- Ralph Yarborough
Infobox Senator |name=Ralph Webster Yarborough
nationality=American
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Texas
party=Democratic
term_start=April 29 ,1957
term_end=January 3 ,1971
preceded=William A. Blakley
succeeded=Lloyd Bentsen
date of birth=June 8 ,1903
place of birth=Chandler, Texas
date of death=January 27 ,1996 (aged 92)
place of death=Austin, Texas
spouse=
religion=Baptist Ralph Webster Yarborough (
June 08 ,1903 –January 27 ,1996 ) was aTexas Democratic politician who served in theUnited States Senate (1957 to 1971) and was a leader of the progressive or liberal wing of his party in his many races for statewide office. As aU.S. senator , he was a staunch supporter and author of "Great Society " legislation that encompassed Medicare andMedicaid , theWar on Poverty , federal support for higher education and veterans. He co-wrote theEndangered Species Act and was the only southern senator to vote for all civil rights bills from 1957 to 1970 (including theCivil Rights Act of 1964 and theVoting Rights Act of 1965). Yarborough was known as "Smilin' Ralph" Yarborough and used the slogan "Let's put the jam on the lower shelf so the little people can reach it" in his campaigns.Early life and career
Yarborough was born in
Chandler, Texas , as the seventh of Charles Richard Yarborough and Nannie Jane Spear's nine children. He was appointed toWest Point in 1919 but dropped out and became a teacher. Yarborough attended Sam Houston State Teachers College and worked his way into theUniversity of Texas at Austin . He graduated from theUniversity of Texas Law School in 1927 and practiced law inEl Paso, Texas until he was hired as an assistant attorney general in 1931 by the state Attorney GeneralJames V. Allred . Yarborough was an expert in Texas land law and specialized in prosecuting major oil companies that violated production limits or failed to pay oil royalties to the Permanent School Fund for drilling on public lands. Yarborough became famous for a million dollar judgment against the Mid-Kansas Oil and Gas Company for oil royalties, the second largest judgment ever in Texas at the time. After Allred was elected governor, he appointed Yarborough to the bench in 1936, making him the 53rd District judge for Austin'sTravis County . Yarborough was confirmed in that office by an election later the same year. Yarborough's first run for state office resulted in a third place finish in the Democratic primary for state attorney general in 1938 against the sittinglieutenant governor . He served in the US Army duringWorld War II after 1943 and achieved the rank ofLieutenant Colonel .Political life
Historically, Texas had been a one-party state. Democrats would win every statewide office, nearly all of the congressional delegation, and large majorities in the state legislature. Thus,
general election s were formalities, and the real battles took place in the Democratic primaries between the conservative wing (pre-presidencyLyndon Baines Johnson , GovernorAllan Shivers ,John Connally ), and the liberal wing (with which Yarborough identified), which was more in line with the national party.Running for governor
Ralph Yarborough was urged to run again for state attorney general in 1952, and he planned to do so until he received a personal affront by Governor Allan Shivers who told him not to run. Out of spite, Ralph Yarborough then ran in the primaries for governor in 1952 and 1954 against the conservative Shivers, drawing support from
labor union s and liberals. Yarborough denounced the corrupt "Shivercrats " for veterans' fraud in the General Land Office and for endorsing the Republican Eisenhower/Nixon ticket for President instead of DemocratAdlai Stevenson in 1952. Shivers portrayed Yarborough as an integrationist supported by communists and labor unions. The 1954 election was particularly nasty in its race-baiting by Shivers as it was the year that "Brown v. Board of Education " was decided, and Shivers made the most of the court decision in order to play on voters' racism. In one particularly odious episode, a black man was hired to drive aroundEast Texas in a Cadillac full of Yarborough stickers and to be obnoxious and insult gas station attendants. The man would say he was busy and had to hurry "to work for Mr. Yarborough." Yarborough made it to the primary runoff and came surprisingly close to beating Shivers despite receiving almost no newspaper endorsements, being out-fundraised, and being the target of nasty attacks.In 1956, Yarborough made it to the primary runoff for governor against U.S. Senator
Price Daniel . Texashistorian J. Evetts Haley ran in the primary to the political right of both Daniel and Yarborough but polled few votes. After being endorsed by former opponent and former GovernorW. Lee O'Daniel , and making aggressive attacks on the Shivers-backed candidate, Yarborough looked to win the runoff, but instead he trailed Daniel by about nine thousand votes. It is believed (by Yarborough, his supporters, and biographer) that the election was stolen because of irregular voting inEast Texas and that Yarborough really won the runoff by thirty thousand. Nevertheless, Yarborough's runs for governor had raised his stature and popularity in the state as he had been campaigning for six straight years for office.Becoming a senator
When Daniel resigned from the Senate in 1957 to become governor, Yarborough ran in the
special election to fill the empty seat. With no runoff then required, he needed only aplurality of votes to win. Ironically, his many runs for governor made him the best positioned candidate to become a U.S. Senator. Yarborough won the special election with 38 percent of the vote to join fellow Texan Lyndon Johnson in the Senate.In office, Ralph Yarborough was a very different kind of Southern senator. He refused to sign the
Southern Manifesto opposing integration and supported national Democratic goals of more funding for health care, education, and the environment. Himself aveteran , he worked to expand theG.I. Bill toCold War veterans.In 1958, Ralph Yarborough easily defeated conservative
William A. Blakley , who was backed by Governor Daniel, in the Democratic primary and cruised on to victory in the general election against Republican Roy Whittenburg. During his first full term, Yarborough worked for the bill, signed by PresidentJohn F. Kennedy , to designate Padre Island as a national seashore.Ralph Yarborough rode in the Dallas motorcade where John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. Yarborough was in the same convertible as
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson ,Lady Bird Johnson , andUnited States Secret Service agentRufus Youngblood , only two cars away from the presidential limousine. It was Yarborough who famously announced Kennedy's death at Parkland Memorial Hospital by saying: "Excalibur has sunk beneath the waves."In 1964, Yarborough again won the primary without a runoff and went on to general election victory with 56.2 percent in LBJ's 1964 Democratic landslide. His Republican Party (GOP) opponent was future president
George H. W. Bush who attacked Yarborough as a left-wing demagogue and for his vote in favor of theCivil Rights Act of 1964 . Yarborough denounced Bush as an extremist to the right of that year's GOP nominee for presidentBarry M. Goldwater and as a rich easterner and acarpetbagger trying to buy a Senate seat. It has since been learned that then Governor Connally was covertly aiding Bush instead of party nominee Yarborough against President Johnson's wishes by teaching voters how to vote split ticket.Although Yarborough supported Johnson's domestic agenda, he went public with his criticism of Johnson's foreign policy and the
Vietnam War after Johnson announced his retirement. Yarborough supportedRobert F. Kennedy until his assassination, then supportedEugene McCarthy until his loss inChicago , and finally backedHubert Humphrey for President in the pivotal campaign of 1968. In 1969, Senator Yarborough became chairman of the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.Defeat
In 1970, South Texan businessman and former congressman
Lloyd Bentsen , won an upset victory against Yarborough in the Democratic primary when Yarborough was focusing on the general election again against Bush. Bentsen played on voters' fears of societal breakdown and urban riots and made an issue of Yarborough's opposition to theVietnam War . Bentsen said that Yarborough was a political antique. Said Bentsen, "It would be nice if Ralph Yarborough would vote for his state every once in a while." Bentsen went on to win the general election against George H.W. Bush.In 1972, Ralph Yarborough made a comeback effort to win the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator as a challenger of Republican Senator
John Tower , who as a young man had once circulated Ralph Yarborough stickers. Yarborough won the first round of the primary and came within 526 votes of winning the primary runoff. Again, Yarborough made accusations of vote fraud from the conservative wing. He lost in the primary runoff to a federal judge,Barefoot Sanders , in an anti-incumbent sweep after theSharpstown Bank-stock Scandal despite neither being an incumbent nor involved at all with the scandal. Yarborough did not again seek office.Death
He died in 1996 in Austin, and was buried in the
Texas State Cemetery (the Arlington of Texas). Ralph Yarborough left a legacy in the modernization of the state of Texas and achieved political power at a peak of Texas's national power during the Johnson years. Yarborough was combative with the dominant industries of oil and gas, always pushing for petroleum's fair share of the public burden.Legacy
Yarborough also was one of the last of the
New Deal Democrats and liberals in Texas state politics. The window of opportunity for a liberal in Texas to reach such a high office was narrow, between theGreat Depression and the Great Society. Yarborough represented this brief political moment, both preceded and followed by conservatives (like "Pappy" O'Daniel andPhil Gramm ). Yarborough is remembered as the acknowledged "patron saint of Texas liberals." Yarborough easily makes the list of greatest conservationists from Texas with his success at making into protected parkland Padre Island, theGuadalupe Mountains , and theBig Thicket (the last one after he left the Senate). Supporters and former aides that rose to prominence includedJim Hightower ,Ann Richards , andGarry Mauro .The
University of Texas at Austin Press published a biography titled, "Ralph W. Yarborough: The People's Senator", by Patrick L. Cox. It features a foreword written by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA).Yarborough is interred in the
Texas State Cemetery in Austin.External links
*Handbook of Texas|id=YY/fyags|name=Ralph Webster Yarborough
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=Y000006 Congressional biography]
* [http://texashistory.unt.edu/search/?q=yarborough%2C+ralph&hl=en&pageSize=10&Submit=Find&q1=&o1=EXACT&q2=&o2=JUSTONE&q3=letter&o3=NOTANY&q4=&t4=institution&q5=&t5=collection&q6=&t6=dc.language&q7=&t7=dc.type&nlow=&nhi=&t8=psource Photographs of Ralph Yarborough] , hosted by the [http://texashistory.unt.edu/ Portal to Texas History]
* [http://www.texasescapes.com/DEPARTMENTS/Guest_Columnists/East_Texas_all_things_historical/LiberalRalphYarborough1AMD401.htm East Texas historical newspaper column]
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