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View Full Version : Strom Thurmond dead at 100


Clayface
06-27-2003, 01:35 PM
I'm surprised that no one's mentioned this yet, what with all the political junkies we have around here. From cnn.com (http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/06/26/thurmond.obit/index.html) :

Former Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, the longest-serving member of the upper house of Congress, died Thursday night. The Republican was 100.

"He carried out a life clearly unmatched in public service," said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tennessee, in announcing Thurmond's death on the Senate floor. Senators then paused for a moment of silence in his honor.

"A giant oak in the forest of public service has fallen," said Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-South Carolina, who served with Thurmond for 36 years.

The colorful and sometimes controversial Thurmond, who held his first public office in the late 1920s died at 9:45 p.m. at a hospital in his hometown of Edgefield, South Carolina, where he had been living since retiring earlier this year, family members said in a statement released to local media.

He was best known for his longevity in public office and his once-fiery opposition to civil rights -- a stance he abandoned, like many one-time supporters of segregation, in later years.

Asked once to recount his career, Thurmond was blunt and brief: "I tried to be honest. I tried to be patriotic. And I tried to be dedicated."

Thurmond retired from the Senate in 2002 at the end of his eighth term. He served 47 years and five months in the Senate. He also was the oldest person to serve in Congress, turning 100 on December 5, 2002, just a month before his retirement from the legislative body.

Before his retirement, he had been hospitalized on numerous occasions for a variety of low-level but persistent ailments, including stomach upset, back pain and exhaustion. But he always returned a scant few days after his admittance to open the Senate's daily sessions with a strike of his gavel.

Thurmond was a political legend in Washington and in South Carolina. In his twilight years in the Senate, he was regarded as a grand old man whose longevity, old-fashioned Southern courtesy and tenacity brought bipartisan respect.

Fellow politicians also respected the fact that he won his first Senate race, in 1954, as a write-in candidate -- the only U.S. senator ever elected that way. He went on to win eight terms.

U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Delaware, once said, "He is absolutely, totally, completely honest -- his main contribution is his legislative political integrity -- and that's a big deal."

Segregationist past

In recent years, Thurmond attained something of legendary status in Washington and was treated with widespread deference and affection by his colleagues. His segregationist past was rarely mentioned; more often it was his office's attention to constituent service that drew comment.

But his segregationist presidential bid returned to the news when then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, speaking at a December celebration of Thurmond's 100th birthday, suggested the nation would have been better off had Thurmond been elected. In the ensuing firestorm of criticism, Lott was forced to step down as majority leader.

Thurmond said he never ran a racist campaign but also never apologized for his 1948 presidential bid, said Jack Bass, co-author of "Ol' Strom," a biography of the senator. However, Bass also noted that a statue honoring Thurmond in Columbia, South Carolina, lists many of Thurmond's accomplishments but not his presidential campaign.

"I think he is embarrassed by it," Bass said in a 2001 interview.

War service included D-Day landing

Born in Edgefield, South Carolina, on December 5, 1902, Thurmond graduated from Clemson College (now University) in 1923 with a horticulture degree. After farming and teaching in his hometown, he became the county's superintendent of schools in 1929 and the state's governor in 1946.

The son of a judge, Thurmond studied law under his father and won a seat in the state Senate in 1932, the same year Franklin D. Roosevelt became president.

During World War II, Thurmond -- a longtime Army Reserve officer -- landed in France with the 82nd Airborne Division on D-Day and emerged from the war as a highly decorated lieutenant colonel. He retired from the Army Reserve as a major general in 1960.

Thurmond married twice, the first time in 1947. His first wife, Jean Crouch, died in 1960.

In 1968, he married Nancy Moore, a former Miss South Carolina. He was 66; she was 22. They had four children and had lived apart for several years.

A fitness buff who neither smoked nor drank alcohol, he entertained reporters on his 65th birthday by doing 100 push-ups.

"Other than exercising, I don't do anything else but work with the Senate," he once said.

For years he campaigned for stronger government controls on alcohol. And alcohol abuse brought the senator heartbreak in early 1993, when his eldest daughter Nancy, 22, was killed by a drunken driver in Columbia, South Carolina.

Thurmond was the third Southern politician from the turbulent civil rights era to die this week.

Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox, who, like Thurmond, was a segregationist but who never backed away from his views, died Wednesday. Former Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson, the South's first black big-city mayor when he was elected in 1973, died Monday.

Walking away from the hard line

Thurmond with his wife at the South Carolina Republican Party state convention 1978.
Thurmond reflected much of the conservatism of the rural South, and it was his opposition to moves toward racial equality that put him on the national political map.

In 1946, he ran successfully for governor of South Carolina as a Democrat and gained national attention by fighting against President Harry Truman's decision to end racial segregation in the military.

When Truman pushed a strong civil rights plank in the Democratic Party's 1948 platform, the action prompted some Southerners to walk out of the Democratic National Convention.

The discontented group formed the short-lived States Rights' Democratic Party, the "Dixiecrats."

Thurmond became the party's candidate for president, carrying Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and South Carolina and winning 39 electoral votes. But Truman managed to win the presidency, and two years later, Thurmond lost a bid for the Senate.

As a Democrat during his first decade in the Senate, Thurmond once filibustered a civil rights bill for 24 hours and 18 minutes, stopping only when the Senate physician threatened to drag him from the floor. It was the longest filibuster in Senate history.

In 1964, with the Democrats throwing their weight behind civil rights measures, he backed Barry Goldwater for the presidency and finally became a Republican himself.

But Thurmond eventually walked away from his opposition to civil rights. Once blacks in the South won the right to vote, Thurmond reached out to them politically and personally: In the early 1980s, he supported a national holiday to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and he often claimed his actions as a politician were misunderstood.

"Time brings changes, and you can't go too far ahead of your people. You have to lead the people as best you can," he said.

"Did he have his eye turned toward history? Perhaps," said Dr. Charles Bullock, a political science professor at the University of Georgia. "Perhaps he did not want to continue to be either the only or one of a handful of poster boys for unreconstructed Southerners. Maybe he didn't want to have that as his legacy."

Known for constituent service

Thurmond, his wife, Nancy, and their children in the back yard of their Columbia home.
As the South became more suburban and more Republican, South Carolina voters returned Thurmond to the Senate again and again.

A physical fitness buff, Thurmond would sometimes demonstrate exercises in his office for visitors -- doing so even well into his 90s. At 93 -- in 1996 -- Thurmond insisted he was fit enough to serve an eighth and final Senate term.

"No matter how tough the going gets, I don't give in and don't give up. After all, they don't call me Thurmond-ator for nothing!" he said.

He was not noted for any particular legislative achievement; it was in his longevity and attention to South Carolina that he made his mark.

He was ahead of his time when he switched to the Republican Party in 1964. He was one of a few Republican office holders in the South then but by his retirement, the South was almost solidly Republican in presidential politics and Republicans had won many statewide offices in the region. He "widened the path to two-party politics" in the South, Bass said.

Thurmond relished his reputation as a ladies man and flirted with women young enough to be his great-granddaughters.

"I love all of you -- and especially your wives," Thurmond told his colleagues in a November farewell address on the Senate floor.

On December 5, 2002, his 100th birthday, former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole said Thurmond was the "patriarch" of the Senate and called him "a man who has honored us through his friendship and his extraordinary example of service."

He returned to South Carolina upon his retirement, which became official once the 108th Congress convened in January 2003.

He was replaced in the Senate by Sen. Lindsey Graham, who won the seat in November 2002. It was the first open Senate seat in South Carolina in 36 years as Thurmond and Sen. Fritz Hollings -- who only became South Carolina's senior senator with Thurmond's retirement -- are the holders of an unusual record.

The two men represented the same state in the Senate for more than 36 years, longer than any other pair of senators in history.

DianaGohan
06-27-2003, 08:09 PM
Well that's pretty sad news, but at a 100, you know you're time is coming soon. But heh, longest serving term in the Senate ain't nothing to scoff at.

Solitude1
06-27-2003, 09:59 PM
I'm not sad are affected by this in anyway. But I couldn't say the same for everyone else. For some reason, a lot of places that are usually busy are slow and desolute.

Some stores and restaurants closed down. And some of the older generation didn't even feel like talking about it.

It's sad that he died but, I'm not a big fan of my state in the first place so may he rest in peace.

Later

All-Star 1.5
06-27-2003, 10:10 PM
I know what you mean I didn't really go outside today but from the loks of it everyone is sort of shocked really. May he rest in peace.

and DG you're wrong it doesn't matter at what age you are at or what condition you are in death can come at anytime.

Mackenzie Rainelle
06-28-2003, 12:35 AM
Wow....And here just a month ago, we were talking in my Government class about how Strom Thurmond was just one of those things that would never go away. That's just....wow.....

Chris Wood
06-28-2003, 01:25 AM
We'll miss you Strom. Don't let it get you down! There's plenty of room for the dead in Congress. Probably be an improvement.

ZorBrak
06-28-2003, 09:47 AM
He had some very outdated and wrong views...but I'll miss the big guy

wonderfly
07-02-2003, 12:11 PM
I was shocked when I stumbled across this editorial online today. Did you know Strom Thurmond, the great racemonger himself, had a child through an affair with a black lady? Here's the editorial...

Strom's Skeleton
The late segregationist's black daughter.
By Diane McWhorter
Posted Tuesday, July 1, 2003, at 12:11 PM PT



Thurmond: curiouser and curiouser

In all the words spent on Strom Thurmond's life and times since his death last week, I have seen no acknowledgment of the most interesting of his sundry racial legacies. She is Essie Mae Washington Williams, a widowed former school teacher in her 70s, living in Los Angeles. Presumably she did not show up for any of the obsequies even though Strom Thurmond was almost certainly her father. Williams is black.

Jack Bass and Marilyn W. Thompson present persuasive evidence in their 1998 biography, Ol' Strom, that Thurmond sired a daughter in 1925 with a black house servant named Essie "Tunch" Butler, with whom he reputedly had an extended relationship. Though "Black Baby of Professional Racist" would seem to sail over the man-bites-dog bar of what is news, the story has never really gotten traction. The particulars of this family saga simply do not fit into the "redemption narrative" Americans tend to impose on our more regrettable bygones: Better that ol' Strom "transformed" from the Negro-baiting Dixiecrat presidential candidate of 1948 to One of the First Southern Senators To Hire a Black Aide in 1971.


In contrast to, say, George "I Was Wrong" Wallace, Thurmond has always been an ornery redemption project. He did not repent. Even so, his illegitimate daughter further complicates the moral picture. Does she mean that he was even more heinous than we knew? Or that—dude!—he wasn't such a racist bastard after all?

We need not dwell on the obvious mind-boggling hypocrisies here: that someone who ran for president on an anti-pool-mixin' platform was party to an integrated gene pool. Or that Thurmond's other signature political achievement—the 24-hour-without-bathroom-break filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1957—was done in the name of sparing the South from "mongrelization." This form of duplicity has been a Southern tradition dating back to those miscegenating slave owners. Their peculiar conflation of shame and honor was captured in 1901 Alabama, at a constitutional convention called to disfranchise blacks. A reactionary old ex-governor known for being good to his mulatto "yard children" was aghast that the insincere anti-Negro propaganda fomented by him and his peers might bring actual injury to its objects. He demanded to know why, "when the Negro is doing no harm, why, people want to kill him and wipe him from the face of the earth."

Even as Thurmond was making a career of segging against his own flesh and blood, he himself wasn't a complete cad. If he didn't exactly claim Essie Mae Williams, neither did he disown her. He gave her money and paid her regular visits (and probably tuition) at the black South Carolina college where she was a "high yaller" sorority girl while he was governor of the state. And in some ways, Williams has played the dutiful daughter, insisting over the long years that Thurmond was merely a "family friend." (Efforts to reach her failed.)

I do not pretend to fully understand these dynamics—and urge those interested in the nexus of race and sex to consult Joel Kovel's White Racism: A Psychohistory. But I know this: Thurmond's secret interracial sex life was complementary to the conspicuously virginal choices he made to be his public consorts. The year before being named the Dixiecrat nominee in 1948, the 44-year-old Thurmond was photographed by Life standing on his head for his lovely 21-year-old fiancee. Caption: "Virile Governor." Thurmond's second bride, young enough at 22 to be the 66-year-old senator's granddaughter, was a former Miss South Carolina. Both wives (No. 1 died of a brain tumor at 33) were the proverbial "flower of southern womanhood," the ideal that justified segregation's direst form of social control, the ritual castration of lynching. Those fair and nubile white women gave Thurmond's ugly politics a shiny emotional gloss that blinded the Southern conscience to the shame of the Essie Mae Williamses.

The reason the South is the most interesting region in the country is that it's the only place where the psychic landscape is parceled out equally among Marx, Freud, and God. Thurmond straddled all three provinces, hard though it has sometimes been to distinguish them under the ground cover of race. (For a different angle on this, see Clarence Thomas.) The Marx part of Thurmond's story is the best-known: The States Rights Party ("Dixiecrat" was the coinage of a waggish newspaper editor) that drafted him for president in 1948 was a top-down junta of oligarchs who had been plotting their bolt from the New Deal Democratic Party since 1941, when Franklin Roosevelt created the Committee on Fair Employment Practice to eliminate race discrimination in war industries.

Racial conflict as a diversion from class conflict is nothing new, of course. But somehow Thurmond's subterranean Freudian life—significant relationships with a black daughter and her mother—brings a fresh level of appall to the immorality of his demagoguing. That it was just "bidness" may account for why Strom Thurmond never felt compelled to ask the forgiveness of a race he devoted so much public capital to making miserable—a race that included members of his own family. Then again, he had always been an integrationist.

As for God, I can't help but wonder if Thurmond felt he had been forsaken by the all-merciful Christian deity and stumbled into the tragic realm of Greek fate when, in 1993, a drunk driver hit and killed the 22-year-old white daughter he did acknowledge, just before she was to enter the Miss South Carolina contest. In any case, if Thurmond seemed to continually elude the harsh verdict of history, now he faces divine judgment. In Doug Marlette's recent editorial cartoon, the angel greeting Ol' Strom at heaven's gate is black. And the sign reads: "We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone."

Wanted
07-02-2003, 08:20 PM
Racist son of a *****(gun)

drippynmeatwad
07-02-2003, 11:17 PM
everything on our local stations just shut off and were memorials for him. So many tapes started airing. it kinda looked like they had been practicing......

I went to Washington DC one time in elementary school with my class and we all got to shake his hand. I remember he started hitting on one of my friends. it was weird.

i just started thinking. since he was pro-segregation, if he had become president, i wouldn't be here today because my parents wouldn't have immigrated and they wouldn't have ever met.

i'm not a supporter of his choices, but rest in peace.

The Dork Knight
07-03-2003, 12:50 AM
What I find funny, was that Sunday, Comedy Central aired an episode of "Duckman". They made a joke about Strom Thurmond, and then white text popped up on the screen that said...

If Strom Thurmond has died before or after this episode airs, please disregard the previous joke.

- The Dork Knight

Digu Volz
07-03-2003, 01:00 AM
It's a shame, but most people would be lucky to last 70 given what poor shape a lot are in. Hopefully it was a fulfilling life.

Alex Toon
07-19-2003, 10:27 PM
Keep on filibustering in heaven!

RogueMartian
07-19-2003, 11:14 PM
http://www.ucomics.com/boondocks/2003/07/07/
http://images.ucomics.com/comics/bo/2003/bo030707.gif

:) Still one of my favs.

supermonkey
07-19-2003, 11:17 PM
Supposedly at 100 years old, you are entitled to a personal b-day card from the President. I wonder if he got it in time.