- Paul B. Johnson, Jr.
Infobox Governor
name= Paul B. Johnson, Jr.
caption=
order=53rd
office= Governor of Mississippi
term_start= January 1964
term_end= January 1968
lieutenant= Carroll Gartin (1964–1966)Charles L. Sullivan (1966–1968)
predecessor=Ross R. Barnett
successor=John Bell Williams
birth_date= January 23, 1916
birth_place=Hattiesburg, Mississippi
death_date= death date and age|1985|10|14|1916|1|23
death_place=Hattiesburg, Mississippi
party= Democratic
religion =Methodist
spouse = Dorothy E. Power
profession = LawyerPaul Burney Johnson, Jr. (January 23, 1916ndash October 14, 1985) was a United States Democratic
Mississippi politician and son of former Mississippi GovernorPaul B. Johnson, Sr. .A graduate of the
University of Mississippi and its law school, Johnson was a practicing attorney in Jackson andHattiesburg , marrying his college sweetheart Dorothy Power in 1941. During his first year atOle Miss , he was a member of the freshmanOle Miss football team and was initiated intoSigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity. He had the distinction of being the only Sophomore ever elected President of theOle Miss student body. [Mississippi Official and Statistical Register: 1964-1968, p.26] After college, Johnson served in the South Pacific with theU.S. Marine Corps duringWorld War II .Upon his release from the service, he looked to follow in his father's political footsteps, serving as Assistant
U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi from 1948 to 1951 . As described by noted writer Theodore White, Johnson had, for a Southerner, a liberal early record. He supported Harry Truman for President in 1948 (Truman received just over ten percent of the vote in Mississippi), Adlai Stevenson in 1952, and had an affectionate reverence for Franklin D. Roosevelt going back to the days of his then-Congressman father's friendship with the then-Assistant Secretary of the Navy (and he and his siblings had known the Roosevelt children). [The Making of the President, 1964:Theodore H. White. New York: Atheneum Publishers, 1965. p.218] Twice during his tenure and once more in 1955, Johnson ran for governor, losing all three times. In 1947, prior to his first try for the governor's mansion, he ran for an open U.S. Senate seat, but lost.In 1959, he ran for
lieutenant governor and won, serving under segregationist icon GovernorRoss Barnett . He played a prominent role in trying to preventJames Meredith from enrolling at Ole Miss in 1962, physically blocking federal marshals escorting Meredith.As a liberal, recognizing that his career in state politics was hopeless and bolstered by his segregationist appeal, Johnson ran for governor once again in 1963 "on a platform of segregation and race hatred so inflexibly extreme as to satisfy the most violent white segregationists." [White, p.218-219] He defeated former governor
James P. Coleman by tying his opponent to PresidentJohn F. Kennedy 's proposed civil rights legislation. During the campaign, he asked voters to "Stand tall with Paul" against those wanting to change Mississippi's "way of life", in reference to his confrontation with the federal marshals. Also a part of his stump speech was the line, "You know what theN.A.A.C.P. stands for: Niggers, alligators apes, coons and possums." [" [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,894564,00.html If You Try & Don't Succeed . . .] ".TIME magazine . Aug. 16, 1963.] In the general election, he faced the first strong Republican candidate for Mississippi governor,Rubel Phillips , that any Democrat had encountered since Reconstruction in 1876. Phillips, a recent Democratic state Public Service Commissioner, ran under the slogan "K.O. the Kennedy's", and tried to tie Barnett and Johnson to them as well as convince voters that he and GOP Lieutenant Governor candidate Stanford Morse represented the best hope for preserving Mississippi's traditional "way of life" while at the same time making overall progress. However, their strong efforts fell short, though Phillips did receive 38% of the vote, indicating a strong base of support for serious GOP state candidates.White's initial description of Johnson was a realization "with a start, that this was no Northern cartoon of a Mississippi Governor; this was a man of civilization and dignity whose deep, serious voice spoke not cornpone but a cultured English--and spoke at once in fear, perplexity, and wistfulness. In his plight one could see half the tragedy of his state." [White, p.218] In his inaugural address in 1964, he chose, "Pursuit of Excellence" as his term's theme and also stated, "Hate, or prejudice, or ignorance, will not lead Mississippi while I sit in the governor's chair." To many, that comment had a hollow ring five months later, when during the investigation of the three missing civil rights workers,
James Chaney ,Andrew Goodman andMichael Schwerner in June 1964, Governor Johnson offered little or no help. He praisedNeshoba County SheriffLawrence A. Rainey and deputy sheriffCecil Price . He also dismissed fears that the trio had been murdered by stating, "Maybe they went to Cuba", a reference to theCommunist ties that were often used to try and discredit that movement. A liberal Ole Miss history professor who was to publish a bestseller book condemning Mississippi's segregated society and who would soon leave the state under pressure would say however:"Probably satisfying no one, Johnson kept his own counsel, and his mouth closed to demogogic outbursts, while treading the uneasy path between the demands of the Citizens Council (which had helped elect him) and the imperatives of the situation. As one astute observer saw it, the governor was "tempering political expedience with common sense, yet still attempting to ease down the more radical, emotional, ignorant groups without losing those votes." And so "ambivalent Paul" cound denounce in picturesque and biting language the impending civil rights law and could declare that "It is an odd thing that so much hell is being raised over three people missing in Mississippi when 10,000 are missing in New York", while welcoming Allan Dulles and J. Edgar Hoover to Mississippi and firing a couple of Ku Kluxers from the Highway Patrol. While castigating the civil rights workers and refusing even to meet with responsible Negro leaders, he did come down hard for law enforcement and played a major role in ending the violence in Pike County. It is more than a reasonable guess that the two Johnsons, President and Governor, kept each other informed, though neither could have admitted that to his public. . . In the meantime, the old "watchdog of segregation", the State Sovereignty Commission, lapsed into desuetude from deliberate withholding of gubernatorial appointments, and the Citizens Council prepared its own death watch." [Mississippi:The Closed Society, New Enlarged Edition, James W. Silver. Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., New York, 1966. pp. 269-270.]
After seeing the potentially damaging effects on the state's image and business climate, Johnson worked to tone down any racist rhetoric and adopted moderate policies, including requesting that the state comply with the newly-passed
Voting Rights Act in 1965 . He also at one point declared "The day for a lot of bull-shooting is over." [Silver, p.355] Moves such as this were seen as major reasons for the decrease in racial violence and solid economic growth, with Johnson working hard to pass a $130 million bond issue to finance a major expansion of the Ingalls Shipyard in Pascagoula. Governor Johnson like many other southern governors quietly observed the 1965 civil war centennial of the defeat of the South. In addition, his fight to repeal the prohibition on alcohol in 1966, a state law for the previous 58 years that had largely been ignored bymoonshiners , was another issue that gained him popular appeal.Following the end of his term, Johnson left politics, then suffered a stroke in the late 1970s. In his final years, he continued to struggle with his health before suffering a fatal heart attack at his home in Hattiesburg.
References
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