Consuelo N. Bailey Explained

Consuelo Northrop Bailey
Office:Secretary of the Republican National Committee
Term Start:1965
Term End:1973
Office1:Vice Chair of the Republican National Committee
Term Start1:1953
Term End1:1957
Order2:66th
Office2:Lieutenant Governor of Vermont
Term Start2:January 8, 1955
Term End2:January 10, 1957
Governor2:Joseph B. Johnson
Predecessor2:Joseph B. Johnson
Successor2:Robert T. Stafford
Office3:Speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives
Term Start3:January 8, 1953
Term End3:January 8, 1955
Predecessor3:Wallace M. Fay
Successor3:John E. Hancock
Office4:Member of the Vermont House of Representatives from South Burlington
Term Start4:January 1951
Term End4:January 1955
Predecessor4:Frederick J. Fayette
Successor4:Allen C. Alfred
Office5:Member of the Vermont Senate from Chittenden County
Term Start5:January 1931
Term End5:January 1933
Alongside5:Frederick J. Goddette, Theodore E. Hopkins, Walter H. Tupper
Predecessor5:Levi P. Smith, Walter Hill Crockett, Henry A. Bailey, Clarence Morgan
Successor5:Leslie A. Evans, Theodore E. Hopkins, Henry A. B. Palmer, Clarence Morgan
Office6:State's Attorney of Chittenden County, Vermont
Term Start6:January 1927
Term End6:January 1931
Predecessor6:Ezra M. Horton
Successor6:Frederick W. Wakefield
Office7:Grand Juror of Burlington
Term Start7:September 1925
Term End7:January 1927
Predecessor7:A. Perley Feen
Successor7:Warren R. Austin Jr.
Office8:Chittenden County Justice of the Peace from the city of Burlington
Term Start8:January 1933
Term End8:January 1935
Term Start9:January 1923
Term End9:January 1927
Birth Date:19 October 1899
Birth Place:Fairfield, Vermont
Death Place:Burlington, Vermont
Party:Republican
Alma Mater:University of Vermont
Boston University School of Law
Spouse:Henry A. Bailey (1940–1961, his death)
Profession:Attorney

Consuelo Bailey (née Northrop; October 19, 1899  - September 9, 1976) was an American lawyer, politician, and elected official. She was the first woman to serve as Speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives and as the 66th lieutenant governor of Vermont. She was the first woman in U.S. history to be elected a lieutenant governor.

Background and earlier career

Consuelo Bentina Northrop Bailey was born in Fairfield, Vermont on October 19, 1899, a daughter of Katherine E. (Fletcher) Northrop and Peter Bent Brigham Northrop. Peter Northrop studied at Columbia Law School but decided on a farming career. His venture proved successful, and grew to include a successful dairy farm, creamery, and maple sugar works. An active Republican, he served in town offices and as a member of the Vermont House of Representatives.

Consuelo Bailey was raised in Fairfield and attended elementary school in Sheldon and high school in St. Albans. She graduated from the University of Vermont with a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1921. While attending college, she was admitted to the Phi Beta Kappa academic honor society. Bailey taught school in Shelburne for a year, then decided on a legal career.

Bailey attended Boston University School of Law, from which she received her LL.B. degree in 1925. In law school, she was captain of the debating team and served on the editorial staff of The Brief, the school's professional journal. She was admitted to the Vermont Bar in 1925.[1]

She served as Burlington's Grand Juror, the prosecutor in the city court, and in 1926, Bailey became the first woman to be admitted to practice before the Vermont Supreme Court[2] and ran for State's Attorney of Chittenden County. Bailey was then elected to the Vermont Senate in 1930, and served one term. She served as secretary to US Senator Ernest Willard Gibson before returning to Vermont to resume practicing law.

In 1950, Bailey was elected to the Vermont House of Representatives. She served as Speaker of the House from 1953 to 1955, the first woman Speaker of the Vermont House.

Lieutenant governor of Vermont

In 1954 she became the first woman to be elected as lieutenant governor of any state. Bailey served as 65th Lieutenant Governor of Vermont between 1955 and 1957.

Later roles

Bailey represented Vermont on the Republican National Committee from 1936 to 1976. She was vice chair from 1953 to 1957, and secretary from 1965 to 1973. As secretary, she was responsible for calling the roll of delegates as they voted for president at the 1968 and 1972 Republican National Conventions.

Death and burial

Bailey died in Burlington on September 9, 1976. She was buried at Sheldon Cemetery in Sheldon.

Family

In 1940, Bailey married her husband Henry A. Bailey (1893-1961), an attorney who served in both chambers of the state legislature and as mayor of Winooski.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Consuelo Northrup Bailey: Vermont's First Woman Speaker. www.vt-world.com. 17 November 2014 . en-US. 2017-01-19.
  2. Web site: Consuelo Northrop Bailey Papers. Special Collections, University of Vermont Library. January 19, 2017.