Albert
Fall was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, on 26th November, 1861. He studied
law and was admitted to the bar in 1891. He worked as a lawyer in
Las Cruces, New Mexico and in 1893 was appointed judge of the third
judicial district.
Fall
served as captain in the First Territorial Infantry during the Spanish-American
War. A member of the Republican Party,
Fall was elected to the Senate in 1912 and served as chairman of the
Committee on Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor.
In
March 1921 President Warren Harding appointed
Fall as Secretary of the Interior. Soon afterwards he persuaded Edwin
Denby, the Secretary of the Navy, that he should take over responsibility
for the Naval Reserves at Elk
Hills, California, Buena Vista, California and Teapot Dome, Wyoming.
Later
that year Fall decided that two of his friends, Harry
F. Sinclair (Mammoth
Oil Corporation) and Edward L. Doheny (Pan-American Petroleum and
Transport Company), should be allowed to lease part of these Naval
Reserves.
Attempts
were made to keep this deal secret but rumours began to circulate
when it became known that Fall was spending large sums of money on
buying new land. On 14th April, 1922, the Wall
Street Journal reported that Fall had leased Teapot
Dome to Harry
F. Sinclair.
President Warren Harding defended Fall
by claiming that "the policy which has been adopted by the Secretary
of the Navy and the Secretary of the Interior in dealing with these
matters was submitted to me prior to the adoption thereof, and the
policy decided upon and the subsequent acts have at all times had
my entire approval."