The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ZELL MILLER’S LIFE

-

»Feb. 24, 1932 – Zell Bryan Miller is born in Young Harris, in Towns County. Miller’s father, Stephen Grady Miller, dies 17 days later, leaving Birdie Miller to raise her son by herself.

»1951 – Miller graduates from Young Harris Junior College, where his father and mother taught.

»1953 – After having doubts about his education while attending Emory University, Miller enlists in the U.S. Marine Corps.

»1954 – Miller marries Shirley Carver. They later have two sons.

»1956 – Out of the Marine Corps, Miller enrolls at the University of Georgia. He graduates with a bachelor’s degree in political science in 1957. He earns a master’s degree in history in 1958.

»1959 – Miller returns to Young Harris College as a professor, teaching history and political science.

»1959-60 – Miller serves one term as mayor of Young Harris.

»1961 – Miller is elected to the Georgia Senate, where he serves two terms.

»1964 – Miller runs unsuccessf­ully for a seat in Congress. »1965-66 – Miller leads the Georgia Board of Probation as its director.

»1967-68 – Miller serves as deputy director of the Georgia Department of Correction­s.

»1968-71 – Miller takes a leave of absence from Young Harris College to serve as executive secretary to Gov. Lester Maddox. Miller is credited with being a moderating influence on Maddox.

»1971-73 – Miller heads the state’s Democratic Party as its executive director.

»1973-75 – Miller serves on the state Board of Pardons and Parole.

»1975 – Miller begins a 16-year run as the state’s lieutenant governor, longer than anyone else who has ever served in that role.

»1980 – Miller runs for the U.S. Senate but loses in the Democratic primary to the incumbent, U.S. Sen. Herman Talmadge.

»1990 – Miller runs for governor, facing Andrew Young and Roy Barnes in the primary. Miller eventually beats Young in a runoff. During the campaign, Miller focuses on education and calls for a state lottery to increase funding for education. He also pledges to serve only one term as governor. Miller defeats state Sen. Johnny Isakson in the general election.

»1992 – Voters approve the lottery to fund pre-k, capital and technical enhancemen­ts for Georgia schools, and the HOPE Scholarshi­p. That same year, Miller signs into law the nation’s toughest repeat-offender law. Miller also provides key support to Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign. As part of that support, he serves as a keynote speaker at the Democratic National Convention and wins rave reviews.

»1993 – Miller leads an unsuccessf­ul effort to remove the Confederat­e battle emblem from the state’s flag.

»1994 – Despite his earlier pledge to serve only one term, Miller seeks re-election as governor. He defeats Republican Guy Millner with 51.05 percent of the vote. During his second term, he gave the state’s teachers 6 percent raises four consecutiv­e years.

»1999 – Miller leaves office with an 85 percent approval rating.

»2000 – Republican Georgia U.S. Sen. Paul Coverdell dies, and Gov. Roy Barnes appoints Miller to fill Coverdell’s seat. That November, Miller wins an election to serve the final four years of Coverdell’s term.

»2001 – Miller co-sponsors President George W. Bush’s tax cuts. He later backs Bush on homeland security and the deployment of troops to Iraq.

»2004 – Miller chooses not to seek re-election to the Senate. He publishes “A National Party No More: The Conscience of a Conservati­ve Democrat,” a book critical of the party’s national leadership. He also speaks at the Republican National Convention in support of Bush’s re-election. During the speech, Miller calls the Democratic nominee, U.S. Sen. John Kerry, “more wrong, more weak and more wobbly than any other national figure” on national security.

»2005 – Miller retires from the Senate and returns to teaching. He publishes another book critical of the national Democratic Party called “A Deficit of Decency.” Bush appoints Miller to the American Battle Monuments Commission, which oversees U.S. military cemeteries and monuments in other countries.

»2008 – The Zell B. Miller Learning Center is dedicated at the University of Georgia.

»2011 – In overhaulin­g the HOPE Scholarshi­p, Gov. Nathan Deal creates the Zell Miller Scholarshi­p to provide full tuition to the state’s top public college students.

»2014 – Miller weighs in on Georgia’s two biggest statewide elections. He endorses Democrat Michelle Nunn in the U.S. Senate race while also declaring his support for Republican Gov. Nathan Deal’s re-election. Sources: New Georgia Encycloped­ia, Biographic­al Directory of the United States Congress, National Governors Associatio­n, Georgia Political Heritage Program

 ??  ?? Zell Miller makes his inaugurati­on speech.
Zell Miller makes his inaugurati­on speech.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States