Everything about Lester Maddox totally explained
Lester Garfield Maddox (
September 30,
1915 –
June 25,
2003) was an
American Democratic Party politician who was
governor of the
U.S. state of
Georgia from
1967 to
1971. He came to prominence as a staunch
segregationist and maintained, to his death, that he never had any regrets. However,
Tom Murphy (former Georgia House Speaker) stated, "He had a reputation as a segregationist, but he told us he wasn't a segregationist, but that you should be able to associate with whoever you wanted. He went on to do more for African-Americans than any governor of Georgia up until that time."
Early life
Lester Maddox was the first governor of Georgia born in
Atlanta, the second of the seven children of Dean Garfield Maddox and Flonnie Castleberry Maddox; his father was a steelworker. Dropping out of school following his junior year in high school, Maddox earned $4 a week at a local drugstore in order to help the family's finances in the midst of the
Depression. He went on to become an apprentice dental technician before accepting a job in his father's line of work at the steel mills. Starting out at a salary of $10 per week, Maddox eventually was promoted to foreman.
Life and career
Pickrick Cafeteria
In 1944, Maddox, along with his wife, the former Virginia Cox, used $400 they'd saved to open up a combination grocery store/restaurant. Building on that success, the couple then bought property on Hemphill Avenue off the
Georgia Tech campus to open up the Pickrick Cafeteria.
Maddox made the Pickrick a family affair with his wife and children working side-by-side with him. The restaurant became known for its simple, inexpensive food, including its specialty, skillet-fried chicken.
It soon became a thriving business. The restaurant also provided Maddox with his first political forum: the restaurant became well known in Atlanta for large newspaper advertisements that featured cartoon chickens. Following the Brown v. the Board of Education decision of 1954, these restaurant ads began more and more to feature the cartoon chickens commenting on the political questions of the day. However, Maddox's refusal to adjust to changes following the passage of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 manifested itself when he filed a lawsuit to continue his segregationist policies. Maddox said that he'd close his restaurant rather than serve black people. An initial group of black demonstrators came to the restaurant but didn't enter when Maddox informed them that he'd a large number of black employees. In April of 1964, more African-Americans attempted to enter the restaurant. Maddox confronted the group, brandishing a handgun.
Unable to win his case, he became a martyr to states-rights advocates by selling the restaurant to employees rather than bowing to government coercion to serve black customers.
The building was purchased by Georgia Tech in 1965 and was used for many years as the placement center. It is currently known as the Ajax building.
Early Campaigns
During his ownership of the Pickrick, he twice ran for mayor of Atlanta. In
1957, he lost to incumbent
William B. Hartsfield, who sought a more moderate racial approach, then lost to
Ivan Allen, Jr. four years later, with the two politicians splitting the white vote. Allen's ability to garner virtually all the black votes proved to be the difference.
In
1962, Maddox ran for
Lieutenant Governor against
Peter Zack Geer, a candidate who shared his opponent's strong states-rights views. In an effort to differentiate from each other, both candidates attempted to paint the other as an extremist. Geer won the race, but Maddox gained valuable recognition across the state.
Governor of Georgia
When Maddox sought the
Democratic Party nomination for
Governor of Georgia in 1966, his principal opponent for the nomination was former governor
Ellis Arnall. That election was still in the era of Democratic Party dominance in Georgia, when winning the Democratic primary was tantamount to election. Since there was no Republican primary at the time, and there were a great many voters who identified with the Republicans, the Republicans voted in the Democratic primary and chose the candidate who they thought would lose against their candidate, Howard Callaway. In the primary election, Arnall won a plurality of the popular vote, but was denied the required majority. Lester Maddox, the candidate in second place, then ran in a run-off against Ellis Arnall. Again, the Republicans voted in the Democratic primary runoff. There were some two or three other candidates, including then-state Senator
Jimmy Carter. Arnall barely campaigned in the run-off election, and the result was a victory for Maddox.
Stunned, Arnall announced a write-in candidacy for the general election, insisting that Georgians must have the option of a moderate Democrat besides party-nominee Maddox and the Republican candidate. In that contest,
Republican nominee
Howard "Bo" Callaway, the first Republican member of the United States House of Representatives elected from Georgia since the close of Reconstruction, won a
plurality, and Maddox finished second. Under the election rules then in effect, the state legislature was required to select a governor from the two candidates with the highest number of votes. With the legislature overwhelmingly dominated by Democrats, all of whom had been required to sign a Democratic loyalty oath which required them to support Democrats only, Maddox became Governor, serving from 1967 to 1971.
Maddox campaigned hard for states-rights. He then governed as a moderate, and appointed more blacks to state government office than any of his predecessors. Despite this, Maddox did manifest anti-black sentiments while in office. Upon the death of
Martin Luther King, Jr., he denied the slain civil rights leader the honor of lying in state in the Georgia state capitol after being provided reports from undercover agents in the Atlanta Police Department that there was a planned storming of the state capitol by participants in the crowd of mourners. As a precaution, Maddox stationed 64 officers in riot gear stationed in groups of eight at each of the entrances to the capitol.
His often self-deprecating humor and off-the-cuff manner stood in contrast to the fiery rhetoric of other Southern politicians such as
George Wallace and
Strom Thurmond: when asked what could be done to improve the abysmal conditions in Georgia prisons, Maddox replied that what was really needed was a better class of prisoner. Maddox's chief of staff was
Zell Miller, who went on to serve two terms as governor in the
1990s.
In
1968, a small Atlanta repertory company produced a play entitled, "
Red, White and Maddox". The play ridiculed Maddox and imagined him winning the
1972 U.S. presidential election, then starting a war with the
Soviet Union. The show came to Broadway and ran 41 performances at the Cort Theatre before closing.
Under the Georgia constitution of
1945, Maddox was
prohibited from running for a second consecutive term, necessitating a
1970 run for
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia. Although Maddox was elected as a Democratic candidate at the same time as
Jimmy Carter's election as Governor as a Democratic candidate, the two were not
running mates; in Georgia, particularly in that era of Democratic dominance, the winners of the primary elections went on to easy victories in the general elections without campaigning together as an official ticket or as running mates. Carter and Maddox found little common ground during their four years of service, often publicly feuding with each other.
Shortly after that election, Maddox appeared as a guest on
The Dick Cavett Show on
December 18,
1970. During a commercial break, fellow guest and former football player
Jim Brown asked Maddox if he'd "any trouble with the white bigots because of all the things you did for blacks." On the air, Cavett substituted the word "admirers" in place of "bigots", enraging Maddox. After demanding an apology from Cavett and getting it, Maddox walked off the show.
Maddox ran again for governor in
1974 but lost in the Democratic primary to
George Busbee. Maddox called the campaign against Busbee "the worst thing I've ever been involved in." Busbee then handily defeated Republican
Ronnie Thompson, who had hoped to have faced Maddox in the fall campaign. Thompson called Maddox "a counterfeit conservative" and challenged the outgoing lieutenant governor to a debate. Maddox's former chief of staff
Zell Miller was successful in his own bid to succeed Maddox as lieutenant governor. When Carter ran for President in
1976, Maddox ran against him as the nominee of the
American Independent Party, saying that his former rival was "the most dishonest man I ever met." Maddox only received 170,000 votes in the election, less than 1 percent of the vote.
Accomplishments in office
- Salary increases (in dollars) during four years as governor were more than for the two previous administrations combined.
- Percentage of salary increase for elementary and secondary teachers was a record breaker that wasn't reached again until fifteen years later
- In higher education, the State Board of Regents received the highest budget increase of the latter half of the 20th century; and has been reported as likely the largest percentage increase for higher education of any state during the four fiscal years of the Maddox approved state budget appropriations.
- Dollars gained for new and expanded industry (during the Maddox Administration) equaled that of the five previous four year terms from 1947 through 1966.
- According to southerncurrents.com, Maddox "left the Office of Governor with a favorable poll rating of above 84% and won the Office of Lieutenant Governor in a landslide vote of over 73%, which remains the greatest percentage of votes for any governor or lieutenant governor against a Republican opponent in a Georgia General Election".
Retirement
With his political career over and with massive debts stemming from his
1974 gubernatorial bid, Maddox began a short-lived nightclub comedy career in
1977 with an
African-American,
Bobby Lee Sears, who had worked as a busboy in his restaurant. Sears had served time in prison for a drug offense before Maddox, as Lieutenant Governor, was able to assist him in obtaining a pardon. Calling themselves "The Governor and the Dishwasher," the duo performed comedy bits built around musical numbers with Maddox on
harmonica and Sears on
guitar.
On
September 25,
1977, Maddox suffered a heart attack, but recovered and attended a number of appreciation dinners from Georgia Democrats that reduced his debts. In an attempt to raise further money, Maddox auctioned off memorabilia the following year from his days as a restaurateur and a politician. Included in this collection were autographed ax handles. The auction brought only $1,392, but Maddox refused to declare bankruptcy, saying, "I'd rather die."
Maddox began a real estate company, but never again experienced the financial success he'd enjoyed with the "Pickrick." When he was diagnosed with
cancer in
1983, Maddox traveled to the
Bahamas for experimental treatment. Two years later, the facility where he received his treatment was closed due to fears of contamination by
AIDS. He never contracted the latter disease, and made a successful recovery from his cancer.
He made one final unsuccessful bid for governor in
1990, then underwent heart surgery the following year. He remained a visible figure in his home community of
Cobb County for the remainder of his life. In
1992 and
1996, Maddox crossed party lines and endorsed unsuccessful populist Republican
Patrick J. Buchanan for the presidency. His last public speech was in Atlanta in
2001 at the annual national conference of the
Council of Conservative Citizens. This group, of which he was a charter member, is considered by the
Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC),
NAACP,
League of United Latin American Citizens, and
Anti-Defamation League to be a
racist or
white supremacist group.
On
June 25,
2003, after a fall while recuperating from intestinal surgery in an Atlanta
hospice, he died of complications from
pneumonia and
prostate cancer.
Lester Maddox and his wife Virginia were married for sixty-one years. At Maddox's home, a prominent landmark was a sign he'd made. The first half of the sign read: "Thanks be to God; He has given me my precious Virginia for 61 years as of May 9, '97." A second sign was added below it after his wife died shortly after. This sign read: "and God took her from me and carried her home 45 days later."
The Interstate Highway 75 bridge over the
Chattahoochee River at the southeastern boundary of Cobb County, GA is named the Lester and Virginia Maddox Bridge.
Maddox's name also appears in the opening lines of
Randy Newman's song "
Rednecks," in allusion to his appearance on
The Dick Cavett Show:
Last night I saw Lester Maddox on a TV show
With some smart-ass New York Jew
And the Jew laughed at Lester Maddox
And the audience laughed at Lester Maddox too
Well, he may be a fool, but he's our fool
And if they think they're better than him, they're wrong
So I went to the park and I took some paper along
And that's where I made this song
According to an interviewer from the alternative newspaper
Creative Loafing, "What offends [Maddox] most is Newman's crude reference to the Jewish man."
It should be noted, however, that Newman's lines are from the
point of view of an
unreliable narrator: specifically, a self-proclaimed "
redneck" who assumes, incorrectly, that Cavett is Jewish.
Further Information
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