Dora Pinkham | |
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Member of the Maine House of Representatives for Fort Kent and Wallagrass | |
In office 1922–1924 |
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Member of the Maine Senate for Aroostook County | |
In office 1926–1930 |
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Personal details | |
Born | September 27, 1891 |
Died | November 19, 1941 | (aged 50)
Political party | Republican |
Dora (Bradbury) Pinkham (September 27, 1891 — November 19, 1941) born in New Limerick, Maine was a Republican politician and the first woman elected to the Maine Legislature. She served in both the Maine House of Representatives and Maine Senate.
Dora Bradbury was born September 27, 1891 in New Limerick, Maine. Her parents were Lester and Dora (Small) Bradbury.
The family moved to Fort Kent, Maine in 1892. Bradbury attended grade school in Fort Kent, and then Houlton High School in Houlton, Maine.
Bradbury graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1913, and earned a master's degree from Columbia University in 1914. She then worked as a teacher, civil servant, and bookkeeper.
In 1917, Bradbury married Fort Kent businessman Niles Pinkham.
Pinkham ran in the 1922 election, and defeated two-term Democrat William J. Audiber. Pinkham was the only one elected of nine women who ran for the legislature that year. She began serving in the Maine House of Representatives on January 3, 1923.
As a Protestant, Pinkham represented an overwhelmingly Catholic region of Maine that bordered on the Canadian province of Quebec.
In the legislature, Pinkham served on the Joint Committee for Public Health, the Maine Publicity Committee, the Joint Committee for Education, and on several ad hoc committees. Of the six bills she sponsored in the Maine House of Representatives, five were passed.
Pinkham ran for re-election in 1924 and lost to the previous incumbent William J. Audibert.
In 1926, Pinkham was elected to the Maine Senate. That year, both Pinkham and Katherine C. Allen became the first women to serve in the Maine Senate.
Pinkham was re-elected to the Senate in 1928.
As a senator, Pinkham held a chair on the Joint Standing Committees on Education and Public Health, and served on the Joint Standing Committees on State Prisons and Interior Waters, the Senate Committee on Bills in Second Reading, and on numerous special and ad hoc committees.