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Ernest Vandiver

Samuel Ernest Vandiver Jr. (July 3, 1918 – February 21, 2005) was an American politician who was the 73rd Governor of the U.S. state of Georgia from 1959 to 1963.

Ernest Vandiver
Ernest Vandiver (1962)
73rd Governor of Georgia
In office
January 13, 1959 – January 15, 1963
LieutenantGarland T. Byrd
Preceded byMarvin Griffin
Succeeded byCarl Sanders
3rd Lieutenant Governor of Georgia
In office
January 11, 1955 – January 13, 1959
GovernorMarvin Griffin
Preceded byMarvin Griffin
Succeeded byGarland T. Byrd
Personal details
Born
Samuel Ernest Vandiver Jr.

(1918-07-03)July 3, 1918
Canon, Georgia, U.S.
DiedFebruary 21, 2005(2005-02-21) (aged 86)
Lavonia, Georgia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseSybil Elizabeth "Betty" Russell Vandiver
ChildrenErnest "Chip" Vandiver, III
Vanna Elizabeth Vandiver
Jane Brevard Kidd
Alma materUniversity of Georgia
University of Georgia School of Law
ProfessionLawyer; Farmer; Banker
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army Air Corps
Battles/warsWorld War II

Early life and career

Vandiver was born in Canon in Franklin County in northeastern Georgia. He was the only child of Vanna Bowers and Samuel Ernest Vandiver. His mother had two children from a previous marriage, which ended with the death of her first husband. Vandiver's father was a prominent businessman, farmer, and landowner in Franklin County. Vandiver attended public schools in Lavonia and the Darlington School in Rome, Georgia. He graduated from the University of Georgia and the University of Georgia School of Law, both in Athens.[1]

After stateside service as an officer in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II, he was elected in 1946 as mayor of Lavonia in Franklin County. That same year he supported Eugene Talmadge's candidacy for governor and then Herman Talmadge's claim to the office after Eugene's death.

In 1948, Talmadge appointed Vandiver to be the state's adjutant general. In 1954, Vandiver was elected lieutenant governor.

He ran for governor in 1958 and promised to restore the state's image, which had been tarnished by scandals under Governor Marvin Griffin under whom he had served in the second position. Vandiver was overwhelmingly elected. He succeeded Griffin as both lieutenant governor and governor.

Governor of Georgia

As governor, Vandiver cleaned up the corruption and mismanagement associated with the Griffin administration. He had pledged to defend segregation, using the campaign motto, "No, not one," meaning not one black child in a white school.[2]

During the presidential election of 1960, Vandiver supported John F. Kennedy, but not fully. Vandiver favored "independent" electors. This led to the erosion of the Democratic party in the South, and southern resistance to the civil rights movement.[3] In March 1960, Vandiver called "An Appeal for Human Rights", an article published in the Atlanta Constitution by black students at Spelman College, "an anti-American document" that "does not sound like it was written in this country".[4] Vandiver worked behind the scenes with Kennedy and his brother Robert and ultimately played a role in obtaining the release of Martin Luther King Jr. from jail.[5] King had been arrested during a sit-in at Rich's in Atlanta on October 19, 1960.

Vandiver on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

I got a call from then-Senator John Kennedy. This was during the campaign. He said, “A judge down in Georgia has incarcerated Martin Luther King. Is there anything that you can do to help get him out? Because it will be helpful to my career.” You may or may not know that Daddy King was supporting Nixon at that time. . . . So I called my brother-in-law and a close friend of mine who had been secretary of state when I was lieutenant governor. His name was George Stewart. George Stewart went out and talked with Judge Mitchell. Judge Mitchell agreed, and I do not know what George told the man. He might have told him that he would get him appointed federal judge or something. Anyway, he agreed that if either Senator Kennedy or Bobby Kennedy would call him personally and ask him to release Dr. King, that he would release him. I called Bobby Kennedy and relayed the message that George Stewart had brought back to me. Bobby Kennedy called Judge Mitchell, and Martin Luther King was released from jail.

Ernest Vandiver, Saving The Soul of Georgia : Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle For Civil Rights

Vandiver changed from his "No, not one" stance on segregation. Those urging him to change included Ivan Allen Jr. (later mayor of Atlanta), banker Mills B. Lane, Coca-Cola President Robert Woodruff, Griffin Bell (later a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and the United States Attorney General under U.S. President Jimmy Carter), and many others.[6]

Following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Vandiver said, "All the world is shocked and grieved at the death of our President. I am certain that all Georgians join together in sending our condolences to the grieved family."[7]

Under Vandiver's administration, a United States District Court ordered the admission of two African-American students, Hamilton E. Holmes and Charlayne Hunter, to the University of Georgia. Despite his past support for segregation, Governor Vandiver did not resist the court order,[8] sparing the University of Georgia the national publicity associated with the opposition stands taken in 1962 by Governor Ross Barnett at the University of Mississippi and in 1963 by Governor George C. Wallace at the University of Alabama. After the desegregation of the University of Georgia,[9] Vandiver successfully urged the Georgia General Assembly to repeal a recently passed law barring state funding to integrated schools.[10] He also appointed banker John A. Sibley to head a state commission designed to prepare for the court-ordered school desegregation.[1]

He pledged to maintain the County Unit System, a type of electoral college that had been employed to elect Georgia governors,[11] but it was struck down by a decision of the United States Supreme Court as unconstitutional. He then ordered the Democratic State Central Committee to conduct the 1962 primary by popular vote.[1]

Vandiver's efficiency in running state government permitted a building program and the expansion of state services without tax increases. The state expanded its ports, encouraged tourism, promoted business and industry, expanded vocational-technical education, and authorized programs for the mentally ill.[1]

Later career

In 1966, Vandiver was initially a candidate for governor and had been expected to compete with another former governor, Ellis Arnall. However, Vandiver withdrew for health reasons.[12] When the Democratic nomination went not to Arnall but to the Atlanta businessman Lester Maddox, a strong segregationist, the Democrat Vandiver endorsed in the general election the Republican nominee, U.S. Representative Howard "Bo" Callaway, then of Pine Mountain. Maddox was ultimately elected by the Georgia legislature after election returns failed to produce a winner by majority vote.[13]

Had Vandiver's health permitted him to run for governor in 1966, Callaway would have instead sought reelection to the U.S. House. When Vandiver looked like a potential Democratic nominee, Callaway asked William R. Bowdoin Sr. (1913–1996), an Atlanta banker and civic figure who had chaired a commission on state government reorganization, to run as a Republican gubernatorial candidate. Oddly, Carl Sanders, the term-limited governor, asked Bowdoin to run that year as a Democrat.[14]

In 1972, at the age of fifty-four, Vandiver ran for the United States Senate for a full term to replace his wife's uncle, veteran Senator Richard Russell Jr., who had died in office in 1971. Vandiver finished third behind Sam Nunn and appointed Senator David H. Gambrell in the Democratic primary election. Nunn defeated the Republican Fletcher Thompson, an Atlanta-area U.S. representative even as Richard M. Nixon was sweeping Georgia in the presidential election against the Democrat George S. McGovern.

In his final years, he would express regret at his earlier segregationist positions. "I said a lot of intemperate things back then that I now have to live with," he said in 2002. "All I can say now is that you are of your time."[2]

Marriage and the Russell family

Vandiver was married to Betty Russell, a niece of Senator Russell, who had also served earlier as governor. Russell was popular and powerful in Georgia and helped to promote his nephew-in-law's career.

Vandiver was a son in law of Judge Robert Lee Russell and grandson-in-law of Judge Richard Russell Sr. For information, see Russell family.

Death

Ernest Vandiver died on February 21, 2005, at the age of eighty-six at his home in Lavonia, Georgia. In addition to his wife, he was survived by three children: Samuel Ernest "Chip" Vandiver, III; Vanna Elizabeth (named for her paternal grandmother and mother) Vandiver; and Jane Brevard Vandiver, who as Jane V. Kidd was elected as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives from Athens and in 2007 as the chairman of the Georgia Democratic Party.[1]

Memorials

The stretch of I-85 through Franklin County, Georgia, is named "Ernest Vandiver Highway" in his memory. Vandiver had worked to make sure the highway traversed Franklin County, instead of proceeding further north as originally planned.

On September 26, 2008, the University of Georgia dedicated a residence hall in the East Campus Village to Vandiver.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Ernest Vandiver Jr. (1918-2005)". georgiaencyclopedia.org. Retrieved April 28, 2012.
  2. ^ a b Gettleman, Jeffrey (December 22, 2002). "South's leaders in pre-civil rights era reflect on records with regret". SFGate. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  3. ^ Novotny, Patrick (Fall 2004). "John F. Kennedy, the 1960 Election, and Georgia's Unpledged Electors in the Electoral College". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 88 (3). Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  4. ^ Howard Zinn, You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train (Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press, 1994, 2002), p. 28)
  5. ^ Daniels, Maurice Charles (2013). Saving the Soul of Georgia : Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights. Athens: University of Georgia Press. p. 118. ISBN 9781306117685.
  6. ^ Young, Neely (June 2015). "An Old, Sweet Song". Georgia Trend. 30 (10): 8. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  7. ^ Murphy, Reg (November 23, 1963). "Governor Leads All Georgians Into Deep Mourning". The Atlanta Constitution.
  8. ^ Rasmussen, Patty (2005). "Right Man, Right Time". Georgia Trend. 20 (7): 18. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  9. ^ Pratt, Robert A. (2002). We Shall Not Be Moved : The Desegregation of the University of Georgia. Athens: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820323992. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  10. ^ "Grace in Georgia". Time. Vol. 77, no. 5. January 27, 1961. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  11. ^ Henderson, Harold Paulk (2000). Ernest Vandiver, Governor of Georgia. Athens: University of Georgia Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0820322230. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  12. ^ "Georgia and the Pursuit Of Reasonableness". New Republic. Vol. 155, no. 14. October 1, 1966. p. 11. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  13. ^ Billy Hathorn, "The Frustration of Opportunity: The Georgia Election of 1966", Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South, XXI (Winter 1987–1988), pp. 42, 47
  14. ^ Atlanta History, p. 44

External links

  • New Georgia Encyclopedia: Ernest Vandiver February 1, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • Ernest Vandiver June 30, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Governor Ernest Vandiver's Public Education Address[permanent dead link] in response to federal desegregation of the University of Georgia, January 18, 1961. From the collection of the .
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Georgia
1958
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Georgia
1955–1959
Succeeded by
Governor of Georgia
1959–1963
Succeeded by

ernest, vandiver, samuel, july, 1918, february, 2005, american, politician, 73rd, governor, state, georgia, from, 1959, 1963, 1962, 73rd, governor, georgiain, office, january, 1959, january, 1963lieutenantgarland, byrdpreceded, bymarvin, griffinsucceeded, byca. Samuel Ernest Vandiver Jr July 3 1918 February 21 2005 was an American politician who was the 73rd Governor of the U S state of Georgia from 1959 to 1963 Ernest VandiverErnest Vandiver 1962 73rd Governor of GeorgiaIn office January 13 1959 January 15 1963LieutenantGarland T ByrdPreceded byMarvin GriffinSucceeded byCarl Sanders3rd Lieutenant Governor of GeorgiaIn office January 11 1955 January 13 1959GovernorMarvin GriffinPreceded byMarvin GriffinSucceeded byGarland T ByrdPersonal detailsBornSamuel Ernest Vandiver Jr 1918 07 03 July 3 1918Canon Georgia U S DiedFebruary 21 2005 2005 02 21 aged 86 Lavonia Georgia U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseSybil Elizabeth Betty Russell VandiverChildrenErnest Chip Vandiver IIIVanna Elizabeth VandiverJane Brevard KiddAlma materUniversity of GeorgiaUniversity of Georgia School of LawProfessionLawyer Farmer BankerMilitary serviceBranch serviceUnited States Army Air CorpsBattles warsWorld War II Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Governor of Georgia 3 Later career 4 Marriage and the Russell family 5 Death 6 Memorials 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and career EditVandiver was born in Canon in Franklin County in northeastern Georgia He was the only child of Vanna Bowers and Samuel Ernest Vandiver His mother had two children from a previous marriage which ended with the death of her first husband Vandiver s father was a prominent businessman farmer and landowner in Franklin County Vandiver attended public schools in Lavonia and the Darlington School in Rome Georgia He graduated from the University of Georgia and the University of Georgia School of Law both in Athens 1 After stateside service as an officer in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II he was elected in 1946 as mayor of Lavonia in Franklin County That same year he supported Eugene Talmadge s candidacy for governor and then Herman Talmadge s claim to the office after Eugene s death In 1948 Talmadge appointed Vandiver to be the state s adjutant general In 1954 Vandiver was elected lieutenant governor He ran for governor in 1958 and promised to restore the state s image which had been tarnished by scandals under Governor Marvin Griffin under whom he had served in the second position Vandiver was overwhelmingly elected He succeeded Griffin as both lieutenant governor and governor Governor of Georgia EditAs governor Vandiver cleaned up the corruption and mismanagement associated with the Griffin administration He had pledged to defend segregation using the campaign motto No not one meaning not one black child in a white school 2 During the presidential election of 1960 Vandiver supported John F Kennedy but not fully Vandiver favored independent electors This led to the erosion of the Democratic party in the South and southern resistance to the civil rights movement 3 In March 1960 Vandiver called An Appeal for Human Rights an article published in the Atlanta Constitution by black students at Spelman College an anti American document that does not sound like it was written in this country 4 Vandiver worked behind the scenes with Kennedy and his brother Robert and ultimately played a role in obtaining the release of Martin Luther King Jr from jail 5 King had been arrested during a sit in at Rich s in Atlanta on October 19 1960 Vandiver on Dr Martin Luther King Jr I got a call from then Senator John Kennedy This was during the campaign He said A judge down in Georgia has incarcerated Martin Luther King Is there anything that you can do to help get him out Because it will be helpful to my career You may or may not know that Daddy King was supporting Nixon at that time So I called my brother in law and a close friend of mine who had been secretary of state when I was lieutenant governor His name was George Stewart George Stewart went out and talked with Judge Mitchell Judge Mitchell agreed and I do not know what George told the man He might have told him that he would get him appointed federal judge or something Anyway he agreed that if either Senator Kennedy or Bobby Kennedy would call him personally and ask him to release Dr King that he would release him I called Bobby Kennedy and relayed the message that George Stewart had brought back to me Bobby Kennedy called Judge Mitchell and Martin Luther King was released from jail Ernest Vandiver Saving The Soul of Georgia Donald L Hollowell and the Struggle For Civil Rights Vandiver changed from his No not one stance on segregation Those urging him to change included Ivan Allen Jr later mayor of Atlanta banker Mills B Lane Coca Cola President Robert Woodruff Griffin Bell later a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and the United States Attorney General under U S President Jimmy Carter and many others 6 Following the assassination of John F Kennedy Vandiver said All the world is shocked and grieved at the death of our President I am certain that all Georgians join together in sending our condolences to the grieved family 7 Under Vandiver s administration a United States District Court ordered the admission of two African American students Hamilton E Holmes and Charlayne Hunter to the University of Georgia Despite his past support for segregation Governor Vandiver did not resist the court order 8 sparing the University of Georgia the national publicity associated with the opposition stands taken in 1962 by Governor Ross Barnett at the University of Mississippi and in 1963 by Governor George C Wallace at the University of Alabama After the desegregation of the University of Georgia 9 Vandiver successfully urged the Georgia General Assembly to repeal a recently passed law barring state funding to integrated schools 10 He also appointed banker John A Sibley to head a state commission designed to prepare for the court ordered school desegregation 1 He pledged to maintain the County Unit System a type of electoral college that had been employed to elect Georgia governors 11 but it was struck down by a decision of the United States Supreme Court as unconstitutional He then ordered the Democratic State Central Committee to conduct the 1962 primary by popular vote 1 Vandiver s efficiency in running state government permitted a building program and the expansion of state services without tax increases The state expanded its ports encouraged tourism promoted business and industry expanded vocational technical education and authorized programs for the mentally ill 1 Later career EditIn 1966 Vandiver was initially a candidate for governor and had been expected to compete with another former governor Ellis Arnall However Vandiver withdrew for health reasons 12 When the Democratic nomination went not to Arnall but to the Atlanta businessman Lester Maddox a strong segregationist the Democrat Vandiver endorsed in the general election the Republican nominee U S Representative Howard Bo Callaway then of Pine Mountain Maddox was ultimately elected by the Georgia legislature after election returns failed to produce a winner by majority vote 13 Had Vandiver s health permitted him to run for governor in 1966 Callaway would have instead sought reelection to the U S House When Vandiver looked like a potential Democratic nominee Callaway asked William R Bowdoin Sr 1913 1996 an Atlanta banker and civic figure who had chaired a commission on state government reorganization to run as a Republican gubernatorial candidate Oddly Carl Sanders the term limited governor asked Bowdoin to run that year as a Democrat 14 In 1972 at the age of fifty four Vandiver ran for the United States Senate for a full term to replace his wife s uncle veteran Senator Richard Russell Jr who had died in office in 1971 Vandiver finished third behind Sam Nunn and appointed Senator David H Gambrell in the Democratic primary election Nunn defeated the Republican Fletcher Thompson an Atlanta area U S representative even as Richard M Nixon was sweeping Georgia in the presidential election against the Democrat George S McGovern In his final years he would express regret at his earlier segregationist positions I said a lot of intemperate things back then that I now have to live with he said in 2002 All I can say now is that you are of your time 2 Marriage and the Russell family EditVandiver was married to Betty Russell a niece of Senator Russell who had also served earlier as governor Russell was popular and powerful in Georgia and helped to promote his nephew in law s career Vandiver was a son in law of Judge Robert Lee Russell and grandson in law of Judge Richard Russell Sr For information see Russell family Death EditErnest Vandiver died on February 21 2005 at the age of eighty six at his home in Lavonia Georgia In addition to his wife he was survived by three children Samuel Ernest Chip Vandiver III Vanna Elizabeth named for her paternal grandmother and mother Vandiver and Jane Brevard Vandiver who as Jane V Kidd was elected as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives from Athens and in 2007 as the chairman of the Georgia Democratic Party 1 Memorials EditThe stretch of I 85 through Franklin County Georgia is named Ernest Vandiver Highway in his memory Vandiver had worked to make sure the highway traversed Franklin County instead of proceeding further north as originally planned On September 26 2008 the University of Georgia dedicated a residence hall in the East Campus Village to Vandiver References Edit a b c d e Ernest Vandiver Jr 1918 2005 georgiaencyclopedia org Retrieved April 28 2012 a b Gettleman Jeffrey December 22 2002 South s leaders in pre civil rights era reflect on records with regret SFGate Retrieved November 11 2012 Novotny Patrick Fall 2004 John F Kennedy the 1960 Election and Georgia s Unpledged Electors in the Electoral College Georgia Historical Quarterly 88 3 Retrieved June 22 2016 Howard Zinn You Can t Be Neutral on a Moving Train Boston Massachusetts Beacon Press 1994 2002 p 28 Daniels Maurice Charles 2013 Saving the Soul of Georgia Donald L Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights Athens University of Georgia Press p 118 ISBN 9781306117685 Young Neely June 2015 An Old Sweet Song Georgia Trend 30 10 8 Retrieved June 22 2016 Murphy Reg November 23 1963 Governor Leads All Georgians Into Deep Mourning The Atlanta Constitution Rasmussen Patty 2005 Right Man Right Time Georgia Trend 20 7 18 Retrieved June 22 2016 Pratt Robert A 2002 We Shall Not Be Moved The Desegregation of the University of Georgia Athens University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820323992 Retrieved June 22 2016 Grace in Georgia Time Vol 77 no 5 January 27 1961 Retrieved June 22 2016 Henderson Harold Paulk 2000 Ernest Vandiver Governor of Georgia Athens University of Georgia Press p 40 ISBN 978 0820322230 Retrieved June 22 2016 Georgia and the Pursuit Of Reasonableness New Republic Vol 155 no 14 October 1 1966 p 11 Retrieved June 22 2016 Billy Hathorn The Frustration of Opportunity The Georgia Election of 1966 Atlanta History A Journal of Georgia and the South XXI Winter 1987 1988 pp 42 47 Atlanta History p 44External links EditNew Georgia Encyclopedia Ernest Vandiver Archived February 1 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ernest Vandiver Archived June 30 2011 at the Wayback Machine Governor Ernest Vandiver s Public Education Address permanent dead link in response to federal desegregation of the University of Georgia January 18 1961 From the collection of the Georgia Archives Party political officesPreceded byMarvin Griffin Democratic nominee for Governor of Georgia1958 Succeeded byCarl SandersPolitical officesPreceded byMarvin Griffin Lieutenant Governor of Georgia1955 1959 Succeeded byGarland T ByrdGovernor of Georgia1959 1963 Succeeded byCarl Sanders Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernest Vandiver amp oldid 1128008277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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