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Richard B. Russell, Jr., Senator From Georgia book cover
Richard B. Russell, Jr., Senator From Georgia
1991
First Published
4.25
Average Rating
582
Number of Pages

Richard B. Russell, Jr., represented Georgia in the United States Senate from 1933 to 1971, a period of sweeping social change. Russell (1879-1971) was regarded by his fellow senators as the quintessential member of the Senate's establishment, and they dubbed him "a Senator's Senator" and "the Georgia Giant." So great was his popularity in Congress that Lyndon B. Johnson once said, "If the membership of the Senate were to cast a secret vote on the man they believed best qualifies to be president of the United States, they would choose Richard Russell." Gilbert Fite's masterful biography begins with Russell's upbringing in an elite Georgia family. The highly stratified and class-conscious society of his early years would later influence Russell's legislative agenda. In 1920, Russell was elected to the Georgia General Assembly, and in 1931 he became governor of Georgia. He held that office until 1933, when he began his thirty-eight years of service in the U.S. Senate. During Russell's long senatorial career, he was deeply involved in many of the most important episodes of our national the New Deal, World War II, the MacArthur investigation, the foreign aid debate, and the Warren Commission inquiry. His greatest contribution, according to Fite, was his fierce determination to maintain a strong national defense during the Cold War; in his sixteen years as chairman of the Armed Services Committee, he emerged as the acknowledged leader in Congress on defense matters. A career-long member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Russell also became one of the nation's strongest advocates of farm price supports. Under his sponsorship, the Senate enacted legislation establishing the school lunch program and distribution of food to the needy. But Russell never abandoned his dedication to the South's traditional values, and he became the leader of the Southern Bloc that staunchly fought to defeat civil rights legislation and maintain the structures of segregation. Russell's unwillingness to compromise on civil rights, says Fite, meant that his career was ultimately one of regional rather than national leadership.

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Author

Gilbert C. Fite
Author · 3 books
The son of educators and farmers, Gilbert Courtland Fite grew up in rural South Dakota. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of South Dakota, and completed his doctorate in history at the University of Missouri in 1945. From 1945 until 1971, Fite taught at the University of Oklahoma, where he established his reputation as an agricultural historian. After serving as president of Eastern Illinois University from 1971 until 1976, Fite went to the University of Georgia, where he became the inaugural first Richard B. Russell Professor of History. Over the course of his career Fite served as president of the Western History Association, the Southern Historical Association, the Agricultural History Society, and Phi Alpha Theta.
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