House In 1942, after
Democratic incumbent
Katharine Byron decided to retire, Beall was elected as a
Republican to the
U.S. House of Representatives from
Maryland's 6th congressional district. He was subsequently re-elected to four more terms. During his 10-year tenure in the House, he served on the committees on the
District of Columbia, flood control, roads and public works. His 449,823 votes were the largest number a Republican Senate candidate ever received in Maryland. During his Senate career, Beall earned a reputation as a moderate Republican.
1960, and
1964, as well as the
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Beall was narrowly re-elected in
1958 after defeating Democrat
Thomas D'Alesandro Jr., the
mayor of Baltimore and father of future
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, by a margin of 51%-49%. However, he was heavily defeated in his bid for a third term in
1964; he lost to Democrat
Joseph Tydings, the
United States Attorney for the District of Maryland (a position Beall's son George later held from 1970 to 1975), by a margin of 63%-37%. Beall's son,
J. Glenn Beall Jr. in turn defeated Tydings for re-election in
1970. Maryland's other U.S. Senate seat had been held by
Millard Tydings (the father of Joseph) from 1927 to 1951. As a consequence of this, Maryland was represented by a father and son of the Tydings family, and then a father and son of the Beall family, trading seats almost (with a break only from January 3, 1951 – January 3, 1953) consecutively from 1927 to 1977 (Tydings 1927–1951, Beall 1953–1965, Tydings 1965–1971, and Beall 1971–1977), when the chain was broken by the re-election defeat of J. Glenn Beall, Jr. in 1976 by Democrat
Paul Sarbanes, the father of U.S. Representative
John Sarbanes. ==Later life and death==