Vincent F. Harrington

[1] He then attended Trinity College Academy, a school in Sioux City built on land purchased from Harrington's parents by the Order of St.[2] He attended the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, where he played football for Knute Rockne,[3] as a second-stringer on the legendary "Four Horsemen" team that dominated all opponents in the 1924 season.This prompted Harrington, a 9th district resident, to withdraw from the race for Lieutenant Governor to accept the Democratic nomination to replace Gillette on the ballot for the U.S. House of Representatives.[7] In the months before the United States' entry into World War II, Harrington declined to support President Roosevelt's departures from a policy of strict neutrality.[9] Thus, after he voted to declare war following the Pearl Harbor attack, he entered in May 1942 in the Army Air Forces, where he was commissioned as a captain, and took a leave of absence from Congress while becoming a candidate for re-election.On November 29, 1943, while serving in the Air Corps as a security control officer in Rutland, England, Harrington suffered a fatal heart attack.
U.S. House of RepresentativesGuy GilletteHarry E. NareyIowa SenateTom Ellis MurraySioux City, IowaRutlandHeart attackCambridge American CemeteryCambridge, EnglandDemocraticUnited States ArmyIX Troop Carrier CommandWorld War IILegion of MeritU.S. RepresentativeUnited States Army Air ForcesPearl Harbor attackFranklin D. RooseveltLiberty ShipOrder of St. FrancisUniversity of Notre DameSouth Bend, IndianaKnute RockneFour Horsemen1924 seasonUniversity of PortlandPortland, OregonHomer, NebraskaRichard Louis MurphyGuy M. GilletteCherokee, IowaIowa's 9th congressional district9th congressional district8th congressional districtMonona County7th congressional districtLend-LeaseSeventy-seventhCharles B. HoevenEnglandWayback MachineBiographical Directory of the United States CongressFind a GraveU.S. House of RepresentativesPortland Pilots men's basketball head coachesMaurice J. "Clipper" SmithGene MurphyRobert L. MathewsArt McLarneyAl NegrattiJack AvinaLarry SteeleMichael HoltonEric RevenoTerry PorterBen JohnsonShantay LegansPortland Pilots head baseball coachesChris SperryGeoff LoomisPortland Pilots head football coachesDom CallicrateSlip MadiganHal MoeHarry Wright1924 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football—national championsElmer LaydenDon MillerJim CrowleyHarry StuhldreherAdam WalshEdgar MillerJoe BachChuck CollinsEd HunsingerNoble KizerJohn WeibelJoe BolandClem CroweWilbur EatonTom HeardenMax HouserGeorge KeoganTom LiebGeorge VergaraW. ThompsonMillerA. HallS. CurtisJ. F. WilsonMcCraryMcCoidB. HallSeerleyS. ClarkKennedyEicherMartinSchwengelSchmidhauserMezvinskyNussleBraleyFinkenauerHinsonMiller-MeeksLefflerL. ClarkJ. P. CookThoringtonVandeverW. WolfCottonFarwellMurphyG. CurtisRumpleDawsonPepperVollmerB. JacobsenW. JacobsenL. WolfBromwellCulverBlouinLoebsackAllisonDonnanAinsworthBurdickUpdegraffHendersonBirdsallPickettConnollyRobinsonWillfordGwynneGrassleyLightfootBoswellLathamGrinnellLoughridgeWaldenDeeringWellerFullerSweneyButlerHaugenBiermannLeCompteCarterBandstraN. SmithGanskeFeenstraKassonG. DodgePalmer J. WilsonR. ClarkW. G. ThompsonFrederickJ. HamiltonCousinsThurstonCunninghamScherleHarkinGrandyA. HubbardPomeroySampsonWeaverJ. C. CookD. HamiltonKendallKirkpatrickRamseyerDowellUtterbackGoodwinGilchristJ. I. DolliverHoevenGreiggBedellCummingsE. GilletteH. SmithCongerProutyWearinJensenHansenMcDillHepburnAndersonJamiesonTownerOliverCarpenterBowmanMcPhersonW. SmithVincentSwansonG. GilletteHolmesJ. P. DolliverConnerDickinsonStrublePerkinsThomasE. HubbardSteeleCampbellHastingsChapmanA. DodgeUnited States CongressesSenateG. GilletteC. HerringC. DowellL. ThurstonF. GilchristF. BiermannE. EicherO. WearinJ. GwynneW. JacobsenB. JensenK. LeCompteT. MartinH. Tallepublic domain material