Stand up for Alabama : Governor George Wallace.

By: Frederick, JeffMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Modern South SerPublisher: Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, 2007Copyright date: ©2007Description: 1 online resource (504 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780817380311Subject(s): Wallace, George C - Political and social viewsGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Stand up for Alabama : Governor George WallaceDDC classification: 976.1/063092 B LOC classification: F330Online resources: Click to View
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Shadows and Light -- 2. Reconstruction Redux, 1963 -- 3. Sins of Omission, Sins of Commission, 1964 -- 4. Checks and Balances, 1965 -- 5. Means to an End, 1966 -- 6. One Governor, Two Governors, or No Governor? 1967-1968 -- 7. Crossroads, 1968-1970 -- 8. Turning Point, 1970-1972 -- 9. A New Reality, 1972-1974 -- 10. Stuck in Neutral, 1974-1978 -- 11. The Last Campaign, 1982-1987 -- Appendix: People Interviewed -- Notes -- Index.
Summary: Whereas other studies have focused on George Wallace's career as a national figure, Stand Up for Alabama provides a detailed, comprehensive, and analytical study of Wallace's political life that emphasizes his activities and their impact within the state of Alabama. Jeff Frederick answers two fundamental questions: What was George Wallace's impact on the state of Alabama? Why did Alabamians continue to embrace him over a twenty-five year period? Using a variety of sources to document the state's performance in areas including mental health, education, conservation, prisons, and industrial development, Frederick answers question number one. He cites comparisons between Alabama and both peer states in the South and national averages. Wallace's policies improved the state, but only in relation to Alabama's past, not in relation to peer states in the region or national averages. As a result, energy was expended but little progress was made.   To answer the second question, Frederick uses the words of Alabamians themselves through oral history, correspondence, letters to the editor, and other sources. Alabamians, white and eventually black, supported Wallace because race was but one of his appeals. Stand Up for Alabama shows that Wallace connected to Alabamians at a gut level, reminding them of their history and memory, championing their causes on the stump, and soothing their concerns about their place in the region and the nation.   Jeff Frederick examines the development of policy during the Wallace administrations and documents relationships with his constituents in ways that go beyond racial politics. He also analyzes the connections between Wallace's career and Alabamians' understanding of their history, sense of morality, and class system. "Stand up for Alabama" was the governor's campaign slogan.
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Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Shadows and Light -- 2. Reconstruction Redux, 1963 -- 3. Sins of Omission, Sins of Commission, 1964 -- 4. Checks and Balances, 1965 -- 5. Means to an End, 1966 -- 6. One Governor, Two Governors, or No Governor? 1967-1968 -- 7. Crossroads, 1968-1970 -- 8. Turning Point, 1970-1972 -- 9. A New Reality, 1972-1974 -- 10. Stuck in Neutral, 1974-1978 -- 11. The Last Campaign, 1982-1987 -- Appendix: People Interviewed -- Notes -- Index.

Whereas other studies have focused on George Wallace's career as a national figure, Stand Up for Alabama provides a detailed, comprehensive, and analytical study of Wallace's political life that emphasizes his activities and their impact within the state of Alabama. Jeff Frederick answers two fundamental questions: What was George Wallace's impact on the state of Alabama? Why did Alabamians continue to embrace him over a twenty-five year period? Using a variety of sources to document the state's performance in areas including mental health, education, conservation, prisons, and industrial development, Frederick answers question number one. He cites comparisons between Alabama and both peer states in the South and national averages. Wallace's policies improved the state, but only in relation to Alabama's past, not in relation to peer states in the region or national averages. As a result, energy was expended but little progress was made.   To answer the second question, Frederick uses the words of Alabamians themselves through oral history, correspondence, letters to the editor, and other sources. Alabamians, white and eventually black, supported Wallace because race was but one of his appeals. Stand Up for Alabama shows that Wallace connected to Alabamians at a gut level, reminding them of their history and memory, championing their causes on the stump, and soothing their concerns about their place in the region and the nation.   Jeff Frederick examines the development of policy during the Wallace administrations and documents relationships with his constituents in ways that go beyond racial politics. He also analyzes the connections between Wallace's career and Alabamians' understanding of their history, sense of morality, and class system. "Stand up for Alabama" was the governor's campaign slogan.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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