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Fielding Lewis Wright: Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Governor of Mississippi: 1946-1948; 1948-1952
By David G. Sansing
When the Democratic Party nominated Harry S. Truman and adopted a strong
civil rights platform in 1948, Southern Democrats organized the States’
Rights Democratic Party. Better known as “Dixiecrats,” the
Southern Democrats nominated Governor Fielding L. Wright of Mississippi
for vice-president and Governor J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina for
president. Thurmond and Wright carried only four southern states and failed
in their effort to throw the presidential election into the U. S. House
of Representatives. The organization of the Dixiecrat Party was an indication,
however, that the South would resist any change in southern race relations.
Wright, who was born into a political family at Rolling Fork, Mississippi,
on May 16, 1895, vowed as a returning World War I veteran that he would
never become a “dang politician.” After studying law at the
University of Alabama and reading law with an uncle, Governor Wright opened
a law office in Rolling Fork. He turned down several opportunities to
run for public office, but finally agreed to run for the Mississippi Senate
in 1928. He was elected. Four years later he was elected to the state
House of Representatives. In his second term as representative, he was
elected Speaker. As Speaker of the House, he strongly supported industrial
development and highway construction.
In 1943 Wright was elected lieutenant governor in his first statewide
campaign. As lieutenant governor, Wright was the presiding officer of
the Mississippi Senate and became one of only two men in the 20th century
to chair both houses of the legislature – Sam Lumpkin of Tupelo,
lieutenant governor during the Wright administration, was the other. Following
the death of Thomas Bailey on November 2, 1946, Wright filled the remainder
of Bailey’s unexpired term.
Because of his strong stand against civil rights, his support for states’
rights, and with the advantage of incumbency, Governor Wright accomplished
a feat rarely seen in Mississippi politics: in 1947 he was elected governor
in the first primary, over four opponents, in his first try for the state’s
highest office.
During Governor Wright’s 1946-1952 administration, urbanization
and industrialization, two of the direct effects of World War II, were
greatly accelerated. The state’s economy, its social customs, and
race relations were undergoing slow but significant changes. It was also
during his administration that the University of Mississippi Medical Center
was established in Jackson, and Mississippi Vocational College, now Mississippi
Valley State University, was founded in Itta Bena.
After leaving the office of governor, which he had held for six consecutive
years, Governor Wright opened a law office in Jackson. He made one last
bid for governor in 1955 but was defeated by J. P. Coleman. After that
defeat, he returned to his law practice. Governor Wright died at Jackson
on May 4, 1956.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004
Sources:
Biographical sketch, Jackson Daily News, December 8, 1946.
Fielding L. Wright Subject File, Mississippi Department of Archives and
History.
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