Contributed by Lubec Historical Society
Description
In 1939, after a career in oil and finance, President Franklin Roosevelt appointed Lubec native Sumner Tucker Pike (1891-1976) to the Securities and Exchange Commission, where he served for six years. Retiring home to Lubec, in 1946 he received a call from President Harry Truman asking him to serve as an original member of the Atomic Energy Commission. As acting chair of the AEC in 1950, Truman nominated him as permanent chair.
A congressional committee rejected the nomination 5-4, apparently because Pike opposed development of the hydrogen bomb. Later he served in the Maine legislature, and from 1965 to 1975 on the Board of the Roosevelt International Park on Campobello Island. He was a prime mover for the Roosevelt Memorial Bridge which connects Lubec with that island. Sumner Pike authored an article, “Grandpa Was a Smuggler,” in the weekly Saturday Evening Post magazine, August 28, 1948.
About This Item
- Title: Sumner Pike, Lubec, ca. 1940
- Creation Date: circa 1940
- Subject Date: circa 1940
- Location: Lubec, Washington County, ME
- Media: Photographic print
- Dimensions: 24.2 cm x 19.0 cm
- Local Code: Pike 3 jpg
- Collection: Anne Pike Rugh
- Object Type: Image
Cross Reference Searches
Standardized Subject Headings
- Pike, Sumner Tucker, 1891-1976
- People associated with politics & government--Maine--Lubec
- Government officials--Maine--Lubec
- Legislators--Maine
- Government employees--Maine--Lubec
People
For more information about this item, contact:
Lubec Historical Society135 Main Street, Lubec, ME 04652
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. No Permission is required to use the low-resolution watermarked image for educational use, or as allowed by the applicable copyright. For all other uses, permission is required.
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