Strom Thurmond

@Former United States Senator, Timeline and Childhood

Strom Thurmond was an American politician, who represented the state of South Carolina in the United States senate for 48 years.

Dec 5, 1902

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: December 5, 1902
  • Died on: June 26, 2003
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Former United States Senator, Leaders, Political Leaders
  • City/State: South Carolina
  • Spouses: Jean Crouch (m. 1947–1960), Nancy Janice Moore (m. 1968–2003)
  • Known as: James Strom Thurmond

Strom Thurmond born at

Edgefield, South Carolina

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Birth Place

Strom died in his sleep on 26th June 2003 of a heart failure at the age of 100.

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Personal Life

Strom Thurmond married quite late at the age of 44. He met his first wife in April 1947 when he was judging a beauty contest and Jean Crouch, his future wife, won the competition for Miss South Carolina. Following this, Strom befriended her and hired her as his secretary and married her in November 1947. Crouch died of a brain tumour at the age of 33.

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Personal Life

In December 1968, Strom married another beauty contest winner Nancy Janice Moore. He was 66 at the time of his marriage and she was 44 years younger to him.

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Personal Life

James Strom Thurmond was born on December 5th 1902 in Edgefield, South Carolina in an upper middle class family of a lawyer John William Thurmond and his wife Eleanor Gertrude. His family had an English and German ancestry. Initially, Strom was attracted towards the idea of being a farmer and he pursued his goal by enrolling into Clemson University in his home state.

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Childhood & Early Life

Strom graduated in 1923 with a degree in horticulture and embarked on a career in farming. Apart from farming, teaching interested him and his love for athletics also dragged him into being an athletic coach. He did those three jobs until 1929, when he was 27 years old and by then he had started gaining an interest in politics.

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Childhood & Early Life

But upon the insistence of his father, he was pushed to study law and he became his father’s apprentice. He further received admission in the South Carolina Bar in 1930. By then, he was also serving as the superintendent of Education of Edgefield County. Starting from 1930, he further served as the attorney for Edgefield Town and County and resigned from his post to serve his country in the Second World War.

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Childhood & Early Life

He was directly promoted to the post of lieutenant colonel and following his brave service in the army, he received more than a dozen awards, medals and honours. This also played a major role in him attaining the trust of American voters as war heroes were always seen with utmost respect.

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Childhood & Early Life

He was elected as the Governor of the state of South Carolina in 1946 at a time when there were many limitations to the civil and voting rights for the black community. This was highly uncalled for as most of the population in the state comprised of African-Americans. As a democrat he was strongly against his party’s civil rights bill presented in the Congress. Several southern democrats walked out of the 1948 convention upon Strom’s insistence.

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Political Career

In the same year, he contested for the presidency and although he got a million votes, he lost to Harry S. Truman by a massive margin. Following a write-in campaign, he was appointed as a Democrat to the senate in 1954 and just a decade later he switched sides and aligned with Republicans. Despite switching sides, which isn’t generally considered a good thing on the part of a politician, he remained a favourite and kept getting re-elected over the years.

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Political Career

The main cause for him switching sides was his Democratic Party’s stance on the civil rights act, which was passed further in 1964 and allowed the African-Americans to have a right to vote and give them equal treatment under the state/national law.

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Political Career

After siding with the Republic party, he heavily campaigned for the Republic Party’s presidential candidates Richard Nixon and Barry Goldwater.

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Political Career

In the 70’s, his ties with Richard Nixon administration further strengthened and this allowed him to have a strong say in the Washington DC. People close to him said that Strom wanted to be the strongest political force in South Carolina. Despite being against the equal rights to blacks, he made a controversial decision to appoint an African-American Thomas Moss to his senate staff in 1971. A decade later, he further advocated that the birthday of Martin Luther King must be made into a national holiday.

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Political Career