Robert H. Holloway
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Robert H. Holloway (May 4, 1918 – November 21, 2005) was a lawyer and state legislator in Illinois. He was elected to the
Illinois House of Representatives The Illinois House of Representatives is the lower house of the Illinois General Assembly. The body was created by the first Illinois Constitution adopted in 1818. The House under the current constitution as amended in 1980 consists of 118 re ...
in 1972 and served one term.


Early life and education

Robert H. Holloway was born in Emmet, Arkansas, on May 4, 1918. Brought to Chicago at the age of four, he attended James McCosh Elementary and Englewood High School. He was a soldier during World War II, completing Officer Candidates School, achieving the rank of Captain, and serving in North Africa as the commander of a Port Battalion and Recreation Facility. Holloway earned a law degree from Loyola in 1949.


Career

Holloway had his own law firm in Chicago. After nine years in private practice, he was appointed to the state's attorneys office, where he served as an Assistant State's Attorney from 1957 to 1967. He ran for clerk of the Illinois appellate court in 1962, but lost to incumbent Leslie Beck. Holloway became a 6th Ward Republican committeeman in 1968. He was an assistant to the sheriff of Cook County from 1968–69, and by 1972 he was an assistant Illinois Attorney General. A Republican, he served in the Illinois House of Representatives, representing District 29 from 1973–1975. He served on the Judiciary I Committee. Although the 29th district was heavily Democratic, he was one of a small number of African American Republicans who were able to win election from such districts prior to the Cutback Amendment, due to an arrangement between the parties under which each party only ran two candidates for each three-member legislative district.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Holloway, Robert 1918 births 2005 deaths Military personnel from Chicago United States Army personnel of World War II Republican Party members of the Illinois House of Representatives Politicians from Chicago Lawyers from Chicago 20th-century American legislators 20th-century African-American politicians Loyola University Chicago School of Law alumni African-American people in Illinois politics 20th-century Illinois politicians