscal matters, he opposed H.R. 12381, the Public Debt and Tax Rate Extension Act of 1960, voting nay on June 29, 1960, against extending the to $295 billion and continuing existing rates amid debates over federal spending. His Armed Services role underscored consistent backing for defense appropriations and military readiness, consistent with Democratic leadership under Speaker .

U.S. Senate service

1962 election and early terms

In the 1962 United States Senate election for , held on November 6, 1962, Democratic U.S. Representative Daniel B. Brewster defeated Republican Edward T. Miller to succeed retiring Republican incumbent John Marshall Butler, marking the first Democratic victory for the seat since 1946. Brewster, aged 39 at the time, captured approximately 55 percent of the vote to Miller's 44 percent. Brewster was sworn into office on January 3, 1963, at the start of the 88th , representing as a Democrat until 1969. During his early tenure, he served on the Committee on Armed Services and participated in the Democratic Policy Committee. As chair of the Maryland congressional delegation, Brewster coordinated state-related legislative efforts. In his initial years, Brewster aligned with the Kennedy administration on matters, including concerns over communist presence in in 1963. He also engaged in debates over adjustments, such as proposed reductions in weekend postal services in 1964. These positions reflected his background as a veteran and House member focused on defense and constituent services.

Civil rights positions and legislative role

During his Senate tenure from 1963 to 1969, Daniel Brewster emerged as a supporter of civil rights legislation, distinguishing himself among Democrats from border states. Influenced by his service alongside Black troops, Brewster developed a commitment to racial equality that informed his legislative actions. Brewster co-sponsored the , making him the only senator from a state south of the Mason-Dixon Line to do so, a role that underscored his advocacy amid regional resistance. He also co-sponsored the , further aligning with efforts to dismantle legal barriers to Black enfranchisement. These positions reflected a break from traditional Southern Democratic opposition, positioning Brewster as a moderate progressive on racial issues within his party's southern delegation. In key votes, Brewster supported the , which prohibited discrimination in public accommodations and employment. He opposed the Ervin Amendment to H.R. 2516 in 1968, which sought to eliminate fair housing provisions and racial protections, thereby backing anti-discrimination measures in housing. Brewster also voted for the final passage of H.R. 2516, the fair housing bill enacted as the of 1968. Brewster's legislative engagement extended to the 1964 Maryland Democratic presidential primary, where he ran as a stand-in for President against segregationist . Winning with 53.6% of the vote, Brewster's victory demonstrated Democratic support for civil rights in a border state and contributed to national momentum for the 1964 Act by countering Wallace's appeal. Despite Wallace's strong showing indicating backlash, Brewster's effort highlighted his role in bridging federal civil rights initiatives with state-level politics.

Foreign policy, including Vietnam War

As a member of the United States Senate Armed Services Committee from 1963 to 1969, Brewster addressed foreign policy primarily through defense and military lenses, including oversight of U.S. commitments abroad. His positions emphasized robust executive authority in international engagements, as evidenced by his 1967 remarks criticizing the basing of foreign and defense policy on public opinion polls, arguing it would have led to premature withdrawals in historical conflicts like those against Britain. Brewster supported President Lyndon B. Johnson's escalation of the , aligning with the administration's strategy despite initial reservations about the breadth of authorizations. During Senate debates on the in August 1964, he expressed concern over its vague language potentially enabling "the landing of large land armies on the continent of ," questioning Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman on constraints to presidential actions. Nonetheless, he voted for the resolution, which passed the 88-2, facilitating expanded U.S. involvement. In 1965, Brewster traveled to for several weeks, embedding with U.S. forces on the front lines as part of his Armed Services Committee duties, an experience that reinforced his backing of Johnson's policies amid rising troop deployments from approximately 23,000 advisors in 1964 to over 184,000 by year's end. He maintained this stance through 1968, defending the war effort against growing domestic opposition, though it contributed to his electoral vulnerability as anti-war sentiment surged nationwide. Brewster's background as a Marine Corps veteran, where he earned decorations including the , informed his hawkish perspective on containing communism in .

Other initiatives: Environment and defense

Brewster sponsored legislation to establish the , a 41-mile barrier island along the coasts of and threatened by commercial development in the early 1960s. His efforts culminated in the Assateague Island National Seashore Act, signed into law by President on September 21, 1965, which authorized federal acquisition of the land to preserve its dunes, beaches, and wildlife habitats, including the wild pony herds. This initiative reflected Brewster's advocacy for coastal conservation amid growing tourism pressures, preventing a proposed bridge and resort projects that would have fragmented the ecosystem. In defense matters, Brewster served on the Senate Armed Services Committee from 1963 to 1969, contributing to oversight of military procurement, personnel policies, and strategic readiness during the escalation. As a Marine Corps veteran who had commanded a rifle platoon in Pacific combat, he prioritized enhancements to troop welfare and equipment, including support for advanced aircraft programs benefiting Maryland's defense industry at facilities like the . His committee work emphasized maintaining U.S. military superiority against Soviet threats, though specific bills he authored on defense spending remain less documented compared to his environmental and civil rights efforts.

1964 Maryland presidential primary

Campaign against George Wallace

In the 1964 Democratic presidential primaries, Alabama Governor entered the Maryland contest on May 19 to protest federal civil rights initiatives, drawing support from voters opposed to rapid integration and emphasizing . U.S. Senator Daniel Brewster, a Democrat and veteran, entered the race at President 's urging to serve as a surrogate and prevent Wallace from capturing the state's delegates, which could have undermined Senate support for the pending . Brewster, a co-sponsor of the , campaigned reluctantly but framed his bid around loyalty to Johnson and advocacy for equal rights under law, contrasting Wallace's "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever" with commitments to federal enforcement of civil rights. Brewster's campaign faced intense backlash, including boos, jeers, and threats requiring police protection for his at their , reflecting widespread resentment among white working-class Democrats toward civil rights advancements. During a televised , Wallace read a provocative racist statement and solicited Brewster's response, prompting the senator to denounce it outright, highlighting their stark divide on racial . Brewster bolstered his effort with pointed attacks on Wallace's record and leveraged Johnson's visit to during an tour, where the president invoked Franklin D. Roosevelt's emphasis on the state's tolerant traditions. Despite these challenges, Brewster maintained a formal tone, avoiding personal and focusing on differences, such as opposition to Wallace's resistance to federal intervention in school desegregation and voting rights.

Outcomes and implications

Senator Daniel B. Brewster defeated Governor George C. Wallace in the Democratic presidential preference primary on May 19, 1964, securing approximately 58% of the vote to Wallace's 42%. The victory, described as unexpectedly close by contemporary observers, ensured that delegates to the supported President rather than Wallace's segregationist challenge. The outcome underscored the limits of Wallace's appeal beyond the , as his strong showing—drawing significant support from white working-class voters protesting federal civil rights enforcement—failed to translate into a win in a border state with a more moderate Democratic base. Analysts at the time interpreted the results as evidence of anti-Negro militancy backlash rather than outright rejection of civil rights legislation, yet Brewster's mobilization of party loyalists and civil rights advocates demonstrated the national Democratic establishment's capacity to contain such dissent. Implications extended to the broader 1964 Democratic primaries, where Wallace's defeats in , , and signaled that his rhetoric, while resonant amid urban unrest and school integration tensions, could not overcome incumbent loyalty or the momentum toward Johnson's nomination. For civil rights policy, Brewster's success contributed to delegate unity at the convention, indirectly bolstering Senate passage of the later that year by marginalizing intra-party opposition and affirming the party's commitment to federal enforcement despite regional grievances. The primary also highlighted emerging fault lines in the Democratic , foreshadowing future realignments where white Southern voters drifted toward the Republican Party.

1968 Senate defeat

Primary and general election challenges

Brewster faced no substantial opposition in the Democratic primary on May 14, 1968, securing renomination as the party's candidate for U.S. Senate. In the general election on November 5, 1968, Brewster competed in a three-way race against Republican U.S. Representative Charles McC. Mathias Jr., who had held Maryland's 1st congressional district seat since 1961, and Joseph A. Chester of the American Independent Party. Mathias, a moderate Republican, mounted a vigorous campaign emphasizing independence from party orthodoxy and criticism of federal spending, drawing support from independents and some Democrats disillusioned by national events including urban riots and the Vietnam War. Chester's bid, aligned with George Wallace's segregationist and anti-federal themes, siphoned votes from conservative-leaning Democrats, exacerbating the split in Brewster's base. Mathias prevailed with 541,893 votes (47.8 percent), while Brewster garnered 443,667 votes (39.1 percent), a margin of 98,226 votes; accounted for the balance. The outcome reflected broader Republican gains amid Democratic vulnerabilities, despite carrying in the concurrent presidential contest. Brewster's support for President Lyndon B. Johnson's Vietnam policies and civil rights agenda alienated segments of the electorate shifting toward anti-war and sentiments.

Factors in loss: Scandals and shifting politics

Brewster's 1968 re-election bid suffered from visible signs of his worsening , which manifested in erratic public appearances and diminished campaign energy, alienating voters who perceived him as unreliable. Compounding this, broader political realignments in and nationally eroded his support base; as anti-Vietnam sentiment intensified amid escalating casualties—over 16,000 U.S. deaths in alone—Brewster's consistent backing of the , including opposition to troop withdrawals, clashed with growing public disillusionment, a factor he himself cited as pivotal to his defeat. The state's suburban expansion and backlash against urban unrest following the April 1968 assassination of —which sparked riots in causing $12 million in damages and 6 deaths—fueled a conservative tilt, boosting Republican , who positioned himself as a fresh alternative to entrenched Washington Democrats like Brewster. This aligned with the national Republican resurgence, as Richard Nixon's campaign capitalized on "law and order" themes to secure 301 electoral votes, enabling GOP gains of 5 seats.

Bribery allegations origin

The bribery allegations against Senator Daniel B. Brewster stemmed from cash payments he received in 1967 from Cyrus T. Anderson, a lobbyist for the mail-order company Spiegel Inc., amid legislative efforts to reform postal rates. As chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Postal Rates of the Post Office and Civil Service Committee, Brewster oversaw a bill (S. 1007) that proposed increasing third-class mail rates, a category heavily used by Spiegel for catalogs, potentially raising the company's annual postage costs by millions. Anderson, seeking to block or amend the hikes, allegedly delivered three installments to Brewster—$5,000 in January, $4,500 in April, and $15,000 in July—totaling $24,500, which prosecutors claimed were bribes promised in exchange for Brewster's public opposition to the bill's rate provisions affecting Spiegel. These transactions, initially presented by Brewster's defense as legitimate campaign contributions funneled through Anderson without his knowledge of the source's intent, were documented via Anderson's testimony and financial records uncovered during a federal probe into congressional lobbying practices. The investigation gained traction following broader scrutiny of influence peddling in postal legislation, including hearings where Anderson's role and payments surfaced, prompting the Department of Justice to examine whether the funds corrupted Brewster's official acts, such as his floor speeches and votes delaying the bill's passage until after the 90th Congress adjourned without final rate increases for third-class mail. On December 1, 1969, a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., indicted Brewster on five counts under 18 U.S.C. §§ 201(b), (c)(1), and (g), charging bribery and unlawful gratuities tied to these specific promises of influence. The case highlighted ambiguities in distinguishing bribes from permissible contributions in an era of lax campaign finance reporting, with evidence including Anderson's admissions of intent to "buy" Brewster's support and Brewster's subsequent expenditure of the funds on personal and campaign uses without formal disclosure. While Brewster maintained the payments were unsolicited and unrelated to legislative , the indictment formalized the allegations' origin in the documented 1967 exchanges, setting the stage for protracted legal battles over protections.

Trial, conviction, and Supreme Court reversal

In 1969, following his defeat in the 1968 election, former Senator Daniel B. Brewster was indicted in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on multiple counts of soliciting and accepting bribes in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 201(c)(1) and 201(g). The charges stemmed from allegations that Brewster accepted a total of approximately $24,000 from lobbyist T. Anderson between January 1966 and May 1967, in exchange for promising to influence his actions, votes, and decisions on postage rate legislation pending before the and Committee, on which Brewster served as a member. Specific counts included acceptance of $19,000 across four instances and an additional $5,000, with the payments purportedly tied to Brewster's support for legislation favored by Anderson's clients in the mail-order industry. Brewster filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment, arguing that prosecution would violate the Speech or Debate Clause of Article I, Section 6 of the U.S. Constitution by necessitating inquiry into his legislative acts and motives. The district court granted the motion and dismissed the relevant counts, ruling that the clause provided immunity from such bribery prosecutions when linked to legislative conduct. The U.S. government appealed directly to the Supreme Court, which heard arguments on October 18, 1971, and March 20, 1972, before reversing the district court's dismissal in a 6–3 decision on June 29, 1972. In United States v. Brewster, 408 U.S. 501 (1972), Chief Justice Warren E. Burger's majority opinion held that the Speech or Debate Clause protects only "legislative acts" themselves—such as speeches, debates, votes, and committee reports—from executive or judicial scrutiny, but does not extend to bribery or corruption preceding those acts. The Court emphasized that evidence of a corrupt promise or agreement to perform a legislative act could be introduced without probing the act or its motives, thereby safeguarding legislative independence while permitting prosecution for extrinsic crimes like bribery, which undermine rather than further legislative functions. Justices William O. Douglas, William J. Brennan Jr., and Thurgood Marshall dissented, arguing that the ruling risked chilling legislative deliberation by allowing inquiries into pre-legislative promises. Following the Supreme Court's reversal, Brewster's proceeded in 1972. On 17, 1972, a jury acquitted him on the three counts under 18 U.S.C. § 201(c) but convicted him on three counts of accepting illegal under 18 U.S.C. § 201(g), involving the same underlying transactions with Anderson. The statute prohibits public officials from accepting anything of value for being influenced in the performance of official acts, distinct from 's requirement of a promise. Anderson, tried jointly, was convicted on all three counts. The convictions highlighted the evidentiary focus on the lobbyist's payments and Brewster's prior commitments, without direct evidence of his actual votes or committee reports, in line with the Supreme Court's delineation.

No-contest plea and fines

In June 1975, following the U.S. Supreme Court's 1972 reversal of his prior conviction and subsequent legal proceedings, former Senator Daniel B. Brewster entered a plea of nolo contendere to a single misdemeanor count of accepting an unlawful gratuity without corrupt intent, stemming from allegations involving payments from Spiegel, Inc., a mail-order firm seeking favorable postal rate legislation. The plea resolved a case that had protracted for over six years, avoiding a full retrial on felony bribery charges under 18 U.S.C. § 201. U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica imposed a $10,000 fine on Brewster but declined to sentence him to prison time, remarking that "you cannot leave this court unwhipped by justice" while acknowledging the absence of proven corrupt intent. The resolution permitted Brewster to retain his law license, which had been at risk amid the ongoing litigation. No further criminal penalties were applied, effectively closing the matter without an admission of guilt, as a plea does not constitute a for all purposes under .

Personal struggles

Alcoholism onset and effects

Brewster's reportedly had familial roots, with his , a World War I veteran, succumbing to alcohol-related causes at age 36. Post-traumatic stress from his severe wounding during the 1945 —where he sustained seven injuries—may have contributed to vulnerability, according to biographer John Frece. The condition's acute onset in his political career aligned with the aftermath of the Maryland Democratic presidential primary, in which Brewster, as a "favorite son" candidate opposing segregationist , secured only 44% of the vote amid intense racial hostility. Friends and colleagues observed a marked escalation in his drinking following this defeat, transitioning from social consumption to problematic dependency. By the late 1960s, during the final years of his tenure (1963–1969), Brewster's manifested in visible and erratic behaviors, including guzzling for its alcohol content and arriving intoxicated—or failing to appear at all—for public engagements. These episodes exacerbated professional instability, with inconsistent positions on key issues like the contributing to perceptions of unreliability among voters and aides. The condition played a direct role in his 1968 re-election defeat to Republican Charles McC. Mathias Jr., as public awareness of his debilitated state eroded support; had become openly evident by the campaign's close. Personally, the precipitated the dissolution of Brewster's first to Carol O'Brien in the mid- and his subsequent brief union with Anne Bullitt, amid escalating domestic turmoil. A notable incident involved Brewster, inebriated at his County estate, brandishing a Colt .45 at his Gerry and urging him to shoot a , highlighting the threat to safety. Hospitalization for followed his 1968 electoral loss, marking an early intervention attempt amid a broader spiral that intertwined with legal scandals and financial strain. Frece attributes the drinking partly to the high-pressure environment of politics, though contemporaries often viewed the itself as the primary driver of Brewster's cascading misfortunes rather than a mere symptom.

Marital and family issues

Brewster's first marriage, to Carol Leiper de Havenon in 1954, produced at least two sons, including Gerry Brewster and Daniel Baugh Brewster Jr.. His worsening alcoholism exacerbated marital tensions, culminating in a sudden Mexican divorce on April 14, 1967. Immediately following the divorce, Brewster pursued and married Anne Bullitt, a horse breeder and his early romantic interest—her fourth husband—later that year, amid reports of his intensified drinking. The second marriage dissolved in , further compounding personal instability linked to Brewster's alcohol dependency. These upheavals strained dynamics, with Gerry Brewster later recounting resentment toward his father's frequent absences, which he attributed to a combination of political obligations and -fueled neglect. The senator's familial pattern of —echoing his father's death at age 36 from drinking—intensified these issues, contributing to early-life disruptions before his later sobriety.

Path to sobriety and redemption

Following his 1972 Senate defeat and amid ongoing legal battles, Brewster entered extended treatment for , spending much of 1973 hospitalized. Earlier attempts at had faltered, with periods of undermined by relapses during his final years, including consumption of non-beverage alcohol like . In summer 1975, Brewster underwent rehabilitation at Hiddenbrook, a treatment facility in Bel Air, Maryland, where he met Judy Lynn Aarsand, a divorcée also in recovery. The couple married on an unspecified date in 1976, marking the start of Brewster's sustained sobriety, which lasted over three decades until his death. Their union produced three children—Danielle in 1977, and two others—whom Brewster raised as a devoted father on Windy Meadows Farm in , focusing on equestrian activities and rural self-sufficiency. Brewster's redemption manifested in a low-profile life of stability and management, contrasting his prior public excesses; he avoided and legal entanglements post-plea, crediting personal resolve and his second for the turnaround. By 1978, observers noted his engagement in everyday tasks, such as veterinary care for , alongside stepchildren from Aarsand's prior . This phase, sustained without , represented a private reclamation of character, though unaccompanied by formal public or on .

Post-Senate career

Immediate aftermath and lobbying attempts

Following his defeat in the November 1968 Senate election by Republican Charles McC. Mathias Jr., Brewster's term concluded on January 3, 1969. Overwhelmed by intensifying , marital discord, and financial pressures, he soon fled to , retreating to a horse farm owned by his wife Anne near . In Ireland, Brewster's health rapidly declined, culminating in hospitalization for severe . This episode exacerbated his personal isolation and family tensions, contributing to the eventual dissolution of his marriage and mounting debts back home. Upon returning to the later in 1969, the federal against him in —stemming from alleged actions during his tenure—intensified the turmoil, rendering immediate professional reintegration, such as through based on his legislative expertise, infeasible amid the scandals and recovery demands. Brewster's condition and legal entanglements instead propelled a phase of retreat, with no documented success in leveraging his networks for paid advocacy or consulting roles during this period.

Later private life and activities

Following the resolution of his legal troubles in 1975, Brewster retreated from public political life to focus on private endeavors, primarily managing Worthington Farms, a 500-acre and cattle operation in Glyndon, , where he had long been involved in equestrian activities including steeplechase racing. He successfully operated the farm into his later years, leveraging his background in Maryland's horse country to breed and raise , which provided a measure of and personal fulfillment amid his recovery from . Brewster channeled his experience with into assisting others, working as an counselor and helping recovering individuals through personal mentorship. He also contributed to community efforts in the area, serving on hospital boards and government commissions related to and recovery programs, reflecting a low-profile commitment to service without seeking elected office. In his , Brewster achieved lasting sobriety after multiple attempts, remarried Judy Aarsand—whom he met during rehabilitation—and raised additional children, including two daughters and a son from that union, while maintaining ties with offspring from prior marriages. This period marked a stabilization of his relationships, previously strained by and personal struggles, allowing him to reside quietly in , until his health declined.

Death and immediate legacy

Final years and passing

After achieving sobriety in the 1970s, Brewster resided on the 130-acre Windy Meadows Farm in Glyndon, , where he engaged in horse and cattle farming. The property, previously owned by his mother and later his sister, supported his activities as a gentleman farmer and reflected a return to the rural roots of his County upbringing. In 1976, Brewster married Judy Lynn Brewster, with whom he had three children, contributing to a stable family life in his later decades. He continued practicing and served as an alcoholism counselor, drawing from his personal recovery experience, while pursuing an interest in steeplechase racing. Brewster died of liver cancer on August 19, 2007, at his home in Owings Mills, Maryland, at the age of 83. Following cremation, his ashes were interred at St. Thomas' Episcopal Church Cemetery in Owings Mills.

Family reflections

Gerry L. Brewster, Daniel B. Brewster's son from his first marriage to Carol, has described worshipping his father as a war hero and politician while harboring resentment over Brewster's prolonged absences during campaigns and the personal turmoil from alcoholism and divorce, which strained family bonds. In recent years, Gerry has promoted a 2023 biography of his father, Self-Destruction: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of U.S. Senator Daniel B. Brewster, emphasizing the family's intent to portray a full, honest account of Brewster's triumphs, failures, and eventual sobriety after 1976, when he remarried and started a second family. Brewster's third wife, Judy L. Brewster, whom he met in rehabilitation and married in 1976, bore three daughters—Danielle, Jennilie, and Dana—and shared over three decades with him on their Baltimore County farm, Windy Meadows, where he focused on and recovery until his death from on August 19, 2007, at age 83. Following Judy's death in 2024, Gerry reflected on her role as a devoted partner who helped sustain Brewster's later stability, calling her a "good person, mother and stepmother" who fell in love with his father during recovery. These accounts highlight a legacy of redemption acknowledged by family, tempered by earlier disruptions to his first family of four children.

Historical assessment

Achievements in civil rights and military

Daniel B. Brewster enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1942 as a private and rose to the rank of during , serving two years in the South Pacific theater. He participated in intense combat on and Okinawa, where he was wounded seven times as a 19-year-old with the 76th , Sixth Marine Regiment, Second Marine Division. For his gallantry in action, Brewster received the [Bronze Star Medal](/page/Bronze Star Medal), recognizing his bravery under fire. Brewster's wartime experiences, including serving alongside Black American troops, shaped his later commitment to , fostering a lifelong advocacy for civil rights informed by firsthand observation of shared sacrifices in combat. In the , Brewster emerged as a strong proponent of civil rights legislation, co-sponsoring the as one of its key supporters and the only senator from a state south of the Mason-Dixon Line to do so. He voted in favor of the bill's passage on June 19, 1964, which passed 73-27 and prohibited discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Brewster also co-sponsored the , aimed at overcoming legal barriers to Black in the South. His political efforts further advanced civil rights by defeating segregationist Alabama Governor in Maryland's 1964 Democratic presidential primary, a as President Lyndon B. Johnson's stand-in that marginalized Wallace's influence and helped secure momentum for the pending . This electoral success, achieved despite Wallace's strong showing, was seen as pivotal in maintaining support for the legislation amid national tensions. Brewster's advocacy extended to broader work on civil rights, as documented in his legislative papers covering related correspondence and initiatives.

Criticisms: Policy shifts, war support, and ethics

Brewster faced criticism for his staunch support of U.S. military escalation in during his tenure, including backing the in August 1964 and subsequent appropriations for the war effort, positions that aligned with the Johnson administration but alienated growing anti-war constituencies in Maryland and nationally. Critics, including dovish Democrats and campus activists, argued that his votes enabled the expansion of U.S. troop levels from approximately 16,000 in 1963 to over 500,000 by 1968, contributing to mounting casualties—over 16,000 American deaths by the end of his term—and domestic unrest, such as the 1968 riots following Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. Brewster later reflected that this stance cost him his 1968 re-election bid against Republican , who campaigned on war skepticism, amid Brewster receiving only 49.5% of the vote in a state shifting against the conflict. Detractors highlighted perceived policy inconsistencies, particularly Brewster's early liberal advocacy for civil rights legislation—co-sponsoring the 1964 and 1965 Voting Rights Act—contrasting with his hawkish , which some viewed as a pragmatic shift toward administration loyalty to secure influence, rather than ideological coherence. This tension was evident in his 1965 Senate speeches defending commitments as essential to containing , even as he expressed private reservations about escalation tactics post-1965, yet without public opposition until after leaving office in 1971, when he publicly decried the war's "moral flaw" in indiscriminate bombing and neutral incursions. Such delayed critique fueled accusations of opportunism, with opponents like Mathias portraying Brewster as out of touch with Maryland's evolving anti-war sentiment, evidenced by his narrow primary win over peace candidate Alan Bible in 1968. On ethics, Brewster's reputation suffered from a 1969 federal indictment on charges of soliciting and accepting $24,500 in bribes from lobbyist Nathan Voloshen between 1967 and 1968 to influence favorable amendments to an airline meal service regulation bill, amid allegations of staff involvement in the scheme. Although a acquitted him of in 1972, citing insufficient of corrupt intent, he pleaded no contest in 1975 to a single count of accepting an illegal under 18 U.S.C. § 201(g), resulting in a $10,000 fine and five years' probation; Brewster maintained innocence, attributing the episode to overzealous aides exploiting his personal struggles with . The scandal, breaking shortly after his electoral defeat on November 5, 1968, amplified perceptions of congressional in the late 1960s, with media outlets like detailing Voloshen's payments as disguised "consulting fees," undermining Brewster's image as a principled war hero despite his ultimate legal vindication on core charges.

Broader lessons on character and politics

Brewster's life exemplifies how personal addictions, particularly , can precipitate the downfall of otherwise promising political figures. As a decorated Marine and rising Democratic star dubbed the "Golden Boy of Maryland Politics," he ascended rapidly to the U.S. in 1963, only for his drinking—intensified by the high-pressure Washington environment—to manifest in public lapses, such as appearing intoxicated at events and consuming mouthwash for alcohol content. This vulnerability highlights a broader risk in politics: environments rife with networking demands and late-night dealmaking often normalize and enable , eroding judgment and amplifying minor flaws into career-ending crises, as evidenced by his 1968 reelection loss amid visible deterioration. The senator's entanglement in ethical lapses further underscores the fragility of character under institutional temptations. Indicted in 1969 for related to a postal rate vote and convicted in 1972 of accepting a $10,000 unlawful from lobbyist T. Anderson—intended to influence legislation—Brewster's actions reflected how access to power invites , particularly when personal instability clouds discretion. Though acquitted on the core charge, the episode illustrates a causal link between compromised integrity and policy distortions, where short-term gains undermine long-term ; it parallels recurring scandals where politicians prioritize over duty to constituents. Brewster's ideological shifts, such as evolving from congressional opposition to civil rights to fervent support under President Johnson, reveal the perils of masquerading as growth. This pivot, aligning with Democratic coalitions for electoral advantage, demonstrates how politicians may subordinate first-principles convictions to partisan pressures or personal ambition, fostering cynicism about authenticity in governance. Yet his post- redemption—achieving by the 1970s, counseling veterans on , and advising Maryland's Governor's Council on the issue—affirms that individual character can recover through disciplined reform, even if rarely does; it cautions that true demands vigilance against vices from the outset, lest redemption arrive too late to restore influence.

References

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