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  • Columnists:
  • Black
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The Old Confederate: William Brimage Bate

by Ray Hill | Sep 2, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

By Ray Hill Just a few years following America’s bloody Civil War, as states were readmitted to the Union, old Confederates began to arrive in Congress.  The United States Senate particularly came to be dominated by Southerners, who occupied most of the powerful...

Chapman Revercomb of West Virginia

by Ray Hill | Aug 25, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives, Stories In This Week's Focus:

  By Ray Hill West Virginia was once one of the more reliably Republican states in the country.  Following the Great Depression and the rise of the machine headed by U. S. Senator Matthew Mansfield Neely of Fairmont, the election of 1932 changed the political...

Theodore Francis Green of Rhode Island

by Ray Hill | Aug 18, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives, Stories In This Week's Focus:

By Ray Hill Before Strom Thurmond, Theodore Francis Green was well known for some years as being the oldest member of the United States Senate. First elected when he was sixty-nine years old, Theodore Francis Green frustrated several generations of aspiring...

Peggy Eaton: The Woman Who Brought Down A Cabinet

by Ray Hill | Aug 11, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives

By Ray Hill Margaret “Peggy” Timberlake Eaton has been the subject of books and even one Hollywood film (The Gorgeous Hussy) and is oftentimes portrayed as the vixen who nearly caused the collapse of President Andrew Jackson’s administration.  The controversy over...

A Tale of Tennessee and the FBI: Senator K. D. McKellar and J. Edgar Hoover

by Ray Hill | Aug 4, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives, Stories In This Week's Focus:

By Ray Hill Francis Biddle was attorney general of the United States under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He noted Tennessee’s Senator Kenneth D. McKellar could be “obstinate” and “vindictive,” but was careful to note McKellar was “shrewd.” Biddle also...

Governor Prentice Cooper, Chapter V

by Ray Hill | Jul 28, 2013 | Archives, Columnist, Hill, Ray Hill's Archives, Stories In This Week's Focus:

By Ray Hill Prentice Cooper was barred by state law from seeking yet another term as Tennessee’s governor in 1944; there was no Senate seat to contest and he was faced with the prospect of retiring from public office. Cooper clearly wanted to remain in public life and...
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