- John Bell Williams
Infobox Governor
name= John Bell Williams
caption=
order=54th
office= Governor of Mississippi
term_start= January 1968
term_end= January 1972
lieutenant=Charles L. Sullivan
predecessor=Paul B. Johnson, Jr.
successor= William Waller
birth_date= birth date|1918|12|4|mf=y
birth_place=Raymond, Mississippi
death_date= death date and age|1983|25|3|1918|12|4
death_place=Brandon, Mississippi
party= Democratic
religion=Baptist
profession= Lawyer
spouse= Elizabeth Ann WellsJohn Bell Williams (
December 4 ,1918 –March 25 ,1983 ) was an American politician who was governor ofMississippi from 1968 to 1972.Williams was born in Raymond near Jackson. He graduated from Hinds Junior College in 1938, attended the
University of Mississippi at Oxford, and graduated fromJackson Law School in 1940. In November 1941, he enlisted with theU.S. Army Air Corps and served as pilot duringWorld War II ; however, he retired from active service after losing the lower part of his left arm after a bomber crash in 1944. [cite web |url=http://crdl.usg.edu/voci/go/crdl/people/viewP/7478/%20John%20Bell/Williams,%20%201918-1983;jsessionid=15565F22AADB0B7E0095656145AB5C18 |title=John Bell Williams, 1918-1983 |accessdate=2008-09-24 |work=Civil Rights Digital Library |publisher=Digital Library of Georgia |date=] In 1946, Williams was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives as a Democrat. He was the youngest U.S. Representative to have been elected from Mississippi.Williams advocated
states' rights and segregation. He walked out of the1948 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia and supportedStrom Thurmond 's presidential campaign, whose primary platform was racial segregation. After the Supreme Court made its "Brown v. Board of Education " ruling in May 1954 which outlawed racial segregation in schools, Williams made a speech on the House floor branding the day 'Black Monday'. [cite web |url=http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/brown/brown-aftermath.html |title=With an Even Hand": Brown v. Board at Fifty |accessdate=2008-09-24 |work= |publisher=Library of Congress |date=] Williams supported the Democratic party's presidential campaign in 1952, and supported unpledged Democratic electors in 1956 and 1960. But in 1964, Williams endorsed RepublicanBarry Goldwater for President and helped raise funds for him in Mississippi. Because of his activities for Goldwater, the national Democratic Party stripped Williams of his House seniority.In 1967, Williams ran for governor. The field of candidates was large, including one former governor (Ross Barnett) and two future Governors (William Winter and William Waller). In the primary, Williams claimed that former Governor Ross Barnett made a secret deal with the Kennedys. He finished second to the moderate candidate Winter. In the runoff, Williams defeated Winter by 61,000 votes. In the general election, Williams handily defeated Republican
Rubel Phillips , who made the second of his two losing campaigns for governor.During Williams's term as governor, Mississippi experienced the
desegregation of its school system through a federal court order. Williams, despite his background as a strong segregationist, refused to defy the court.After his term, Williams resumed his law practice. He endorsed
Gerald Ford in 1976 andRonald Reagan in 1980, rather than the Democratic nomineeJimmy Carter of Georgia.References
External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6941543 John Bell Williams' Gravesite] at
Find-A-Grave
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