Spiro Theodore Agnew (November 9, 1918 September 17, 1996), born Spiros Anagnostopoulos in Towson, Maryland, was the thirty-third Vice President of the United States, serving from 1969 to 1973 under President Richard M. Nixon. He is the highest-ranking Greek-American citizen to hold political office in the United States. He is most famous for his resignation in 1973 following evidence of tax evasion. Agnew was also the 55th governor of the state of Maryland from 1967 to 1969.
Agnew attended public schools in Baltimore before enrolling in Johns Hopkins University in 1937. He studied chemistry at Johns Hopkins University for three years before joining the U.S. Army and serving in Europe during World War II. He was awarded the Bronze Star for his service in France and Germany.
Prior to leaving for Europe, Agnew began working at an insurance company where he met and, on May 27, 1942, married another company employee, Elinor Judefind, known as Judy. They would eventually have four children: Pamela, James Rand, Susan, and Kimberly.
Upon his return from the war, Agnew transferred to the evening program at the University of Baltimore School of Law. He studied law at night while working as a grocer and as an insurance salesman. Agnew received a law degree in 1947 and moved to the suburbs to begin practicing law. He passed the bar in 1949.
In 1962, Agnew ran for election as County Executive of Baltimore County, seeking office in a predominantly Democratic county that had seen no Republican elected to that position in the twentieth century, with only one (Roger B. Hayden) earning victory after he left. Running as a reformer and Republican outsider, he took advantage of a bitter split in the Democratic Party and was elected. Agnew backed and signed an ordinance outlawing discrimination in some public accommodations, among the first laws of this kind in the United States.
As governor, Agnew worked with the Democratic legislature to pass tax and judicial reforms, as well as tough anti-pollution laws. Projecting an image of racial moderation, Agnew signed the state's first open-housing laws and succeeded in getting the repeal of an anti-miscegenation law. However, during the riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., Agnew angered many African-American leaders by lecturing them about their constituents in stating, "I call on you to publicy repudiate all black racists. This, so far, you have been unwilling to do."
Agnew was known for his tough criticisms of political opponents, especially journalists and anti-Vietnam War activists. He was known for attacking his opponents with unusual, often alliterative epithets, some of which were coined by White House speechwriters William Safire and Patrick Buchanan, including:
Agnew had hoped to be the Republican Party's presidential nominee in the 1976 election, before the Watergate scandal broke out. Privately, Agnew blamed Nixon for releasing the accusations of bribes and tax evasion in order to divert attention from the growing Watergate scandal that was engulfing Nixon's administration. As fate would have it, Nixon was forced from office but Agnew's earlier resignation and criminal charges ruined his hopes of becoming President. The two men never spoke to each other again. As a gesture of reconciliation, Nixon's daughters requested that Agnew attend Nixon's funeral in 1994, and Agnew complied.
In 1980 Agnew published a memoir in which he implied that Nixon and Alexander Haig had planned to assassinate him if he refused to resign the Vice-Presidency, and that Haig told him "to go quietly … or else.Agnew, Spiro T:: "Go quietly ... or else". Morrow, 1980. ISBN 0688036686." Agnew also wrote a novel, The Canfield DecisionAgnew, Spiro T:: "The Canfield Decision". Putnam Pub Group, 1976. ISBN 9997554876., about a vice president who was "destroyed by his own ambition."
Agnew died suddenly on September 17, 1996 at the age of 77 at Atlantic General Hospital, in Berlin, Maryland in Worcester County (near his Ocean City home) only a few hours after being hospitalized and diagnosed with an advanced, yet to that point undetected, form of leukemia. He is buried at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens, a cemetery in Timonium, Maryland in Baltimore County.
Vice Presidents of the United States | Republican Party (United States) vice presidential nominees | Governors of Maryland | Baltimore County Executives | Burials at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens | Disbarred American lawyers | American tax evaders | American Episcopalians | Greek-Americans | People from Baltimore | University of Baltimore alumni | 1918 births | 1996 deaths
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