The infamous Statehouse sex scandal of 1855 
   
This is a story about state Rep. Joseph Hiss.
  His claim to fame is that he was the first member of the Massachusetts
  Legislature to be thrown out of the House for sexual misconduct.
 As a matter of fact, he was the first legislator thrown out of the Legislature  for anything.
  His name came up the other day following Senate President Stanley 
Rosenberg’s decision to temporarily step down from his position during 
an investigation over charges that his husband Bryon Hefner sexually 
molested and harassed four Statehouse lobbyists or associates.
  Rosenberg has not been accused of any sexual misconduct  or 
wrongdoing. And there is — and will not be — any movement  to kick him 
out of the Senate,  or anything like that. But he may be forced to 
officially resign as Senate president.
  Already there are several senators, all one-time Rosenberg supporters, who are rounding up
 votes to succeed him if  he officially vacates — or  is forced to 
vacate — the  presidency. But that is  another story.  This story 
concerns  Hiss.  Back in 1855 Hiss  was a member of the  House. I did 
not know  him, although some people  believe I covered the Statehouse  
back then.
  I only came 
across Hiss when I delved into the Statehouse archives a generation ago 
after his name came up as precedent in a Supreme Judicial Court decision
 on the ouster of a state senator.
  In the archives I found the hand-written report the court referred to.
 It was a report on Hiss by a special committee that had been 
established to investigate  Hiss.
  Following complaints, the investigative committee had been set up to 
look into Hiss’ behavior during several visits to nunneries in1855.
  The report was yellowed with age, but readable. I did a column about the find for the Boston Herald, where I worked at the time.
  The story was that Hiss was a member of the legislative Nunnery  
Committee, which had jurisdiction over Roman Catholic convents and 
nunneries.
  As such, 
Hiss and his six-member  committee visited nunneries in Roxbury, 
Worcester and Lowell, according to the investigative committee, a 
committee that today would be equal to the House and Senate Ethics 
Committees.
  According 
to witness testimony before the investigating committee,  Hiss was 
something of a womanizer  who was not averse to having  a drink or two, 
which may have accounted for his behavior.
  At his Statehouse hearing, witnesses testified that Hiss propositioned
 the nuns during a visit by the Nunnery Committee to the Academy of the 
Sisters of Notre Dame in Roxbury.
  One of the nuns said that Hiss asked her if she wanted “to go out in 
the world.” She testified: “ He then wanted to know if I wanted to go to
 Montreal and I said that I would not.”
 Hiss and his committee later spent the night at the Norfolk House in 
Roxbury where “they consumed wine that was paid for by the state.”
  “We by no means approve of the practice of a legislative committee  
making use of intoxicating  drinks at the expense of the Commonwealth,” 
the report said.
  If 
that was not bad enough, Hiss and his committee then went to Lowell, 
where Hiss was greeted by two unidentified women at the train station.
  The Nunnery Committee members registered at the Washington  House 
where Hiss added the name of a “Mrs. Paterson” to the list of committee 
members who were staying over. She was not a member of the committee.
  When Mrs. Patterson arrived, she was given Room 12 by the hotel clerk.
 “Mr. Hiss had had the next room, Room 13,” the committee noted.
  The key witness against Hiss was Mrs. Carpenter, the chambermaid.  She
 told the committee that she saw Mrs. Patterson in her night gown 
getting ready for bed at 8 p.m.
  However, the next morning, when Mrs. Carpenter went up to make up the 
beds in Rooms 12 and 13, Mrs. Patterson’s bed “had the used appearance 
of having  been occupied by two persons,”  while Hiss’ bed and not been 
slept in at all.
  The report said, “She judged that a man and a woman had used the bed that night and she had no doubt that being the case.”
  “Room Number 12 was occupied  by two persons that night,” Hiss and Patterson, the committee  concluded.
  In addition, Hiss paid for Mrs. Patterson’s room with state funds. It 
came to $1.25, “proving she being at that place with his knowledge.” The
 total cost of Hiss’ Lowell sex junket came to a whopping $18.75.
  So they threw Hiss out of the House.
  It is a good thing our politicians no longer tolerate such bad
 behavior.
 Send comments to: luke1825@aol.com
 
 
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