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William Lowe Waller Sr.: Fifty-sixth Governor of Mississippi: 1972-1976
By David G. Sansing
In the early 1970s after the Civil Rights Movement had run its course
and had brought enormous changes to the South, a group of young and progressive
southern governors attracted national attention. Among them were Dale
Bumpers of Arkansas, Reuben Askew of Florida, Jimmy Carter of Georgia,
and William Waller of Mississippi. Governor Waller was elected at a crucial
time in the state’s history and his constructive leadership helped
chart a new direction for Mississippi.
Waller, who was born in Lafayette County, Mississippi, on October 21,
1926, attended the public schools in the Black Jack community of Panola
County and graduated from Oxford High School. After earning his bachelor
of arts degree at Memphis State University and his law degree from the
University of Mississippi, Waller established a law practice in Jackson.
After the Korean War, during which he served as an intelligence officer,
Waller was elected Hinds County District Attorney in 1959 and was re-elected
in 1963. Waller’s most famous case as a prosecuting attorney was
the Medgar Evers assassination. Waller’s vigorous prosecution of
that case brought many commendations to the young district attorney and
was often cited as an indication of the changing attitudes of Mississippi’s
public officials.
After an unsuccessful bid for governor in 1967, Waller was elected to
the state’s highest office on his second try. In the 1971 general
election, Waller defeated Charles Evers, an independent candidate who
was the brother of Medgar Evers and the first black Mississippian in the
state’s history to run for governor.
One of the most important accomplishments of Governor Waller’s
administration was the separation of the tax collecting responsibilities
from the law enforcement duties of the county sheriff. That change, which
created two separate offices and allowed sheriffs to succeed themselves,
improved the quality of law enforcement in Mississippi and professionalized
the office of sheriff. Governor Waller also integrated the highway patrol
and appointed blacks to boards, commissions, and other state agencies.
For the first time in almost a century, blacks actively participated in
the affairs of state.
Under the leadership of Mississippi’s First Lady, the former Carroll
Overton, the state’s historic Governor’s Mansion was saved
for a second time from near collapse. Mrs. Waller, who referred to the
130-year-old building as the “Home of our Heritage,” presided
over the mansion’s restoration to its original 1842 design. Upon
the completion of the restoration, which took three and one-half years,
the Governor’s Mansion was designated a National Historic Landmark
in 1975.
After leaving office, Governor Waller resumed his law practice in Jackson, which he continued until his death on November 30, 2011.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted January 2004; updated November 2011
Sources:
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1972-1976), 25.
Sansing, David and Waller, Carroll. A History of the Mississippi
Governor’s Mansion, 177-194.
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