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Walter F. George

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Walter F. George
Georgec. 1940
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
In office
January 5, 1955 – January 3, 1957
Preceded byStyles Bridges
Succeeded byCarl Hayden
United States Senator
fromGeorgia
In office
November 22, 1922 – January 3, 1957
Preceded byRebecca L. Felton
Succeeded byHerman Talmadge
Associate Justice of theGeorgia Supreme Court
In office
1917 – 1922
Appointed byHugh Dorsey
Succeeded byJames K. Hines
Personal details
Born
Walter Franklin George

(1878-01-29)January 29, 1878
Preston, Georgia,U.S.
DiedAugust 4, 1957(1957-08-04)(aged 79)
Vienna, Georgia,U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseLucy Heard George
Alma materMercer University

Walter Franklin George(January 29, 1878 – August 4, 1957) was an American politician from the state ofGeorgia.He was a longtimeDemocraticUnited States Senatorfrom 1922 to 1957 and wasPresident pro tempore of the United States Senatefrom 1955 to 1957.

Born nearPreston, Georgia,George practiced law after graduating fromMercer University.He was a member ofSigma Nufraternity. He served on theSupreme Court of Georgiafrom 1917 to 1922, resigning from the bench to successfully run for the Senate. Philosophically a conservative Democrat,[1]George refrained from endorsing the1932 presidentialnomination ofFranklin D. Rooseveltand openly objected to the President's 1937 court packing plan. However, despite his philosophical views, George supported much of Roosevelt's domestic policy[1]and led the implementation of the President's foreign policy. He served as Chairman of theSenate Finance Committeefrom 1941 to 1946 in which he generally supported Roosevelt's handling ofWorld War II.George also served as Chairman of theSenate Foreign Relations Committeefrom 1940 to 1941 and 1955 to 1957.

Throughout his political career, George was generally viewed as more moderate on civil rights than other Southern U.S. Senators.[2]Nevertheless, George opposed integration in the wake of the Supreme Court's decision inBrown v. Board of Education,and, in theSouthern Manifesto,which he not only signed, but formally presented to the Senate,[3]condemnedBrown v. Board of Educationas the “unwarranted decision of the Supreme Court... [that] is now bearing fruit always produced when men substitute naked power for established law.”

By the end of his Senate career, George was one of the most powerful U.S. Senators and was well-regarded by both political parties and by liberals and conservatives. George was an early and leading champion of vocational education, a strict constitutionalist who believed in limited federal government, a fiscal conservative. During the course of his Senate career, he transitioned from being a foreign isolationist to a fervent supporter of internationalism, including playing an important role in the Senate's 1945 approval of theUnited Nations Charter.[2]George retired from the Senate in 1957 and died later that same year. Reflecting the esteem with which George was held, 40 members of Congress, including Senate Majority LeaderLyndon Johnson,attended his funeral inVienna, Georgia,and PresidentDwight Eisenhowerordered flags at all U.S. federal buildings lowered tohalf-mast.[2]

Early life

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George was born on a farm nearPreston, Georgia,the son of sharecroppers Sarah (Stapleton) and Robert Theodoric George.[4]He attended public schools and thenMercer UniversityinMacon, Georgia.He received his law degree from Mercer in 1901 and entered the practice of law. George served as a judge of theGeorgia Court of Appealsin 1917 and as an associate justice of theSupreme Court of Georgiafrom 1917 to 1922. While he was a judge he was a "vociferous reader" of serious history as well as historical novels.[5]

Senator

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1920s

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George resigned from the Supreme Court of Georgia to run for a seat in theUnited States Senate,which became available due to the death ofThomas E. Watson.George won the special election but, rather than take his seat immediately when the Senate reconvened on November 21, 1922, George allowed the appointedRebecca Latimer Feltonto be sworn in, making her the first woman seated in the Senate, and serving until George took office on November 22, 1922, one day later. George was re-elected to his first full six-year term in 1926. He served in the Senate from 1922 until 1957, declining to run for a sixth full term in 1956. At that time, theRepublican Partyin Georgia was very weak, so the real re-election contests for George were in the Democratic primaries.

During the 1920s, George, a Democrat, tended to voteconservatively.[6]George supportedprohibition,opposedcivil rightslegislation,[6]and voted against federal anti-lynching legislation based upon his belief that the measures were unconstitutional as law enforcement was a state law matter under the Constitution.[2]George was a strong supporter offree enterpriseand business, offering significant support for Georgia-based companies, including theCoca-Cola CompanyandGeorgia Power Company.[6]The power of free enterprise,capitalismand markets to create jobs and raise living standards were a key tenet of George’s political philosophy.[2]

In 1928, Georgia's congressional delegation selected George as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.[6](Al Smithfrom New York received the national nomination but was soundly defeated by Republican candidateHerbert Hoover.)[6]Even though George was never a serious candidate for the nomination,[6]it was clear that he was very popular among his fellow Georgians.[6]

The stock market crash of 1929 ushered in theGreat Depressionof the 1930s and, with it, a new era in American politics.[6]

1930s

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George and family posing in 1922

Despite personal visits to Franklin Roosevelt’sWarm Springs, Georgiafarm, George did not endorse Roosevelt's nomination for president in 1932, declining to favor any of the Democratic candidates.[2]George was considerably less enthusiastic about theNew Dealin comparison to his fellow Georgia senatorRichard B. Russell Jr.,[6]though still supported some programs that he saw as beneficial to Georgia, primarily theTennessee Valley Authority,[6]Social Security,[1]theRural Electrification Administration,[7]and theAgricultural Adjustment Act.[6]He would also support several of the earlier New Deal policies[8]and during Roosevelt's time in office, he supported 34 New Deal bills that went through the Senate, opposing only 10.[1]

George found far more to oppose during Roosevelt's second term, however, including rigorous regulation of utility companies, the Wealth Tax Acts, and Roosevelt's attempt to pack the U.S. Supreme Court with justices favorable to his New Deal policies.[6]Roosevelt, who considered Georgia his "second home" because of the time he spent at Warm Springs, tried hard to unseat George,[6]who Roosevelt felt had now been "sent out to pasture."[1]In a famous speech, delivered inBarnesvilleon August 11, 1938, Roosevelt praised George for his service and acknowledged his intelligence and honor but urged voters to choose George's opponent, Lawrence Camp, in the upcoming Democratic primary.[6]George shook the president's hand and accepted the challenge.[6]

George easily won re-nomination for his Senate seat, and with the Democratic Party firmly in control of Georgia, he easily won re-election as well.[6]

1940s

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A confidential April 1943 analysis of theSenate Foreign Relations Committeeby British scholarIsaiah Berlin,working for the BritishForeign Office,stated of George:[9]

an honourable but narrow Southern Conservative, who incurred the displeasure of the New Deal in 1938 whenan unsuccessful attempt to "purge" himwas made by its then leaders (in particular,[Edward] Flynn,[Harry] Hopkins,and[Thomas] Corcoran). This attempt increased his popularity in his State and in the Senate. He left the chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee in order to head the equally importantFinance Committee,and is an exceedingly influential figure in the Senate, and the hope of the Conservatives in many parts of the United States.

From July 31, 1941 to August 2, 1946, Senator George was the chairman of theUnited States Senate Committee on Finance,and one of Washington's most powerful legislative forces. As chairman of this powerful committee, George defeated many of Roosevelt's efforts to increase taxes and enact very progressive tax regimes. George and Roosevelt were in greater agreement on foreign affairs;[6]Berlin added that "although [George] acutely dislikes the domestic policies of the Administration, he has never wavered in support of its foreign policy and, like the other cotton and tobacco Senators, supports Mr.Hull'sreciprocal trade agreements".[9]In the 1940s, George supported Roosevelt's efforts at military preparedness, includingLend-Leaseaid to Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union, already at war, and American defensive buildup in response to the threat posed by Japanese and German militarism.[6]Once the United States enteredWorld War IIafter the Japanese attack onPearl Harbor,George embraced the president's vigorous prosecution of the war. He reversed his previous opposition to an international agency designed to keep peace by supporting the ratification of theUnited Nations Charterin 1945.[6]

1950s

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George in his later career

As the 1950s began, with thirty years of the Senate experience, George became one of the most powerful individuals in the United States, withLifemagazine calling George "one of the most distinguished legislators of his time and the most revered man in the Senate" andCollier'scalling him "the solemn, dignified, and well-nigh unassailable senior Senator from Georgia."[2]Increasingly President Eisenhower began to rely heavily on George, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in matters related to foreign policy.

Especially after the U.S. Supreme Court'sBrown v. Board of Educationdecisions mid-decade, legislative and political focus on civil rights increased. While George was not a racial rabble-rouser on the campaign trail as were some Southern politicians,[2]he supported racial segregation. As the senior Southern Senator, the"Declaration of Constitutional Principles"a/k/a "The Southern Manifesto" was physically signed in his office as Senate President pro Tempore on March 8, 1956, and his fellow SenatorRichard Russellof Georgia met with the press the next morning to announce that George would be reading it into theCongressional Record,allowing all members to sign it before the close of legislative business on the evening of March 12. This prevented any dissenters from using the excuse that they did not know about the statement before its formal appearance.[10][2]

That fall, after thirty-four years in the U.S. Senate, George approached what would be his seventh senatorial campaign. At the age of 78, he vacillated on whether to seek re-election since he faced an opponent,Herman Talmadge,noting to President Eisenhower that "if I retire, I want to stay at home and rest. I am really tired."[2]U.S. Senators from both political parties actively worked to encourage George’s reelection, including Minnesota'sHubert Humphreywho offered George, "represented the finest of traditions of this great deliberative body... a profound and effective statesman... when some of us felt too timid to speak up, this brave man spoke up."[2]While the President and other national politicians favored George’s reelection, Talmadge had the state political machinery built by his father,Eugene,firmly behind him.[6]Moreover, George's refusal to publicly renounceBrown v. Board of Educationharmed his reelection prospects, since segregation became a primary campaign focus.[2]Balancing his age, reelection prospects and other considerations, George declined to run for re-election, realizing that despite his seniority and leadership in the Senate and the support of Georgia's businesses, his health likely would not withstand the strenuous campaign.[6]

George was a member of twelve committees while he was in the Senate and the chairman of five, including theUnited States Senate Committee on Foreign Relationsfrom 1940 to 1941 and from 1955 to 1957 and theUnited States Senate Committee on Financefrom 1941 to 1947 and from 1949 to 1953. He was also President pro tempore of the Senate from 1955 to 1957. In the Senate, George became known for his polished oratory and was considered one of the Senate's best public speakers.

Early in 1957, shortly after George retired from the Senate, PresidentDwight Eisenhowerappointed George special ambassador to theNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization.After about six months' service, George became seriously ill. He died inVienna, Georgiaand is interred in the Vienna cemetery. George was afreemason,member of Vienna Lodge No. 324 in Vienna, Georgia

Remembrances

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TheWalter F. George School of LawofMercer University,the former Walter F. George High School (presentlySouth Atlanta High School) inAtlanta, Georgia,andWalter F. George Lakein western Georgia were named for him. The Walter F. George Foundation, created at Mercer when the university's law school was named in honor of George in 1947, continues to award scholarships to Mercer law students who plan to pursue careers in public service. George's portrait hangs in the Georgia state capitol inAtlanta.A bronze bust of Sen. George was dedicated in 1950 in Vienna, Georgia. The bust was donated by the Georgia Vocational Association (now Georgia Association for Career & Technical Education) for George's support of Vocational Education and passage of the George-Deen Act.

In 1960, theUnited States Postal Serviceissued a $0.04 stamp honoring George. The place of issue wasVienna, Georgia,George's final home.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdeZeigler, Luther Harmon (January 1, 1959). "Senator Walter George's 1938 Campaign".The Georgia Historical Quarterly.43(4): 333–352.JSTOR40577958.
  2. ^abcdefghijklCockfield, Jamie H. (2019).A Giant From Georgia: The Life of U.S. Senator Walter F. George, 1878-1957.Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. pp. 452–453.ISBN978-0-88146-676-8.
  3. ^Congressional Record, 84th Cong., 2d Sess. 4459-4460 (March 12, 1956)
  4. ^"Walter F. George (1878-1957)".
  5. ^Ellis, Jean Patricia. Walter Franklin George, United States Senator from Georgia, 1935-1945. 1949.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstu"Walter F. George (1878-1957)".
  7. ^"Walter F. George 1878-1957 Marker - Historic Markers Across Georgia".Archived fromthe originalon August 4, 2018.RetrievedMarch 13,2012.
  8. ^"Walter F. George (1878-1957)".
  9. ^abHachey, Thomas E. (Winter 1973–1974)."American Profiles on Capitol Hill: A Confidential Study for the British Foreign Office in 1943"(PDF).Wisconsin Magazine of History.57(2): 141–153.JSTOR4634869.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on October 21, 2013.
  10. ^John Kyle Day, The Southern Manifesto: Massive Resistance and the Fight to Preserve Segregation (2014) p. 108

Further reading

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  • Fleissner, James P. "August 11, 1938: A Day in the Life of Senator Walter F. George."Journal of Southern Legal History.9 (2001): 55+.
  • Mixon, Val G. "The Foreign Policy Statesmanship of Senator Walter F. George: 1955-1956."West Georgia College Review1973 6: 29-41.ISSN0043-3136
  • Patterson, James T. "The failure of party realignment in the south, 1937–1939."Journal of Politics(1965) 27#3 pp: 602-617.in JSTOR
  • Zeigler, Luther Harmon, Jr. "Senator Walter George's 1938 Campaign."Georgia Historical Quarterly1959 43(4): 333-352.in JSTOR
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Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic Partynominee forUnited States Senator from Georgia (Class 3)
1922,1926,1932,1938,1944,1950
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 3) from Georgia
November 22, 1922 – January 3, 1957
Served alongside:William J. Harris,John S. Cohen,Richard B. Russell, Jr.
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of theSenate Foreign Relations Committee
1940–1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of theSenate Finance Committee
1941–1947
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of theSenate Finance Committee
1949–1953
Preceded by Chairman of theSenate Foreign Relations Committee
1955–1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by President pro tempore of the United States Senate
January 5, 1955 – January 3, 1957
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Dean of the United States Senate
January 3, 1953 – January 3, 1957
Succeeded by