- Wilmer Mizell
Infobox_Congressman
name = Wilmer David Mizell
date of birth = birth date|1930|08|13
place of birth =Leakesville, Mississippi
death_date = death date and age|1999|02|21|1930|08|13
death_place =Kerrville, Texas
state =North Carolina
district = 5th
term = 1969–1975
preceded =Nick Galifianakis
succeeded =Stephen L. Neal
party = Republican
spouse = Nancy Mizell(1st wife,died), Ruth Mizell
religion =ProtestantWilmer David "Vinegar Bend" Mizell (August 13, 1930 - February 21, 1999) was an American left-handed
pitcher inmajor league baseball who went on to serve three terms as a Republican U.S. congressman fromNorth Carolina between 1969 and 1975. He representedNorth Carolina's 5th congressional district , includingWinston-Salem . Defeated for a fourth term in 1974, Mizell was among dozens of Republicans nationwide punished by voters irate overWatergate .Mizell in Baseball
Mizell was born and reared in
Leakesville, Mississippi , but gained his sobriquet playing baseball in nearby Vinegar Bend, Alabama. He graduated from high school inLeakesville, Mississippi , in 1949. He was a professional pitcher between 1949 and 1963, although he served in theUnited States Army from 1953 to 1954. During hisMajor League Baseball career, he played for theSt. Louis Cardinals (1952-1960),Pittsburgh Pirates (1960-1962), andNew York Mets (1962). Mizell was known as "Vinegar Bend Mizell" during his major league career.In a nine-season career, Mizell was 90-88 with a 3.85 ERA in 268 games, 230 of those starts. He pitched 61
complete game s, including 15shutout s. He allowed 654earned run s and struck out 918 in 1528 and 2/3innings pitched .After leaving baseball, Mizell worked in sales and
public relations for thePepsi-Cola company in Winston-Salem until 1967.Mizell in politics
Mizell entered politics in the 1960s as well. He was elected to the Davidson County board of commissioners in 1966. He was the chairman of the board for the two years when he was a member.
In 1968, Mizell, a Republican, was elected to a seat, in the
91st United States Congress ; re-elected twice, he served a total of six years in the national legislature. A previous Republican candidate, G. Fred Steele, Jr., had polled 46.9 percent of the vote in District 5 in 1966; Steele's showing helped prepare the district for a party transformation in 1968. Mizell defeated Democratic nomineeSmith Bagley , anR.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company official, 84,905 (52.4 percent) to 77,112 (47.6 percent). The previous District 5 representative, DemocratNick Galifianakis , was moved to District 4 for the 1968 elections. Mizell was the first republican elected to the 5th district since 1908. He was one of the most popular congressmen in Washington and one of the most conservative.In 1970, Mizell defeated Democrat James G. White, 68,937 (58.1 percent) to 49,663 (41.9 percent). In 1972, he trounced former liberal Arkansas Congressman
Brooks Hays , who had moved to North Carolina, 101,375 (64.8 percent) to 54,986 (35.2 percent). Hays had lost his seat in Arkansas to fellow DemocratDale Alford in 1958, when he supported school desegregation during theLittle Rock crisis of 1957.Mizell may have thought that his 1972 margin would insulate him from further Democratic challenges in 1974. If so, he did not reckon with the impact of Watergate on Republican House members. Mizell was unseated by Democrat
Stephen L. Neal , 64,634 (52 percent) to 59,182 (47.6 percent).After the stinging 1974 defeat, in which Mizell polled less than three fifths of the total votes that he had received in 1972, President Gerald R. Ford, Jr., a former House colleague, appointed him as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development, a post he held from March 1975 to May 1976.
In 1976, Mizell challenged Neal and again lost, 83,129 (45.6 percent) to 98,789 (54.2 percent). Neal, a strong supporter of Democratic presidential nominee
Jimmy Carter , polled almost the same raw vote as Mizell had four years earlier, when he was running on the Nixon--Agnew slate.In 1981, Mizell was named Assistant Secretary of Agriculture for Governmental and Public Affairs in the Reagan administration, and as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Intergovernmental Affairs, Department of Veterans Affairs in the
George H. W. Bush administration. Mizell also worked as executive director of thePresident's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports .Mizell in retirement
After leaving government life, he resided in
Midway, North Carolina . In the fall of 1998, Mizell had a heart attack while watching his son, Dave Mizell, coach High Point Andrews High School in a football game againstNorth Davidson High School in Welcome. Just before kickoff, rescue crews were called, and the game was postponed for about a half hour. Mizell was taken to the cardiac care unit ofWake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. He recovered for a few months.Mizell died at the age of 68 in
Kerrville, Texas (Kerr County), where he was visiting his wife's family. Mizell is survived by his two sons, Danny and Dave, who both live in North Carolina, and by four grandchildren.External links
CongBio|M000833 [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=M000833]
*baseball-reference|id=m/mizelvi01
*http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1:74602863/EX-5TH+DIST%7eR%7e+REPRESENTATIVE+SUFFERS+ATTACK%3b+A+FORMER+U%7eR%7eS%7eR%7e+HOUSE+MEMBER+FROM+THE+5TH+DISTRICT+COLLAPSES%7eR%7e%7eR%7e%7eR%7e.html?refid=ip_hf
*http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0775387.html
*http://216.109.125.130/search/cache?p=wilmer+mizell&sm=Yahoo%21+Search&fr=FP-tab-web-t399&toggle=1&ei=UTF-8&u=www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/M/Mizell_Vinegar_Bend.stm&w
*http://thedeadballera.com/Obits/Mizell.Wilmer.Obit.html
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