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John Sparkman

John Jackson Sparkman (December 20, 1899 – November 16, 1985) was an American jurist and politician from the state of Alabama. A Southern Democrat, Sparkman served in the United States House of Representatives from 1937 to 1946 and the United States Senate from 1946 until 1979. He was the Democratic Party's nominee for vice president in the 1952 presidential election.

John Sparkman
Sparkman in 1959
United States Senator
from Alabama
In office
November 6, 1946 – January 3, 1979
Preceded byGeorge R. Swift
Succeeded byHowell Heflin
Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
In office
January 3, 1975 – January 3, 1979
Preceded byJ. William Fulbright
Succeeded byFrank Church
Chair of the Senate Banking Committee
In office
January 3, 1967 – January 3, 1975
Preceded byA. Willis Robertson
Succeeded byWilliam Proxmire
Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee
In office
January 3, 1955 – January 3, 1967
Preceded byEdward Thye
Succeeded byGeorge Smathers
In office
February 20, 1950 – January 3, 1953
Preceded byCommittee formed
Succeeded byEdward Thye
House Majority Whip
In office
January 1, 1946 – November 6, 1946
LeaderJohn W. McCormack
Preceded byRobert Ramspeck
Succeeded byLeslie C. Arends
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Alabama's 8th district
In office
January 3, 1937 – November 6, 1946
Preceded byArchibald Hill Carmichael
Succeeded byRobert E. Jones Jr.
Personal details
Born
John Jackson Sparkman

(1899-12-20)December 20, 1899
Hartselle, Alabama, U.S.
DiedNovember 16, 1985(1985-11-16) (aged 85)
Huntsville, Alabama, U.S.
Resting placeMaple Hill Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseChelsea Ivo Hall
Children1
EducationUniversity of Alabama (BA, LLB)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
UnitStudent Army Training Corps
Battles/warsWorld War I

Born in Morgan County, Alabama, Sparkman established a legal practice in Huntsville, Alabama, after graduating from the University of Alabama School of Law. He won election to the House in 1936 and served as house majority whip in 1946. He left the House in 1946 after winning a special election to succeed Senator John H. Bankhead II. While in the Senate, he helped establish Marshall Space Flight Center and served as the chairman of several committees.

Sparkman served as Adlai Stevenson's running mate in the 1952 presidential election, but they were defeated by the Republican ticket of Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon.

Known as a defender of segregation during the Civil Rights era, Sparkman voted regularly against civil rights legislation and condemned the "judicial usurpation" of the Supreme Court decision of Brown v. Board of Education, Sparkman signed the 1956 Southern Manifesto, which pledged opposition to racial integration and promised to use "all lawful means" to fight the ruling that put court power behind the integration of public institutions.

He became the longest-serving senator from Alabama in 1977, a record that was surpassed by Richard Shelby in 2019.[1] Sparkman chose not to seek re-election in 1978 and retired from public office the following year.

Early life and education edit

Sparkman, a son of Whitten Joseph and Julia Mitchell (Kent) Sparkman, was born on a farm near Hartselle, in Morgan County, Alabama.[2] He grew up in a four-room cabin with his eleven brothers and sisters. His father was a tenant farmer and doubled as the county's deputy sheriff. As a child, John Sparkman worked on his father's farm picking cotton.[3] He was raised Methodist.[4]

He attended a one-room elementary school in rural Morgan County, then walked 4 miles (6.4 km) every day to his high school.[5] Sparkman graduated from Morgan County High School in 1917 and enrolled in the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa.[6] During World War I, he was a member of the Students Army Training Corps .[7] Sparkman worked shoveling coal in the university's boiler room to help pay for his education.[8] He worked on The Crimson White (the university's newspaper), becoming the paper's editor-in-chief, and served as his class's student-body president.[9] Sparkman was awarded a teaching fellowship in history and political science,[10] he became a founding member of the Gamma Alpha Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha in 1921, and was chosen as the university's "most outstanding senior" the same year.[9] He received his Bachelor of Arts in 1921, and his Bachelor of Laws from the University of Alabama School of Law in 1923. In 1924, Sparkman earned his master's degree in history, writing his master thesis titled "The Kolb-Oates Campaign of 1894," on former Confederate colonel William C. Oates's 1894 campaign for Governor of Alabama.[11]

Legal career edit

 
From left: President Harry S. Truman, Senator Sparkman (1952 Vice Presidential nominee) and Adlai Stevenson II (Governor, 1952 Presidential nominee) in the Oval Office

Sparkman briefly worked as a high school teacher before he was admitted to the Alabama State Bar in 1925. He commenced his practice in Huntsville.[12] He was also an instructor at Huntsville College from 1925 to 1928.[13] He was appointed as a U.S. Commissioner (magistrate judge) for Alabama's northern judicial district, serving from 1930 to 1931.[2]

Sparkman was involved in many civic organizations, including serving as the district governor of the Kiwanis Club of Huntsville in 1930,[14] and later as the president of the Huntsville Chamber of Commerce.[15] A Freemason, he was life member of Helion Lodge#1 in Huntsville.[16] He was also member of the Huntsville Scottish Rite bodies and a recipient of the Knight Commander Court of Honor (KCCH).

Political career edit

 
In 1970, Wernher von Braun (right) was honored for his career in Huntsville, Alabama, with the celebration of Wernher von Braun Day. Among those participating were Sparkman (center) and Alabama Governor Albert Brewer (left).

After Representative Archibald Hill Carmichael announced his retirement in 1936, Sparkman ran in the Democratic primary for the open seat. A teacher of the Big Brother Class at the First Methodist Church in Huntsville, his campaign was launched through fundraising, campaigning and advertising by students in his Sunday class.[15] Sparkman was elected to the United States House of Representatives in the 1936 election, defeating Union Party candidate, architect Harry J. Frahn[17] with 99.7% of the vote.[18] He was reelected in 1938 and 1940. During this time, World War II began in Europe. Sparkman took a pro-British foreign policy stance, advocating the United States should assist Great Britain in the war against the Nazis. In 1941, he voted in favor of the Lend-Lease Act of 1941 in order to provide military equipment and food to the United Kingdom.[19] Sparkman was reelected in the elections of 1942 and 1944, serving in the 75th, 76th, 77th, 78th, and 79th Congresses.

According to his citation from the Alabama Academy of Honor 2020-02-11 at the Wayback Machine, into which Sparkman was inducted in 1969, as a Member of the House of Representatives, "[Sparkman] gained renown for his sponsorship of such programs as the farm-tenant purchase program, rehabilitation loans for small farmers, and lower interest rates for farm loans. He was a champion of the TVA and REA."

In 1946, he served as house majority whip.[20] He was reelected in the 1946 House election to the 80th Congress and on the same date was elected to the United States Senate in a special election to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John H. Bankhead II, for the term ending on January 3, 1949. Sparkman resigned from the House of Representatives immediately following the election and began his Senate term on November 6, 1946. He served until his retirement on January 3, 1979, having not sought reelection in 1978.

He was chairman of the Select Committee on Small Business (81st, 82nd, and 84th through 90th Congresses), co-chairman of the Joint Committee on Inaugural Arrangements (86th Congress), chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency (90th and 91st Congresses), co-chairman of the Joint Committee on Defense Production (91st and 93rd Congresses), Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs (92nd and 93rd Congresses), and a member of the Committee on Foreign Relations (94th and 95th Congress).

The 1943 Sparkman Act, which allowed female physicians to be commissioned as officers in the armed forces, was named after him.

In 1949, Sparkman was instrumental in convincing the United States Department of the Army to transfer the missile development activities from Fort Bliss, Texas, to Redstone Arsenal. This brought Wernher von Braun and the German Operation Paperclip scientists and engineers to Huntsville, forming the foundation to what eventually became the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. Von Braun selected Huntsville to relocate his fellow German engineers because it reminded him of Germany.

Sparkman was a representative of the United States at the Fifth General Assembly of the United Nations in 1950.[4]

In January 1951, Sparkman stated that he believed the Truman administration housing defense program could increase inflationary pressures, a view that aligned with Republican senators Irving Ives and Andrew Frank Schoeppel, but furthered that the plan was essential and should be undertaken regardless of inflation concerns.[21][22] On September 8, 1951 he was the fourth signatory to the Treaty of Peace with Japan (with two declarations).

In 1952, he was the Democratic Party's nominee for vice president, running on the ticket of Adlai Stevenson. However, the election was won by the Republican candidate, Dwight D. Eisenhower. Sparkman ran against Richard M. Nixon, the junior senator from California.

After the election, Sparkman in an interview expressed approval that American small businessmen were giving large firms competition for foreign aid contracts. "The large firms once dominated this field. Now we are insisting that the small business get a fair share of these contracts and it has had a good effect. The increasing competition has cut costs in the entire American foreign aid program."[23]

In January 1955, the University of Alabama News Bureau released remarks of Sparkman he had made during an interview following the 1954 midterm elections. Sparkman predicted a larger number of Democrats would cooperate with the Eisenhower administration, furthering that their tendency to criticize the Republicans rather than the president directly was ending, and Republicans, by contrast, would be more likely to oppose the president's foreign policy. Sparkman advocated for studying of the administration's defense program to confirm that the reduction in numbers would not be concurrent with a decrease in strength.[24]

On January 21, 1955, Sparkman introduced a bill authorizing $50 million in appropriation each quarter of the year for G.I.s to see a reduction dependent on the sales of home mortgages to private lenders of properties owned by the Veterans Administration. In a statement, Sparkman argued that the past few years had seen a home loan program which had come up short in meeting the needs of GI applications and the government was making a profit from the loans to GI's.[25]

On February 2, 1955, during an interview, Sparkman said the US would have to weigh giving Nationalist islands to Red China if the United Nations succeeded in imposing a cease-fire in Formosa. He said the Eisenhower administration had a foggy attitude towards defending the islands.[26]

In February 1955, Sparkman criticized the farming policies of the Eisenhower administration, charging them with having hurt the financial situations of American farmers the most since before the beginning of World War II and that the plight of farmers would continue so long as legislation affecting controls on crop acreage and the flexible price support system was enacted.[27]

Sparkman delivered a speech at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner in Rome, Georgia on February 21, 1955, assailing Republican economic promises as a hoax and asserting the Eisenhower administration was operating on a theory of reactionary trickle-down economics. He said the school and road programs of the Eisenhower administration were intended to deliver larger funds to investment bankers rather than children or those using highways, predicting that the enactment of Eisenhower's school program would not see a single classroom built in either Georgia or Alabama.[28]

On February 25, 1955, Sparkman predicted the Senate would approve the authorization of one and a half billion dollars of government insurance to be granted for housing mortgages, saying that if the bill was not enacted, "our housing program will come to a stop."[29]

In 1956, Sparkman was one of 82 representatives and 19 senators who signed the Southern Manifesto opposing the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education and racial integration. In 1956, the Democrats did not renominate Sparkman as Stevenson's vice presidential running mate, opting instead for U.S. Senator Estes Kefauver of neighboring Tennessee, partly because he had refused to sign.[30] In 1957, Sparkman voted against HR 6127, the Civil Rights Act of 1957.[31]

On June 30, 1961, President John F. Kennedy signed the Housing Act of 1961; Kennedy thanked Sparkman for spearheading "this bill through the Senate".[32] During the September 4, 1964 signing of the Housing Act of 1964 by President Lyndon B. Johnson, the latter expressed his "very special congratulations this morning to both Senator Sparkman and Congressman Rains of Alabama."[33]

In August 1961, the Kennedy administration reaffirmed its lack of interest in compromising on its five-year foreign aid program, Sparkman arguing that the administration faced the possibility of having to settle for a reduction in the program by two years.[34]

On June 19, 1964, Sparkman and 20 other Southern Democrats, and one lone Southern Republican voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[35]

On July 9, 1964, President Johnson signed the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 into law, observing Sparkman was one of the members of Congress who helped in securing the legislation's passage.[36]

From 1967 to 1975, Sparkman was the chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency where he worked on helping small farmers.

After this, J. William Fulbright, the longest serving chairman as of 2023 from 1959 to 1974, lost the Democratic primary contest in Arkansas in the 1974 United States Senate election in Arkansas, who Sparkman succeeded to become the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee from 1975 to 1979. On the Foreign Relations Committee, the committee lost much of its influence due to a perceived lack of leadership and his ideological position that the president should mainly pursue foreign policy, not Congress. This statement was reinforced by a response to an interviewee's question shortly after becoming chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, where he said that they don't "make foreign policy, except insofar as the executive will take our advice and consent."[37]

On January 20, 1978, Sparkman announced that he would not seek reelection as Alabama senator at the age of 78 due to unspecified reason, but noted that he had served as Alabama senator for longer than anybody in history up to that point.[38]

Later elections edit

In 1960, Sparkman defeated the Republican Julian E. Elgin of Montgomery, who received 164,868 votes (29.8 percent) in the Senate contest. Six years later, Elgin ran again against Sparkman as an Independent but polled few votes. In 1966, Sparkman defeated another Republican, John Grenier, the former state GOP chairman and an attorney from Birmingham, who polled 39 percent of the vote.

Initially, Grenier had planned to run for governor in 1966, and James D. Martin was poised to oppose Sparkman, as Martin had four years earlier against Sparkman's colleague, J. Lister Hill. However, The New York Times predicted toppling the "tight one-party oligarchy" would be a herculean task. Though Sparkman trailed in some polls, The Times speculated that he would rebound because Alabamians were accustomed to voting straight Democratic tickets.[39]

In his last Senate race in 1972, Sparkman easily defeated President Nixon's former postmaster general, the Republican businessman Winton M. Blount of Montgomery, originally from Union Springs. Blount, running without a specific endorsement from President Nixon, first had to dispatch intraparty Republican rivals James D. Martin, former member of the United States House of Representatives representing Alabama, and Alabama State Representative Bert Nettles.[40]

On October 30, 1977, Sparkman became the longest-serving senator in the history of Alabama.[41] This record was later surpassed by Richard Shelby in 2019.

Death edit

On November 16, 1985, Sparkman died of a heart attack at Big Springs Manor Nursing Home in Huntsville, Alabama, a month before his 86th birthday.[42] Survived by his wife and daughter, he was interred in Huntsville at the historic Maple Hill Cemetery.

Sparkman High School in Harvest, Alabama, Sparkman Park in Hartselle, Alabama, Sparkman School in Somerville, Alabama, Sparkman Drive in Huntsville are all named in his honor.

Electoral history edit

1972 Alabama United States Senatorial Election

John Sparkman (D) (inc.) 62.3%
Winton M. Blount (R) 33.1%

1966 Alabama United States Senatorial Election

John Sparkman (D) (inc.) 60.1%
John Grenier (R) 39%

1960 Alabama United States Senatorial Election

John Sparkman (D) (inc.) 70.2%
Julian Elgin (R) 29.8%

1954 Alabama United States Senatorial Election

John Sparkman (D) (inc.) 82.5%
J. Foy Guin, Jr. (R) 17.5%

1952 United States Presidential Election (Vice President's seat)

Richard Nixon (R) 55.2%
John Sparkman (D) 44.3%
Charlotta Bass (Progressive) 0.2%
Enoch Holtwick (Prohibition) 0.1%

1948 Alabama United States Senatorial Election

John Sparkman (D) (inc.) 84%
John G. Parsons (R) 16%

1946 Alabama United States Senatorial Special Election

John Sparkman (D) Unopposed

References edit

  1. ^ Thornton, William (3 March 2019). "Richard Shelby now Alabama's longest-serving senator". AL.com. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b Temnant S. McWillfams; James A. Lopez (July 1982). (PDF). University of Alabama at Birmingham. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-20.
  3. ^ "JOHN SPARKMAN The following biographical sketch was compiled at the time of induction into the Academy in 1969". Alabama Department of Archives and History. March 14, 2007.
  4. ^ a b . Samford University. April 21, 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-02-15. Retrieved 2013-04-21.
  5. ^ "FORMER SENATOR, VP CANDIDATE DEAD AT 86". Associated Press. November 16, 1985.
  6. ^ Samuel L. Webb (January 24, 2008). "John J. Sparkman". encyclopediaofalabama.org.
  7. ^ "Steady Rise Has Marked John Sparkman's Career". Rome News-Tribune. August 3, 1954.
  8. ^ Carry It On: The War on Poverty and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, 1964-1972. University of Georgia Press. 2008. ISBN 9780820330518 – via books.google.com.
  9. ^ a b "Senator Sparkman Man Of The Hour". The Gadsden Times. April 10, 1966.
  10. ^ "DEDICATION OF THE JOHN J. SPARKMAN CENTER FOR MISSILE EXCELLENCE". United States Government Printing Office. September 20, 1994.
  11. ^ Lynda Brown (1998). Alabama history: an annotated bibliography. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9780313282232.
  12. ^ . Alabama State Bar. April 20, 2013. Archived from the original on March 14, 2013. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  13. ^ Andrew R. Dodge, Betty K. Koed, ed. (2005). Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-2005. United States Government Printing Office. ISBN 9780160731761.
  14. ^ (PDF). Kiwanis Club of Huntsville, Alabama. April 21, 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2014. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  15. ^ a b "From Log House To Senate Sparkman Story". The Palm Beach Post. The Associated Press. August 3, 1952.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ "Universal Masonry Famous Masons". masonlar.org.
  17. ^ . Alabama Department of Archives and History. September 13, 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-02-22. Retrieved 2013-04-25.
  18. ^ Leroy D. Brandon (December 18, 1936). "STATISTICS OF THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION ON NOVEMBER 3, 1936" (PDF). Clerk of the United States House of Representatives.
  19. ^ "Voteview | Plot Vote: 77th Congress > House > 6".
  20. ^ United States House of Representatives Office of the Historian. "Democratic Whips (1899 to present)". history.house.gov.
  21. ^ ""Inflationary" Housing Plans Are Hit By GOP". Times Daily. January 17, 1951.
  22. ^ "Treaty of Peace with Japan" (PDF).
  23. ^ Sen. Sparkman Says Small Business Is Giving Competition (December 4, 1952)
  24. ^ Sparkman Says Demos To Cooperate With Ike (January 9, 1955)
  25. ^ "GI Loan Bill Sponsored by Sen. Sparkman". Gadsden Times. January 22, 1955.
  26. ^ Sparkman Says Loss of Islands Possible (February 2, 1955)
  27. ^ Sparkman Raps Farm Policies of Republicans (February 16, 1955)
  28. ^ Sparkman Rips At Republicans At Demo Dinner (February 22, 1955)
  29. ^ Sparkman Predicts More Housing Aid (February 25, 1955)
  30. ^ "Crime Fighting Senator Kefauver Dies Unexpectedly" The Associated Press, as reported in the Reading Eagle, Reading, Pennsylvania, August 10, 1963. Accessed July 18, 2012.
  31. ^ Vote Tally. Civil Rights Act of 1957 GovTrack.
  32. ^ "264 - Remarks Upon Signing the Housing Act". American Presidency Project. June 30, 1961.
  33. ^ Johnson, Lyndon B. (September 2, 1964). "549 - Remarks Upon Signing the Housing Act". American Presidency Project.
  34. ^ "JFK Stands Pat on 5-Year Aid Program". The Milwaukee Sentinel. August 2, 1961.[permanent dead link]
  35. ^ "HR. 7152. PASSAGE." GovTrack, n.d. Retrieved 20 Aug. 2020.
  36. ^ "453 - Remarks Upon Signing the Urban Mass Transportation Act". American Presidency Project. July 9, 1964.
  37. ^ "JOHN SPARKMAN, 85, EX-SENATOR, DIES". The New York Times. 1985-11-17. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
  38. ^ "Around the Nation". The New York Times. 1978-01-21. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
  39. ^ The New York Times, October 2, 1965, p. 1; October 14, 1965, p. 40
  40. ^ Billy Hathorn, "A Dozen Years in the Political Wilderness: The Alabama Republican Party, 1966–1978", Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Spring 1994), pp. 33–34
  41. ^ "STATES IN THE SENATE Alabama". senate.gov. April 21, 2013.
  42. ^ "John Sparkman, former senator". Bangor Daily News. Associated Press. November 18, 1985.

Writings by Sparkman edit

  • Sparkman, John. "Checks and balances in American foreign policy." Ind. LJ 52 (1976): 433. online
  • Sparkman, John. "The Problems of Multi-State Taxation of Interstate Commerce Income." American Bar Association Journal (1960): 375-378.
  • Sparkman, John. "Multinational Corporation and Foreign Investment, The." Mercer L. Rev. 27 (1975): 381.

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Alabama's 8th congressional district

1937–1946
Succeeded by
Preceded by House Majority Whip
1946
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by House Democratic Whip
1946
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Alabama
(Class 2)

1946, 1948, 1954, 1960, 1966, 1972
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States
1952
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Alabama
1946–1979
Served alongside: J. Lister Hill, James Allen, Maryon Pittman Allen, Donald Stewart
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee
1955–1967
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Joint Inaugural Ceremonies Committee
1960–1961
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Banking Committee
1967–1975
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
1975–1979
Succeeded by

john, sparkman, john, jackson, sparkman, december, 1899, november, 1985, american, jurist, politician, from, state, alabama, southern, democrat, sparkman, served, united, states, house, representatives, from, 1937, 1946, united, states, senate, from, 1946, unt. John Jackson Sparkman December 20 1899 November 16 1985 was an American jurist and politician from the state of Alabama A Southern Democrat Sparkman served in the United States House of Representatives from 1937 to 1946 and the United States Senate from 1946 until 1979 He was the Democratic Party s nominee for vice president in the 1952 presidential election John SparkmanSparkman in 1959United States Senatorfrom AlabamaIn office November 6 1946 January 3 1979Preceded byGeorge R SwiftSucceeded byHowell HeflinChair of the Senate Foreign Relations CommitteeIn office January 3 1975 January 3 1979Preceded byJ William FulbrightSucceeded byFrank ChurchChair of the Senate Banking CommitteeIn office January 3 1967 January 3 1975Preceded byA Willis RobertsonSucceeded byWilliam ProxmireChair of the Senate Small Business CommitteeIn office January 3 1955 January 3 1967Preceded byEdward ThyeSucceeded byGeorge SmathersIn office February 20 1950 January 3 1953Preceded byCommittee formedSucceeded byEdward ThyeHouse Majority WhipIn office January 1 1946 November 6 1946LeaderJohn W McCormackPreceded byRobert RamspeckSucceeded byLeslie C ArendsMember of the U S House of Representatives from Alabama s 8th districtIn office January 3 1937 November 6 1946Preceded byArchibald Hill CarmichaelSucceeded byRobert E Jones Jr Personal detailsBornJohn Jackson Sparkman 1899 12 20 December 20 1899Hartselle Alabama U S DiedNovember 16 1985 1985 11 16 aged 85 Huntsville Alabama U S Resting placeMaple Hill CemeteryPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseChelsea Ivo HallChildren1EducationUniversity of Alabama BA LLB Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyUnitStudent Army Training CorpsBattles warsWorld War IBorn in Morgan County Alabama Sparkman established a legal practice in Huntsville Alabama after graduating from the University of Alabama School of Law He won election to the House in 1936 and served as house majority whip in 1946 He left the House in 1946 after winning a special election to succeed Senator John H Bankhead II While in the Senate he helped establish Marshall Space Flight Center and served as the chairman of several committees Sparkman served as Adlai Stevenson s running mate in the 1952 presidential election but they were defeated by the Republican ticket of Dwight D Eisenhower and Richard Nixon Known as a defender of segregation during the Civil Rights era Sparkman voted regularly against civil rights legislation and condemned the judicial usurpation of the Supreme Court decision of Brown v Board of Education Sparkman signed the 1956 Southern Manifesto which pledged opposition to racial integration and promised to use all lawful means to fight the ruling that put court power behind the integration of public institutions He became the longest serving senator from Alabama in 1977 a record that was surpassed by Richard Shelby in 2019 1 Sparkman chose not to seek re election in 1978 and retired from public office the following year Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Legal career 3 Political career 3 1 Later elections 4 Death 5 Electoral history 6 References 7 Writings by Sparkman 8 External linksEarly life and education editSparkman a son of Whitten Joseph and Julia Mitchell Kent Sparkman was born on a farm near Hartselle in Morgan County Alabama 2 He grew up in a four room cabin with his eleven brothers and sisters His father was a tenant farmer and doubled as the county s deputy sheriff As a child John Sparkman worked on his father s farm picking cotton 3 He was raised Methodist 4 He attended a one room elementary school in rural Morgan County then walked 4 miles 6 4 km every day to his high school 5 Sparkman graduated from Morgan County High School in 1917 and enrolled in the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa 6 During World War I he was a member of the Students Army Training Corps 7 Sparkman worked shoveling coal in the university s boiler room to help pay for his education 8 He worked on The Crimson White the university s newspaper becoming the paper s editor in chief and served as his class s student body president 9 Sparkman was awarded a teaching fellowship in history and political science 10 he became a founding member of the Gamma Alpha Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha in 1921 and was chosen as the university s most outstanding senior the same year 9 He received his Bachelor of Arts in 1921 and his Bachelor of Laws from the University of Alabama School of Law in 1923 In 1924 Sparkman earned his master s degree in history writing his master thesis titled The Kolb Oates Campaign of 1894 on former Confederate colonel William C Oates s 1894 campaign for Governor of Alabama 11 Legal career edit nbsp From left President Harry S Truman Senator Sparkman 1952 Vice Presidential nominee and Adlai Stevenson II Governor 1952 Presidential nominee in the Oval OfficeSparkman briefly worked as a high school teacher before he was admitted to the Alabama State Bar in 1925 He commenced his practice in Huntsville 12 He was also an instructor at Huntsville College from 1925 to 1928 13 He was appointed as a U S Commissioner magistrate judge for Alabama s northern judicial district serving from 1930 to 1931 2 Sparkman was involved in many civic organizations including serving as the district governor of the Kiwanis Club of Huntsville in 1930 14 and later as the president of the Huntsville Chamber of Commerce 15 A Freemason he was life member of Helion Lodge 1 in Huntsville 16 He was also member of the Huntsville Scottish Rite bodies and a recipient of the Knight Commander Court of Honor KCCH Political career edit nbsp In 1970 Wernher von Braun right was honored for his career in Huntsville Alabama with the celebration of Wernher von Braun Day Among those participating were Sparkman center and Alabama Governor Albert Brewer left After Representative Archibald Hill Carmichael announced his retirement in 1936 Sparkman ran in the Democratic primary for the open seat A teacher of the Big Brother Class at the First Methodist Church in Huntsville his campaign was launched through fundraising campaigning and advertising by students in his Sunday class 15 Sparkman was elected to the United States House of Representatives in the 1936 election defeating Union Party candidate architect Harry J Frahn 17 with 99 7 of the vote 18 He was reelected in 1938 and 1940 During this time World War II began in Europe Sparkman took a pro British foreign policy stance advocating the United States should assist Great Britain in the war against the Nazis In 1941 he voted in favor of the Lend Lease Act of 1941 in order to provide military equipment and food to the United Kingdom 19 Sparkman was reelected in the elections of 1942 and 1944 serving in the 75th 76th 77th 78th and 79th Congresses According to his citation from the Alabama Academy of Honor Archived 2020 02 11 at the Wayback Machine into which Sparkman was inducted in 1969 as a Member of the House of Representatives Sparkman gained renown for his sponsorship of such programs as the farm tenant purchase program rehabilitation loans for small farmers and lower interest rates for farm loans He was a champion of the TVA and REA In 1946 he served as house majority whip 20 He was reelected in the 1946 House election to the 80th Congress and on the same date was elected to the United States Senate in a special election to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John H Bankhead II for the term ending on January 3 1949 Sparkman resigned from the House of Representatives immediately following the election and began his Senate term on November 6 1946 He served until his retirement on January 3 1979 having not sought reelection in 1978 He was chairman of the Select Committee on Small Business 81st 82nd and 84th through 90th Congresses co chairman of the Joint Committee on Inaugural Arrangements 86th Congress chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency 90th and 91st Congresses co chairman of the Joint Committee on Defense Production 91st and 93rd Congresses Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs 92nd and 93rd Congresses and a member of the Committee on Foreign Relations 94th and 95th Congress The 1943 Sparkman Act which allowed female physicians to be commissioned as officers in the armed forces was named after him In 1949 Sparkman was instrumental in convincing the United States Department of the Army to transfer the missile development activities from Fort Bliss Texas to Redstone Arsenal This brought Wernher von Braun and the German Operation Paperclip scientists and engineers to Huntsville forming the foundation to what eventually became the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Von Braun selected Huntsville to relocate his fellow German engineers because it reminded him of Germany Sparkman was a representative of the United States at the Fifth General Assembly of the United Nations in 1950 4 In January 1951 Sparkman stated that he believed the Truman administration housing defense program could increase inflationary pressures a view that aligned with Republican senators Irving Ives and Andrew Frank Schoeppel but furthered that the plan was essential and should be undertaken regardless of inflation concerns 21 22 On September 8 1951 he was the fourth signatory to the Treaty of Peace with Japan with two declarations In 1952 he was the Democratic Party s nominee for vice president running on the ticket of Adlai Stevenson However the election was won by the Republican candidate Dwight D Eisenhower Sparkman ran against Richard M Nixon the junior senator from California After the election Sparkman in an interview expressed approval that American small businessmen were giving large firms competition for foreign aid contracts The large firms once dominated this field Now we are insisting that the small business get a fair share of these contracts and it has had a good effect The increasing competition has cut costs in the entire American foreign aid program 23 In January 1955 the University of Alabama News Bureau released remarks of Sparkman he had made during an interview following the 1954 midterm elections Sparkman predicted a larger number of Democrats would cooperate with the Eisenhower administration furthering that their tendency to criticize the Republicans rather than the president directly was ending and Republicans by contrast would be more likely to oppose the president s foreign policy Sparkman advocated for studying of the administration s defense program to confirm that the reduction in numbers would not be concurrent with a decrease in strength 24 On January 21 1955 Sparkman introduced a bill authorizing 50 million in appropriation each quarter of the year for G I s to see a reduction dependent on the sales of home mortgages to private lenders of properties owned by the Veterans Administration In a statement Sparkman argued that the past few years had seen a home loan program which had come up short in meeting the needs of GI applications and the government was making a profit from the loans to GI s 25 On February 2 1955 during an interview Sparkman said the US would have to weigh giving Nationalist islands to Red China if the United Nations succeeded in imposing a cease fire in Formosa He said the Eisenhower administration had a foggy attitude towards defending the islands 26 In February 1955 Sparkman criticized the farming policies of the Eisenhower administration charging them with having hurt the financial situations of American farmers the most since before the beginning of World War II and that the plight of farmers would continue so long as legislation affecting controls on crop acreage and the flexible price support system was enacted 27 Sparkman delivered a speech at the Jefferson Jackson Day dinner in Rome Georgia on February 21 1955 assailing Republican economic promises as a hoax and asserting the Eisenhower administration was operating on a theory of reactionary trickle down economics He said the school and road programs of the Eisenhower administration were intended to deliver larger funds to investment bankers rather than children or those using highways predicting that the enactment of Eisenhower s school program would not see a single classroom built in either Georgia or Alabama 28 On February 25 1955 Sparkman predicted the Senate would approve the authorization of one and a half billion dollars of government insurance to be granted for housing mortgages saying that if the bill was not enacted our housing program will come to a stop 29 In 1956 Sparkman was one of 82 representatives and 19 senators who signed the Southern Manifesto opposing the 1954 U S Supreme Court decision Brown v Board of Education and racial integration In 1956 the Democrats did not renominate Sparkman as Stevenson s vice presidential running mate opting instead for U S Senator Estes Kefauver of neighboring Tennessee partly because he had refused to sign 30 In 1957 Sparkman voted against HR 6127 the Civil Rights Act of 1957 31 On June 30 1961 President John F Kennedy signed the Housing Act of 1961 Kennedy thanked Sparkman for spearheading this bill through the Senate 32 During the September 4 1964 signing of the Housing Act of 1964 by President Lyndon B Johnson the latter expressed his very special congratulations this morning to both Senator Sparkman and Congressman Rains of Alabama 33 In August 1961 the Kennedy administration reaffirmed its lack of interest in compromising on its five year foreign aid program Sparkman arguing that the administration faced the possibility of having to settle for a reduction in the program by two years 34 On June 19 1964 Sparkman and 20 other Southern Democrats and one lone Southern Republican voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964 35 On July 9 1964 President Johnson signed the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 into law observing Sparkman was one of the members of Congress who helped in securing the legislation s passage 36 From 1967 to 1975 Sparkman was the chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency where he worked on helping small farmers After this J William Fulbright the longest serving chairman as of 2023 from 1959 to 1974 lost the Democratic primary contest in Arkansas in the 1974 United States Senate election in Arkansas who Sparkman succeeded to become the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee from 1975 to 1979 On the Foreign Relations Committee the committee lost much of its influence due to a perceived lack of leadership and his ideological position that the president should mainly pursue foreign policy not Congress This statement was reinforced by a response to an interviewee s question shortly after becoming chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee where he said that they don t make foreign policy except insofar as the executive will take our advice and consent 37 On January 20 1978 Sparkman announced that he would not seek reelection as Alabama senator at the age of 78 due to unspecified reason but noted that he had served as Alabama senator for longer than anybody in history up to that point 38 Later elections edit In 1960 Sparkman defeated the Republican Julian E Elgin of Montgomery who received 164 868 votes 29 8 percent in the Senate contest Six years later Elgin ran again against Sparkman as an Independent but polled few votes In 1966 Sparkman defeated another Republican John Grenier the former state GOP chairman and an attorney from Birmingham who polled 39 percent of the vote Initially Grenier had planned to run for governor in 1966 and James D Martin was poised to oppose Sparkman as Martin had four years earlier against Sparkman s colleague J Lister Hill However The New York Times predicted toppling the tight one party oligarchy would be a herculean task Though Sparkman trailed in some polls The Times speculated that he would rebound because Alabamians were accustomed to voting straight Democratic tickets 39 In his last Senate race in 1972 Sparkman easily defeated President Nixon s former postmaster general the Republican businessman Winton M Blount of Montgomery originally from Union Springs Blount running without a specific endorsement from President Nixon first had to dispatch intraparty Republican rivals James D Martin former member of the United States House of Representatives representing Alabama and Alabama State Representative Bert Nettles 40 On October 30 1977 Sparkman became the longest serving senator in the history of Alabama 41 This record was later surpassed by Richard Shelby in 2019 Death editOn November 16 1985 Sparkman died of a heart attack at Big Springs Manor Nursing Home in Huntsville Alabama a month before his 86th birthday 42 Survived by his wife and daughter he was interred in Huntsville at the historic Maple Hill Cemetery Sparkman High School in Harvest Alabama Sparkman Park in Hartselle Alabama Sparkman School in Somerville Alabama Sparkman Drive in Huntsville are all named in his honor Electoral history edit1972 Alabama United States Senatorial Election John Sparkman D inc 62 3 Winton M Blount R 33 1 1966 Alabama United States Senatorial Election John Sparkman D inc 60 1 John Grenier R 39 1960 Alabama United States Senatorial Election John Sparkman D inc 70 2 Julian Elgin R 29 8 1954 Alabama United States Senatorial Election John Sparkman D inc 82 5 J Foy Guin Jr R 17 5 1952 United States Presidential Election Vice President s seat Richard Nixon R 55 2 John Sparkman D 44 3 Charlotta Bass Progressive 0 2 Enoch Holtwick Prohibition 0 1 1948 Alabama United States Senatorial Election John Sparkman D inc 84 John G Parsons R 16 1946 Alabama United States Senatorial Special ElectionJohn Sparkman D UnopposedReferences edit Thornton William 3 March 2019 Richard Shelby now Alabama s longest serving senator AL com Retrieved 8 February 2021 a b Temnant S McWillfams James A Lopez July 1982 Public Career of John Sparkman PDF University of Alabama at Birmingham Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 20 JOHN SPARKMAN The following biographical sketch was compiled at the time of induction into the Academy in 1969 Alabama Department of Archives and History March 14 2007 a b John Jackson Sparkman 1899 1985 Samford University April 21 2013 Archived from the original on 2013 02 15 Retrieved 2013 04 21 FORMER SENATOR VP CANDIDATE DEAD AT 86 Associated Press November 16 1985 Samuel L Webb January 24 2008 John J Sparkman encyclopediaofalabama org Steady Rise Has Marked John Sparkman s Career Rome News Tribune August 3 1954 Carry It On The War on Poverty and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama 1964 1972 University of Georgia Press 2008 ISBN 9780820330518 via books google com a b Senator Sparkman Man Of The Hour The Gadsden Times April 10 1966 DEDICATION OF THE JOHN J SPARKMAN CENTER FOR MISSILE EXCELLENCE United States Government Printing Office September 20 1994 Lynda Brown 1998 Alabama history an annotated bibliography Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9780313282232 John J Sparkman 1899 1985 Alabama State Bar April 20 2013 Archived from the original on March 14 2013 Retrieved May 10 2014 Andrew R Dodge Betty K Koed ed 2005 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress 1774 2005 United States Government Printing Office ISBN 9780160731761 Past Presidents Kiwanis Club of Huntsville PDF Kiwanis Club of Huntsville Alabama April 21 2013 Archived from the original PDF on May 12 2014 Retrieved April 21 2013 a b From Log House To Senate Sparkman Story The Palm Beach Post The Associated Press August 3 1952 permanent dead link Universal Masonry Famous Masons masonlar org THE ALABAMA HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION Historical Marker Program Colbert County Alabama Department of Archives and History September 13 2012 Archived from the original on 2013 02 22 Retrieved 2013 04 25 Leroy D Brandon December 18 1936 STATISTICS OF THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION ON NOVEMBER 3 1936 PDF Clerk of the United States House of Representatives Voteview Plot Vote 77th Congress gt House gt 6 United States House of Representatives Office of the Historian Democratic Whips 1899 to present history house gov Inflationary Housing Plans Are Hit By GOP Times Daily January 17 1951 Treaty of Peace with Japan PDF Sen Sparkman Says Small Business Is Giving Competition December 4 1952 Sparkman Says Demos To Cooperate With Ike January 9 1955 GI Loan Bill Sponsored by Sen Sparkman Gadsden Times January 22 1955 Sparkman Says Loss of Islands Possible February 2 1955 Sparkman Raps Farm Policies of Republicans February 16 1955 Sparkman Rips At Republicans At Demo Dinner February 22 1955 Sparkman Predicts More Housing Aid February 25 1955 Crime Fighting Senator Kefauver Dies Unexpectedly The Associated Press as reported in the Reading Eagle Reading Pennsylvania August 10 1963 Accessed July 18 2012 Vote Tally Civil Rights Act of 1957 GovTrack 264 Remarks Upon Signing the Housing Act American Presidency Project June 30 1961 Johnson Lyndon B September 2 1964 549 Remarks Upon Signing the Housing Act American Presidency Project JFK Stands Pat on 5 Year Aid Program The Milwaukee Sentinel August 2 1961 permanent dead link HR 7152 PASSAGE GovTrack n d Retrieved 20 Aug 2020 453 Remarks Upon Signing the Urban Mass Transportation Act American Presidency Project July 9 1964 JOHN SPARKMAN 85 EX SENATOR DIES The New York Times 1985 11 17 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 28 Around the Nation The New York Times 1978 01 21 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 28 The New York Times October 2 1965 p 1 October 14 1965 p 40 Billy Hathorn A Dozen Years in the Political Wilderness The Alabama Republican Party 1966 1978 Gulf Coast Historical Review Vol 9 No 2 Spring 1994 pp 33 34 STATES IN THE SENATE Alabama senate gov April 21 2013 John Sparkman former senator Bangor Daily News Associated Press November 18 1985 Writings by Sparkman editSparkman John Checks and balances in American foreign policy Ind LJ 52 1976 433 online Sparkman John The Problems of Multi State Taxation of Interstate Commerce Income American Bar Association Journal 1960 375 378 Sparkman John Multinational Corporation and Foreign Investment The Mercer L Rev 27 1975 381 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Sparkman nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about John Sparkman United States Congress John Sparkman id S000701 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress John Sparkman and the History Of Redstone Arsenal John Sparkman Alabama Academy of Honor Retrieved 31 Oct 2014 John Sparkman at Find a Grave A film clip Longines Chronoscope with John J Sparkman is available for viewing at the Internet ArchiveU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byArchibald Hill Carmichael Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Alabama s 8th congressional district1937 1946 Succeeded byRobert E Jones Jr Preceded byRobert Ramspeck House Majority Whip1946 Succeeded byLeslie C ArendsParty political officesPreceded byRobert Ramspeck House Democratic Whip1946 Succeeded byJohn William McCormackPreceded byJohn H Bankhead II Democratic nominee for U S Senator from Alabama Class 2 1946 1948 1954 1960 1966 1972 Succeeded byHowell HeflinPreceded byAlben W Barkley Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States1952 Succeeded byEstes KefauverU S SenatePreceded byGeorge R Swift U S Senator Class 2 from Alabama1946 1979 Served alongside J Lister Hill James Allen Maryon Pittman Allen Donald Stewart Succeeded byHowell HeflinPreceded byEdward Thye Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee1955 1967 Succeeded byGeorge SmathersPreceded byStyles Bridges Chair of the Joint Inaugural Ceremonies Committee1960 1961 Succeeded byB Everett JordanPreceded byA Willis Robertson Chair of the Senate Banking Committee1967 1975 Succeeded byWilliam ProxmirePreceded byJ William Fulbright Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee1975 1979 Succeeded byFrank Church Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Sparkman amp oldid 1192814861, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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