- James P. Coleman
Infobox Governor
name= James Plemon Coleman
party= Democratic
order= 51th
title=Governor of Mississippi
term_start=January 17 ,1956
term_end=January 19 ,1960
lieutenant=Carroll Gartin
predecessor=Hugh L. White
successor=Ross R. Barnett
date of birth= birth date|1914|1|9|mf=y
place of birth=Ackerman, Mississippi
date of death= death date and age|1991|9|28|1914|1|9|mf=y
place of death=Ackerman, Mississippi
religion=Baptist
profession= Lawyer
spouse= Margaret Janet DennisJames Plemon "J.P." Coleman (
January 9 ,1914 ndashSeptember 28 ,1991 ) was apolitician from the state ofMississippi .Coleman was born in
Ackerman, Mississippi . He obtained a law degree fromThe George Washington University Law School in 1939. As a young man, he served upon the staff of Mississippi Congressman A. L. Ford. InWashington, D.C. , he made a name for himself by challenging and defeating another young southern congressional staffer and future president,Lyndon Baines Johnson , for Speaker of the Little Congress, a body that Johnson had dominated before Coleman's challenge. Coleman and Johnson became lifelong friends.Returning to Mississippi, Coleman was elected District Attorney in 1940, and served until 1946, when he became judge on the state circuit court. After a stint as a justice on the
Mississippi Supreme Court , Coleman was the Mississippi Attorney General from 1950 to 1956. Coleman became theGovernor of Mississippi in 1956 as a moderate candidate in a campaign where, to appease the emotions of the day, he promised to uphold segregation. As governor, he befriended Democratic presidential nominee, SenatorJohn Fitzgerald Kennedy , but set up the State Sovereignty Commission. After his term ended in 1960, he won a seat in theMississippi House of Representatives and served until 1964. He thus became the only Mississippi politician in history to serve in an elected capacity in all three branches of Mississippi government.His subsequent campaign for Governor in 1963 was unsuccessful as he lost to
Paul B. Johnson, Jr. The segregation candidate Johnson ran against Coleman, painting Coleman as a racial moderate and friend of theKennedy administration . Paul Johnson's campaign staff charged, fictitiously, that during the 1960 presidential campaign Coleman had allowed candidate JFK to sleep in the Governor's Mansion in the bed of white supremacistTheodore Bilbo .President Kennedy offered Coleman various posts, including Secretary of the Army and ambassador to
Australia , but Coleman declined. After President Kennedy's assassination, President Lyndon Baines Johnson appointed Coleman to theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit , where he served from 1965 to 1981. He finished his career in Ackerman, Mississippi, where he practiced law and farmed until he suffered a severe stroke in the Fall of 1991.J. P. Coleman State Park , astate park in Mississippi, is named after him.External links
* [http://docsouth.unc.edu/sohp/A-0338/ Oral History Interview with James P. Coleman] at [http://docsouth.unc.edu/sohp/ Oral Histories of the American South]
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