John Bell Williams: Fifty-fifth Governor of Mississippi: 1968-1972
By David G. Sansing
John Bell Williams’s political career took an unusual route to
the office of governor. Most politicians first run for state or local
office and then use those offices to launch a national career. Williams
took the opposite approach. He served in the United States Congress for
twenty-one years prior to his election as governor in 1967.
Williams, a native of Raymond, Mississippi, where he was born December
4, 1918, graduated from Hinds Junior College and then attended the University
of Mississippi. After graduating from the Jackson School of Law, Williams
was admitted to the bar and opened a law office at Raymond in 1940. Both
Williams and his wife, the former Elizabeth Ann Wells, served in the U.S.
military forces during World War II. Mrs. Williams serverd as a private
in the Women’s Army Corps.
After serving two years as the Hinds County prosecuting attorney, Williams
was elected to the U. S. Congress in 1946 from Mississippi’s third
congressional district. At age twenty-seven, he was the youngest congressman
in the state’s history. During his twenty-one years in Congress,
which extended from the 80th Congress to the 90th, Williams was a champion
of states’ rights and racial segregation.
Shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court issued the Brown v Board of
Education of Topeka decision on Monday, May 17, 1954, Williams made
a dramatic speech on the floor of the House of Representatives criticizing
the court’s ruling. He branded Monday, May 17, 1954, “Black
Monday.” Over the next several years, Williams became increasingly
alienated from the national Democratic Party. In 1964 he publicly endorsed
the Republican candidate for president, Barry Goldwater, and helped raise
funds for his campaign in Mississippi. Goldwater received 87.1 percent
of the presidential vote in Mississippi in 1964.
Because of his support for the Republican candidate and his fund-raising
activities, the Democrats in Congress stripped Williams of his party seniority
in 1965. Following his re-election to the House in 1966, Williams returned
to Mississippi the next year and ran for governor as a Mississippi Democrat.
From a large field of candidates, which included one former governor and
two future governors, John Bell Williams emerged the eventual winner and
was inaugurated January 16, 1968.
Like people across the nation, Mississippians in 1968 were disturbed
by a seemingly unending Vietnam War. Yet in Mississippi, school desegregation
remained the most troubling issue of all.
Although Governor Williams was an avowed segregationist, the most sweeping
integration in Mississippi history occurred during his administration.
By a federal court order the state’s dual segregated public school
system was superseded by a unified integrated system in the spring of
1970. Governor Williams did not resist the court order and the transition
from a dual to a unified system was made with remarkable success.
After he left office, Governor Williams resumed his law practice in Raymond
which he continued until his death on March 25, 1983. The John Bell Williams
Wildlife Management Area in Itawamba and Prentiss counties is named for
Governor Williams.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004
Sources:
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1949-1952), 13;
(1968-1972), 23.
John Bell Williams Subject File, Mississippi Department of Archives and
History.
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