Oakes Ames
Oakes Ames (January 10, 1804 – May 8, 1873) was an American manufacturer and Republican politician from Massachusetts who built the family shovel-making enterprise into a major industrial concern and represented the state's 1st congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1859 until his death.)
Ames assumed a leading role in the Union Pacific Railroad's construction by acquiring control of the Crédit Mobilier of America, a sham construction subsidiary that overcharged the railroad for work while distributing profits to insiders, including discounted shares sold to congressmen to influence votes favoring the project.[1] As chairman of the House Committee on Railways and Canals during the 37th through 40th Congresses, he advocated for policies supporting transcontinental rail development amid the Civil War and Reconstruction.)
The 1872 exposure of the Crédit Mobilier scheme prompted a House investigation, culminating in Ames's censure on February 28, 1873, for corruptly manipulating congressional influence through stock distribution, though he avoided expulsion and maintained that the transactions ensured the railroad's completion.[1] Despite the scandal's damage to his reputation, Ames's financing helped realize the first transcontinental railroad, linking the eastern U.S. to the Pacific Coast in 1869.[1] He died of a stroke in Easton two months after censure.)