John Ignatius Nolan (January 14, 1874 – November 18, 1922) was an American iron molder and politician who represented California's 5th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives for five terms from 1913 to 1922. He was elected to a sixth consecutive term but died before the start of the new Congress.
Nolan was born in San Francisco, California, on January 14, 1874. He attended the public schools there until the age of 14, when he became an apprentice iron molder. He worked in that trade until 1907, when he was elected secretary of the San Francisco Iron Molder's Union. Later that year, he was elected to the international union's executive board. He was the San Francisco Labor Council's legislative agent to the California Legislature from 1909 to 1911.
An active member of the Union Labor Party, Nolan was appointed to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors by mayor P. H. McCarthy in 1911. He was a member of the Board's Finance Committee and chairman of its Street Committee. He ran for re-election that year, but was narrowly defeated. In 1912, he was elected secretary of the San Francisco Labor Council.
In 1912, Nolan was elected as a Bull Moose Republican to the 63rd United States Congress. San Francisco's first labor congressman in eight years, he was a staunch progressive reelected to the four succeeding Congresses. He served from March 4, 1913, until his death. During the 66th United States Congress, he was the chairman of the United States House Committee on Patents, and during the 67th United States Congress, he was the chairman of the United States House Committee on Labor.
Nolan voted for the Immigration Act of 1917 (which barred immigration from most of the AsiaâÂÂPacific region), and against the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill of 1922. Although he initially opposed American entry into World War I, Nolan ultimately voted to declare war on the German Empire and after the war strongly supported American membership in the League of Nations. He voted against the Volstead Act, which established Prohibition in the United States. In 1920, he received a 100% "labor record" from the American Federation of Labor.
In 1916, Nolan introduced H.R. 7625, which would have established a $3 per day minimum wage for federal employees. It was endorsed by the AFL and the National Federation of Federal Employees, but the bill's opponents in the House kept it from coming to a vote. In 1918, U.S. Senator Hiram Johnson co-sponsored the legislation, and it became known as the Johnson-Nolan Minimum Wage Bill. It passed the House that September, but was stalled in the Senate Committee on Education and Labor. It was reintroduced two years later and passed in both the House and Senate, but when it went to conference it was filibustered by Southern Democrats who opposed it because it would have paid African American employees the same as white employees.
Nolan was re-elected in 1922 to the 68th United States Congress before he died in San Francisco, California, on November 18, 1922. He was interred at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, California.
After he died, he was succeeded in Congress by his wife, Mae Nolan. She was the first woman elected to her husband's seat in Congress, which is sometimes known as "widow's succession."