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Gilbert Gude; Md. congressman led environmental efforts; at 84

Gilbert Gude, a Maryland Republican who often championed liberal causes, never lost an election. He said he decided to leave Congress in 1976 'to lead a more balanced life.' Gilbert Gude, a Maryland Republican who often championed liberal causes, never lost an election. He said he decided to leave Congress in 1976 "to lead a more balanced life." (Gerald Martineau/Washington Post)

WASHINGTON -- Gilbert Gude, a former Republican congressman from Montgomery County, Md., who championed environmental causes and introduced a bill to preserve the Chesapeake Bay and Ohio Canal and make it a national park, died Thursday of congestive heart failure at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C. He was 84.

Mr. Gude (pronounced GOO-dee), a longtime resident of Bethesda, Md., served five terms in the US House of Representatives from 1967 to 1977 and was proud of being both a Republican and a liberal. He was an ardent environmentalist who worked to protect the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay, wild horses in the West, and the quality of the nation's air.

A native of Washington, he was also an early advocate for home rule and a sponsor of legislation that led to the building of the capital's Metro system. But his crowning achievement might have been saving the scenic C & O Canal, which stretches 185 miles from Georgetown to Cumberland, Md.

He spearheaded efforts to stop plans for a highway alongside the canal, and then introduced the bill that resulted in the restoration of the 19th-century waterway and the creation, in 1971, of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Park, the country's narrowest national park.

Possessing a deep knowledge of nature and plants from boyhood, when he worked in his family's nursery business, Mr. Gude stated his environmental principles while introducing a 1969 bill to protect the Potomac River valley.

"The choice," he said, "is between a river comprised of wilderness, open space, developed recreation areas, and farmland, interspersed with towns and areas of commerce or a mammoth open storm drain running through nightmarish strips of oversized cities, suburbs, and Coney Islands."

Mr. Gude sponsored the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act of 1971, which protected wild mustangs in the rural West. He was alerted to the problem by one of his sons, who told him that hundreds of horses were rounded up by helicopter, killed, and sold for dog food.

Mr. Gude introduced measures to improve air quality in Washington and to limit noise pollution near airports. His amendment to the Clean Air Act of 1970 required auto emission tests to be published annually.

When making his first run for Congress in 1966 in a largely Democratic district, Mr. Gude called himself "a liberal on civil rights and a moderate on fiscal matters." By his second term, his votes matched the recommendations of the conservative Americans for Constitutional Action only 29 percent of the time. His rating from the liberal Americans for Democratic Action, by contrast, was 67 percent.

He supported limits on cigarette advertising, restrictions on handgun ownership, and a tighter rein on military spending. As early as 1969, he voiced opposition to the Vietnam War, and he was one of the first members of Congress from either party to suggest that President Nixon should be impeached for his role in the Watergate scandal. Mr. Gude received hate mail after introducing a bill that would have removed J. Edgar Hoover's name from the FBI building.

Nonetheless, he was reelected four times by wide margins, receiving 66 percent of the vote during his final campaign in 1974. He never lost an election.

Mr. Gude was the son of a prosperous owner of a nursery and landscaping company.

He served in the Army Medical Corps during World War II and received a bachelor's degree in horticulture from Cornell University in 1948. He worked in the family business before being appointed to the Maryland House of Delegates in 1953. He received a master's degree in public administration from George Washington University in 1958.

He was Republican chairman of Montgomery County and served in the state Senate between 1962 and 1967 before going to Congress.

He leaves his wife of 58 years, Jane Callaghan Gude of Washington; five children, Sharon of Rockville, Adrienne Lewis of Washington, Gilbert Jr. of Bethesda and Gregory and Daniel , both of Cabin John, Md.; and three grandchildren.

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