James Strom Thurmond
(December 5, 1902 – June 26, 2003) was an American politician
who served as governor of South Carolina
and as a United
States Senator. He also ran for the
Presidency of the United
States in
1948 as the
segregationist
States Rights Democratic
Party (Dixiecrat) candidate, receiving 2.4% of the popular vote
and 39
electoral
votes. Thurmond later represented South Carolina in the
United States Senate from 1954
to April 1956 and November 1956 to January 2003, at first as a
Democrat and after
1964 as a
Republican, switching
parties as the
conservative base shifted.
He left office at age 100 as the oldest-serving and
longest-serving senator in U.S. history (although he was later
surpassed in the latter by
Robert Byrd).
Thurmond holds the record for the longest serving
Dean of the United States
Senate in U.S. history at 14 years. He conducted the longest
filibuster ever by a U.S. Senator in
opposition to the
Civil Rights
Act of 1957, at 24 hours and 18 minutes in length, nonstop. He
later moderated his position on race, but continued to defend his
early
segregation campaigns on
the basis of
states' rights in the
context of Southern society at the time, never fully renouncing his
earlier viewpoints. After his death it was revealed that Thurmond
and a black maid, Carrie Butler, had a daughter whom Thurmond never
publicly acknowledged. He is the only U.S. Senator to reach the age
of 100 while still in office.
Early life and career
James
Strom Thurmond was born on December 5, 1902, in Edgefield, South
Carolina
, the son of John William Thurmond (May 1, 1862 –
June 17, 1934) and Eleanor Gertrude Strom (July 18, 1870 – January
10, 1958). He attended Clemson Agricultural College of
South Carolina (now Clemson University
), graduating in 1923 with a degree in horticulture. He was a farmer,
teacher and athletic coach until 1929, when he became Edgefield
County
's superintendent of education, serving until
1933. Thurmond studied law with his father and was admitted
to the South Carolina Bar in 1930. He served as the Edgefield Town
and County attorney from 1930 to 1938, and joined the
United States Army Reserve in 1924. In
1933 Thurmond was elected to the
South Carolina Senate and represented
Edgefield until he was elected to the Eleventh Circuit
judgeship.
After the outbreak of
World War II,
Judge Thurmond resigned from the bench to serve in the U.S. Army,
rising to
Lieutenant
Colonel.
In the Battle of Normandy
(June 6 – August 25, 1944), he landed in a glider
attached to the 82nd Airborne
Division. For his military service, he received 18
decorations, medals and awards, including the Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster, Bronze Star with Valor device, Purple
Heart, World War II
Victory Medal, European-African-Middle
Eastern Campaign Medal, Belgium
's Order of the Crown and France's
Croix de Guerre. During
1954–55 he was president of the
Reserve Officers Association.
He later retired from the
U.S.
Army Reserves with the rank of
Major General.
Thurmond's political career began in the days of
Jim Crow laws, when South Carolina strongly
resisted any attempts at integration.
Running as a Democrat,
Thurmond was elected Governor
of South Carolina in 1946, largely on the promise of making
state government more transparent and accountable by weakening the
power of a group of politicians from Barnwell
, which Thurmond dubbed the Barnwell Ring led by House Speaker Solomon Blatt. Thurmond was considered
a progressive for much of his term, in large part due to his
influence in arresting all those responsible for the lynch mob
murder of Willie Earl. Though none of the men was found guilty by
the jury, Thurmond was congratulated by the
NAACP
and the
ACLU for his
efforts.
In 1948, after President
Harry S.
Truman desegregated the U.S. Army,
proposed the creation of a permanent
Fair Employment Practices
Commission, supported the elimination of Poll Taxes, and wished
to draft federal anti-lynching laws, Thurmond became a candidate
for
President of the
United States on the
third
party ticket of the
States' Rights
Democratic Party, which split from the national Democrats over
the proposed constitutional innovation involved in federal
intervention in segregation. Thurmond carried four states and
received 39 electoral votes. One 1948 speech, met with cheers by
supporters, included the following:
Thurmond ran for the U.S. Senate in 1950 against Senator
Olin Johnston. Both candidates denounced
President Truman during the campaign. Johnston defeated Thurmond
186,180 votes to 158,904 votes (54% to 46%). It was the only
statewide election Thurmond would ever lose.
In 1952, Thurmond endorsed Republican
Dwight Eisenhower for the Presidency,
rather than Democratic
nominee Adlai Stevenson. This led state Democratic
Party leaders to block Thurmond from receiving the nomination to
the Senate in 1954, forcing him to run as a write-in
candidate.
Senate career
1950s
In 1954 he became the only person ever
elected to
the U.S. Senate as
a
write-in candidate,
campaigning, at the recommendation of Governor
James Byrnes, on the pledge to face a
contested primary in the future. He resigned in 1956, triggering an
election. He then won the Democratic primary—in those days, the
real contest in South Carolina—for the special election triggered
by his own vacancy. His career in the Senate remained uninterrupted
until his retirement 46 years later, despite his mid-career party
switch.
Thurmond supported racial segregation with the longest
filibuster ever conducted by
a single Senator, speaking for 24 hours and 18 minutes in an
unsuccessful attempt to derail the
Civil Rights Act of 1957. Cots were
brought in from a nearby hotel for the legislators to sleep on
while Thurmond rambled on about random things, including his
grandmother's biscuit recipe. Other Southern Senators, who had
agreed as part of a compromise not to filibuster this bill, were
upset with Thurmond because they thought his defiance made them
look bad to their constituents.
1960s

Strom Thurmond, c.
Throughout the 1960s, Thurmond generally received relatively low
marks from the press and his fellow Senators in the performance of
his Senate duties, as he often missed votes and rarely proposed or
sponsored noteworthy legislation.
Thurmond was increasingly at odds with the Democratic Party. In a
notable incident on July 9, 1964, he assaulted Texas Senator Ralph
Yarborough to prevent the Senate confirmation of a moderate from
Florida. On September 16, 1964, he
switched his party affiliation to
Republican. He played an important role in South Carolina's support
for Republican
presidential candidates
Barry Goldwater in
1964 and
Richard Nixon in
1968. South
Carolina and other states of the
Deep
South had supported the Democrats in every national election
from the end of
Reconstruction to
1960. However, discontent with the Democrats' increasing support
for civil rights resulted in
John F.
Kennedy barely winning the state in 1960. After Kennedy's
assassination,
Lyndon Johnson's
strong support for the Civil Rights Act and integration angered
white segregationists even more. Goldwater won South Carolina by a
large margin in 1964.
In 1968, Richard Nixon ran the first GOP "
Southern strategy" campaign appealing to
disaffected southern white voters. Although segregationist Democrat
George Wallace was on the ballot,
Nixon ran slightly ahead of him and gained South Carolina's
electoral votes. Due
to the antagonism of white South Carolina voters towards the
national Democratic Party,
Hubert
Humphrey received less than 30% of the total vote, carrying
only majority black districts.
At the
1968 Republican
National Convention in Miami Beach
, Thurmond played a key role in keeping Southern
delegates committed to Nixon, despite the
sudden last-minute entry of California
Governor Ronald Reagan
into the race. Thurmond also quieted conservative fears over
rumors that Nixon planned to ask either
Charles Percy or
Mark Hatfield—liberal Republicans—to be his
running mate, by making it known to Nixon that both men were
unacceptable for the vice-presidency to the South.
Nixon ultimately asked
Maryland
Governor Spiro Agnew—an
acceptable choice to Thurmond—to join the ticket.
At this time, too, Thurmond took the lead in thwarting Lyndon
Johnson's attempt to elevate Justice
Abe
Fortas to the post of chief justice of the United States.
Thurmond's devotion to his conservatism had left him quite unhappy
with the
Warren Court, and he was happy
simultaneously to disappoint Johnson and to leave the task of
replacing Warren to Johnson's presidential successor, Richard
Nixon.
Senator Thurmond decried the Supreme Court opinion in
Alexander
v. Holmes County
Board of Education, which ordered the immediate
desegregation of schools in the American South. Thurmond praised
President Nixon and his "Southern Strategy" of delaying
desegregation, saying Nixon "stood with the South in this
case."
1970s
Thanks to his close relationship with the Nixon administration,
Thurmond found himself in a position to deliver a great deal of
federal money, appointments and projects to his state. With a
like-minded president in the White House, Thurmond became a very
effective power broker in Washington. His staffers said that he
aimed to become South Carolina's "indispensable man" in D.C.
Views regarding race
Thurmond supported extending the
Voting Rights Act, making the birthday of
Martin Luther King, Jr. a
federal holiday and he
was the first southern senator to appoint a black aide. However, he
never explicitly renounced his earlier views on racial
segregation.
Later career
Thurmond became
President pro
tempore in 1981, and held the largely ceremonial post for three
terms, alternating with his longtime rival
Robert Byrd depending on the party composition
of the Senate. On December 5, 1996, Thurmond became the oldest
serving member of the U.S. Senate, and on May 25, 1997, the longest
serving member (41 years and 10 months). He cast his 15,000th vote
in September 1998. He joined the minority of Republicans who voted
for the
Brady
Bill.
Towards the end of Thurmond's Senate career, there was controversy
over his mental condition. His supporters argued that while he
lacked physical stamina due to his age, mentally he remained aware
and attentive and maintained a very active work schedule in showing
up for every floor vote. He stepped down as Chairman of the
Senate Armed Services
Committee at the beginning of 1999, as he had pledged to do in
late 1997. Resignation of a sitting chairman, even an elderly one,
was highly unusual in the Senate. (Term limits for committee chairs
adopted by the Republican Conference only forced some turnover
years later and were not at issue in this case.) The move suggested
that Thurmond or his colleagues (or both) felt he was no longer
capable of fulfilling that role.
Declining to seek re-election in 2002, he was succeeded by fellow
Republican
Lindsey Graham. At
Thurmond's hundredth birthday party in December 2002, Senate
Minority Leader
Trent Lott sparked
controversy by praising Thurmond's 1948 candidacy for President and
suggesting that the country would be better off if Thurmond had
won, leading to Lott's resignation from his leadership post.
Thurmond left the Senate in January 2003 as the United States'
longest-serving senator (a record that has since been eclipsed by
Byrd). Thurmond still holds the record for oldest serving senator.
On June 26, 2003, he died at 9:45 p.m. of
heart failure at the age of 100, at a hospital
in Edgefield and is interred there in Willowbrook Cemetery.
Personal life
Marriages and children
Thurmond married his first wife, Jean Crouch (July 24, 1926 –
January 6, 1960) in South Carolina's Governor's mansion on November
7, 1947. She died of
cancer 13 years later;
there were no children.
He married his second wife, Nancy Janice Moore (born 1946),
Miss South Carolina of 1965, on
December 22, 1968. He was 66 years old and she was only 22. She had
been working in his Senate office off and on since 1967. It is
often said that he ran for president before she was born. This is
false; however, he was old enough to be eligible. They separated in
1991, but never divorced. The two remained married and close
friends until his death. He even considered resigning during his
last term, but only if the Governor would appoint his wife to the
seat as his replacement.
At age 68 (with his wife Nancy at age 25) Thurmond fathered what
was then believed to be his first child.
His four children
with Nancy are: beauty pageant contestant Nancy Moore Thurmond
(1971–1993), who was killed when a drunk driver hit her in Columbia,
South Carolina
; South Carolina Department of Natural Resources Law
Enforcement Advisory Committee member James Strom Thurmond Jr. (born
1972); Washington,
D.C.
, homemaker Juliana Gertrude Thurmond Whitmer (born 1973);
and Charleston County, South
Carolina
, Council Member Paul Reynolds Thurmond (born
1976).
Daughter
Shortly after Thurmond's death on June 26, 2003,
Essie Mae Washington-Williams
publicly revealed that she was Strom Thurmond's daughter. She was
born to a black maid, Carrie "Tunch" Butler (1909–1948), on October
12, 1925, when Butler was 16 and Thurmond was 22. He helped pay her
way through college and later paid her sums of money in cash or,
through a nephew, checks. Though Thurmond never publicly
acknowledged Washington-Williams when he was alive, he continued to
support her financially. These payments extended well into her
adult life.Washington-Williams has stated that she did not reveal
she was Thurmond's daughter during his lifetime because it "wasn't
to the advantage of either one of us" and that she kept silent out
of love and respect for her father. She denies that there was an
agreement between the two to keep her connection to Thurmond
silent.
After Washington-Williams came forward, the Thurmond family
publicly acknowledged her parentage. Many close friends and staff
members had long suspected this to have been the case, stating that
Thurmond had always taken a great amount of interest in
Washington-Williams and that she was granted a degree of access to
the Senator more appropriate to a family member than to a member of
the public.
Political timeline
- Governor of South Carolina (1947–1951)
- States' Rights Democratic presidential candidate (1948)
- Eight-term Senator from South Carolina
(December 1954 – April 1956 and November 1956 –
January 2003)
- Democrat (1954 – April 1956 and November 1956 – September
1964)
- Republican (September 1964 – January 2003)
- President pro tempore (1981–1987; 1995 – January 3, 2001;
January 20, 2001 – June 6, 2001)
- Set record for the longest Congressional filibuster (1957)
- Set record for oldest serving member at 94 years (1997)
- Set the then-record for longest cumulative tenure in the Senate
at 43 years (1997), increasing to 47 years, 6 months at his
retirement in January 2003, surpassed by Robert Byrd in July 2006
- Became the only senator ever to serve at the age of 100
Electoral history
Legacy
- The Strom Thurmond Foundation, Inc. provides financial aid
support to deserving South Carolina residents who demonstrate
financial need. The Foundation was established in 1974 by Senator
Thurmond with honoraria received from speeches, donations from
friends and family, and from other acts of generosity. It serves as
a permanent testimony to his memory, and to his concern for the
education of able students who have demonstrated financial
need.
- Senator Thurmond is mentioned in a 1993 Frasier episode entitled "Here's Looking at
You." In the episode Frasiers' son Frederick is afraid that Senator
Thurmond is hiding in his bedroom closet.
- A
reservoir on the Georgia
–South
Carolina
border is
named after him: Lake Strom Thurmond
.
- The
University
of South Carolina
is home to the Strom Thurmond Fitness Center, the
largest fitness complex on any college campus. The new
complex has largely replaced the Blatt Fitness center, named for
Solomon Blatt who was a political
rival of Thurmond.
- Charleston Southern
University
has a Strom Thurmond Building, which houses the
school's business offices, bookstore, and post office.
- Thurmond Building at Winthrop
University
is named for him. He served on Winthrop's
Board of Trustees from 1936–38 and again from 1947–51 when he was
governor of South Carolina.
- A
statue of Strom Thurmond is located on the grounds of the South
Carolina State Capitol
as a memorial to his service to the
state.
- Strom
Thurmond High School is located in his hometown of Edgefield,
South Carolina
.
- The Rev. Al
Sharpton was reported on February 24, 2007 to be a descendent
of slaves owned by the Thurmond family. Sharpton has not asked for
a DNA test.
- The U.S. Air Force has a C-17
Globemaster named "The Spirit of Strom Thurmond".
- In 1993 he was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom
by President George H. W. Bush.
- The
Strom Thurmond Institute is located on the campus of Clemson
University
. George H. W. Bush was on hand at the ground
breaking ceremony while he was the Vice President.
Notes
- Caro, Robert (2002). Master of the Senate: The Years of Lyndon
Johnson, New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-52836-0
- Woodward, Bob; Scott Armstrong (September 1979). The Brethren.
Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-24110-9. Page 56.
- See A. Juliana was the mother of Strom Thurmond's
first grandchild B. See also C and D
- Elected to the Council in 2006.
- 60 Minutes interview, December 17, 2003
- Interview with Al Sharpton, David Shankbone,
Wikinews,
December 3, 2007.
Further reading
- Finley, Keith M. Delaying the Dream: Southern Senators and
the Fight Against Civil Rights, 1938–1965 (Baton Rouge: LSU
Press, 2008).
- "Abe Fortas: A Biography," by Laura Kalman: Yale University
Press, 1990.
- Dear Senator: A Memoir by the Daughter of Strom
Thurmond by Essie Mae Washington-Williams, William Stadiem:
Regan Books (February 1, 2005). ISBN 0-06-076095-8.
- The Dixiecrat Revolt and the End of the Solid South,
1932–1968 by Kari Frederickson: University of North Carolina
Press (March 26, 2001). ISBN 0-8078-4910-3.
- "The Faith We Have Not Kept," by Strom Thurmond: Viewpoint
Books, 1968.
- Ol' Strom: An Unauthorized Biography of Strom Thurmond
by Jack Bass, Marilyn Walser Thompson: University
of South Carolina Press (January 1, 2003). ISBN 1-57003-514-8.
- Strom: The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom
Thurmond by Jack Bass and Marilyn Walser Thompson: Public
Affairs 2005. ISBN 1-58648-297-1.
- Strom Thurmond & the Politics of Southern Change
by Nadine Cohodas: Mercer University Press (December 1, 1994). ISBN
0-86554-446-8.
External links
Articles
Obituaries