U.S. Senator
John F. Collins (1960–1968). In
1966, Collins ran to succeed Saltonstall when he retired but lost in the Democratic primary to former
Massachusetts Governor Endicott Peabody (who in turn lost to
Massachusetts Attorney General Edward Brooke). In 1944, Saltonstall was elected to the
United States Senate in a
special election to fill the unexpired term created by the resignation of U.S. Senator
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. He was re-elected three times, serving from 1945 to 1967. Early in his first term, in April 1945 he was one of a dozen Senators and Congressmen who toured the
Buchenwald Concentration Camp at the invitation of Gen.
Dwight Eisenhower to attest to the reality of Nazi atrocities. Those he defeated included
John H. Corcoran in 1944,
John I. Fitzgerald in 1948,
Foster Furcolo in 1954, and
Thomas J. O'Connor in 1960. During his
tenure in the Senate, he served as the Senate Republican Whip and on five influential Senate committees. He also served as the chair of the
Senate Republican Conference, 1957–1967. He was viewed as a political moderate, and served as a mediating force between the party's conservative and progressive wings. He was an unspectacular but effective legislator, good at drafting legislation and finding compromise language. When he left office, after more than thirty years in politics, he had few political enemies. Saltonstall voted in favor of the
Civil Rights Acts of 1957,
1960, and
1964, as well as the
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. Saltonstall was one of thirteen Republican senators to vote in favor of the creation of Medicare. As a senator, Saltonstall was described by
The Washington Post as neither liberal or conservative, but as being on the side of common sense. == Personal life ==