Paul B. Johnson Sr.: Forty-sixth Governor of Mississippi: 1940-1943
By David G. Sansing
During his 1931 and 1935 races for governor, Paul Burney Johnson Sr.
called himself the “Champion of the Runt Pig People,” and
in his successful campaign of 1939, he promised to inaugurate several
New Deal measures in the state of Mississippi. In supporting government
programs for the poor and unemployed, Johnson explained that he was trying
to give the common people their fair share of the nation’s wealth
and pledged, “I will never balance the budget at the expense of
suffering humanity.”
Johnson was born into a poor farm family and readily identified with
Mississippi’s tenant farmers, sharecroppers, and day laborers. When he became a lawyer,
he said he vowed to “save a little from everything I made.”
He saved some of the fee from his first law case and kept some of the
dollar bills from that case for the rest of his life.
Born in Hillsboro in Scott County, Mississippi, on March 23, 1880, Johnson
completed his early education at Harperville Academy in Scott County and
then studied law at Millsaps College. He opened a law practice at Hattiesburg
in 1903. After a four-year term as city judge, he was appointed judge
of the twelfth circuit and was subsequently elected to the office in 1911
and 1915.
In 1918, Johnson defeated Theodore Bilbo for the U. S. Congress from the
sixth district. After serving three congressional terms, Johnson did not
seek re-election. He began the pursuit of a life-long dream of becoming
governor of Mississippi. After two unsuccessful campaigns, Johnson achieved
his dream in 1939 and was inaugurated governor on January 16, 1940.
Governor Johnson was skeptical of the Balance Agriculture With Industry
program and took steps to curtail industrial expansion in Mississippi.
He considered economic incentives to industry as a “trickle down”
approach to economic recovery. His legislative program emphasized more
direct measures to increase the purchasing power of Mississippi’s
poor and unemployed workers.
Among his most important achievements were an increase in the pensions
for Mississippi’s senior citizens and a law providing free textbooks
for Mississippi’s school children. Both measures were very controversial,
especially the textbook law. The opponents of free textbooks accused Governor
Johnson of socializing the state of Mississippi and claimed that the state’s
involvement in the textbook business would undermine the free enterprise
system.
Governor Johnson’s term in office covered three years of World
War II and much of his time was occupied with events covering Mississippi’s
part in it.
During much of his administration, Governor Johnson was ill and the long
and bitter struggle over the textbook bill put an enormous strain on him
and his family. During the Christmas season of 1943, his health declined
rapidly and Governor Johnson died December 26, 1943. The Paul B. Johnson
State Park in Hattiesburg is named in honor of Mississippi’s forty-sixth
governor.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004
Sources:
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress (1950),
1379.
Obituary, Jackson Daily News, December 27, 1943.
Biographical Sketch, Jackson State Times, December 6, 1959.
Kelly, Thomas E. Who’s Who In Mississippi, 51.
Paul B. Johnson Sr. Subject File, Mississippi Department of Archives
and History.
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