Strom Thurmond
Section
(Columbia, South Carolina-AP) -- The nation's
longest-serving senator is being laid to rest today. Strom Thurmond
of South Carolina died Thursday at 100.
Thousands of people
have paid their respects to Thurmond as his body lied in state in
the Statehouse in Columbia. At midday today, he'll be transported by
horse-drawn carriage for a memorial service at First Baptist
Church.
Thurmond's last journey will be to his hometown of
Edgefield for a graveside service at Willowbrook Cemetery around
dusk.
Those who have traveled to the Statehouse to view
Thurmond's casket say he never failed to put South Carolina first.
Mourner Belva Motts says "if South Carolinians wanted something
done, they asked Strom. He put South Carolina on the
map."
Thurmond, whose physical and political endurance were
legendary — he holds the record for solo Senate filibustering —
retired on Jan. 5, 2003, at the age of 100 after more than 48 years
in office.
Thurmond died at 9:45 p.m., his son said. He had
been living in a newly renovated wing of a hospital in his hometown
of Edgefield since he returned to the state from Washington earlier
this year.
Age took its inevitable toll on Thurmond as he
neared retirement, and he was guided through the Capitol in a
wheelchair. Yet he wielded political power virtually to the end,
prevailing upon President Bush to appoint his 29-year-old son, Strom
Jr., as U.S. Attorney in South Carolina in 2001.
Thurmond is
"beyond criticism" in South Carolina, Furman University political
scientist Don Aiesi said as the senator's health declined and he
underwent a series of hospitalizations late in his congressional
tenure. "Strom is the most venerable of institutions here."
In a political career that spanned seven decades, Thurmond
won his first election in 1928, to local office, and his last in
1996, to his eighth Senate term. "We cannot and I shall not give up
on our mission to right the 40-year wrongs of liberalism," he said
during his last campaign. "The people of South Carolina know that
Strom Thurmond doesn't like unfinished business."
His voting
record was pro-defense, anti-communist and staunchly conservative.
His devotion to constituent services was legendary. He was a
lifelong physical fitness buff, who shunned tobacco and alcohol and
was known for his vigorous handshake. He had a storied, lifelong
reputation as a ladies' man.
Thurmond ran for president as a
Dixiecrat in 1948 and won 39 Southern electoral votes as part of a
states-rights uprising against President Harry Truman's support for
civil rights. Nearly a decade later, he set the Senate record for
filibustering when he spoke for a straight 24 hours and 18 minutes
against a bill to end discrimination in housing.
Ironically,
his presidential campaign sparked controversy more than a
half-century later, when then-Majority Leader Trent Lott declared at
Thurmond's 100th birthday party that voters of Mississippi were
proud to have supported the South Carolinian when he ran for the
White House. "If the rest of the country had followed our lead, we
wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years either,"
added Lott, who was forced to step down as the Senate's Republican
leader in the ensuing uproar.
Thurmond's racial politics
changed over the years as blacks began voting in large numbers. He
became the first Southern senator to hire a black aide, supported
the appointment of a black Southern federal judge and voted to make
Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday a national holiday.
His
outlook seemed far different a half century ago, when he ran for
president.
"I want to tell you," he declared in one speech
in 1948, "that there's not enough troops in the Army to force the
Southern people to break down segregation and admit the Negro race
into our theaters, into our swimming pools, into our homes and into
our churches."
Thurmond grew up a Democrat — his father once
ran for office — but switched to the GOP in 1964 to support Barry
Goldwater's conservative campaign for the White House.
He
said at the time he had made the move because Democrats were
"leading the evolution of our nation to a socialistic dictatorship."
Like other Southern states, South Carolina had been a
one-party Democratic state since the end of Reconstruction nearly a
century earlier. Thurmond's switch anticipated a broader trend. By
the 1990s, the South favored the GOP, and Republican candidates
generally triumphed in statewide races in South Carolina.
The first time he ran as a Republican, in 1966, he won
easily.
In 1968, Thurmond played a pivotal role in executing
the "Southern Strategy" that helped Richard Nixon win the White
House. The South Carolinian helped hold Southern delegates in line
at the GOP convention when a charismatic conservative, Ronald
Reagan, made a late play for the nomination. In the general
election, he sought to blunt George Wallace's third-party candidacy
in the South, arguing that anything but a vote for Nixon would help
elect a liberal Democrat, Hubert Humphrey.
Born Dec. 5,
1902, in Edgefield, S.C., James Strom Thurmond — Strom was his
mother's maiden name — was elected county school superintendent,
state senator and circuit judge before enlisting in the Army in
World War II. He landed in Normandy as part of the 82nd Airborne
Division assault on D-Day, and won five battle stars and numerous
other awards.
The war over, he returned home to resume his
political career and won election as governor in 1946. His record
was progressive by contemporary standards for a Southern Democrat.
He pushed for repeal of the poll tax and boosted education spending.
He lost a race in South Carolina for the only time in his
career four years later, when he challenged incumbent Sen. Olin
Johnston for renomination. In defeat, he returned home to practice
law.
But in 1954, Sen. Burnet Maybank died unexpectedly.
When party officials tapped a state lawmaker to run for the post,
Thurmond challenged as a write-in candidate, saying the voters, not
the party's leaders, should decide who got the nomination. To
underscore his credentials as an insurgent, he pledged to resign his
seat before seeking re-election in 1956.
He won, the only
person in history to capture a seat in Congress by write-in. Two
years later, he kept his pledge to resign before running for the
four years remaining in the term.
His presidential race and
write-in victory behind him, Thurmond arrived in Washington with a
nationwide reputation. The civil rights movement was gathering
steam, but he held fast to his segregationist views for years.
He was a leader in drafting the Southern Manifesto of 1956,
in which Southern lawmakers vowed resistance to the Supreme Court's
unanimous school desegregation order. In 1957, he staged his record
nonstop filibuster against housing legislation that he denounced as
"race mixing."
Ironically, in earlier decades, Thurmond's
segregationist views were more nuanced than those held by other
Southern politicians.
As governor, he called for forceful
prosecution after a black man, a murder suspect, was lynched by a
mob. The result was a trial at which 31 white men were defendants.
His 1950 defeat came at the hands of an opponent who made an
issue of Thurmond's gubernatorial appointment of a black physician
to a state medical advisory board.
Like many one-time
segregationists, Thurmond insisted the issue wasn't race but
"federal power vs. state power" — though the state power he wanted
to preserve was the power to segregate.
"The question of
integration was only one facet of that matter," he said in a
November 1992 interview.
Showing how much his world had
changed, in 1977, Thurmond's young daughter, Nancy, 6, enrolled in a
public school in Columbia, S.C., that was 50 percent black. The
girl's teacher also was black.
Thurmond's first wife, Jean
Crouch, was 23 years his junior. The couple married in 1947, and she
died of a brain tumor in 1960.
His second wife, former
beauty queen Nancy Moore, was 44 years younger than Thurmond when
they were married in 1968. Thurmond was 68 when their first child,
Nancy, was born. The couple had three other children before
separating in 1991: Strom Jr., Juliana and Paul. Nancy died in 1993
after being struck by a car.
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