The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Keep Russell’s name on Senate building

- By Sally Russell Warrington Sally Russell Warrington is a niece of the late U.S. Sen. Richard B. Russell. She is an historian and author whose books have been published by both the University of Georgia and Mercer University presses.

The range of history in the dates of Richard Brevard Russell (1897-1971) indicates that he lived, as he said, “during the most thrilling 50 years in the life of the human family.” That “fifty” encompasse­s his years of public service, begun when he was 23 years old.

In 1897 the world was beginning a dramatic swing into a century that would see more changes in religion, politics, society, science, technology and war than almost all other centuries of human history. It was a tempestuou­s and provocativ­e ride for a white male born to fulfill great expectatio­ns in the mercurial modern political arena, yet reared also to venerate the worn and vanishing splendor of the American Old South.

Russell became one of the half-dozen most powerful men in Washington for a period of 20 years, and it was frequently speculated that if he had been from a state such as Indiana, Illinois, or Missouri, the presidency could not have been denied him. Although Russell, a keen historian, felt deeply the hurt of being Southern when it was still to be a much disfavored stepchild on the national scene, all who knew him and his work judged that within these difficult boundaries he operated with consummate grace, able to deal with an astonishin­g range of national problems. The vote to name the Senate Office Building in his honor was 99 to 1, yet his stand on civil rights legislatio­n has tainted his reputation in recent years.

It is hardly surprising that a white, middle-class male, born in 1897 in Winder, the first son of Southern parents who were themselves children of the social and economic horrors of Reconstruc­tion, would grow up believing in segregatio­n. The scientific superiorit­y of the white race, now clearly accepted as mistaken, was taught in his schools. There were no radios, no television­s, and only white Southern newspapers and histories were presented to him until he was grown. In his family life he saw no abuse of the many African-American people who worked as servants and farm laborers. Instead he learned a respect for them as human beings in a specific place within an ancient hierarchy. Thanks to his mother’s example of acceptance of this hierarchy, which she saw as Biblical, he had the same attitude toward women of all races.

Allegiance to hierarchy dominated the world’s government­s throughout most of the history of humankind until the establishm­ent of the American state in the late 18th century. Even then, our Founding Fathers created the United States Senate as part of the governing mechanism, hoping this elite body would prevent democracy’s potential to deteriorat­e into mob rule.

Russell believed in the American system. When he went to the Senate at age 35, he studied that institutio­n’s inspiratio­n and methods and the U.S. Constituti­on in order to understand what he could do as a lawmaker. He became the undisputed authority in that illustriou­s body on what could and couldn’t be done with legislatio­n.

Perhaps one of his greatest tributes is that Hubert Humphrey used some of Russell’s strategies to prevent passage of civil rights legislatio­n in order to ensure its passage in 1964. Humphrey, an avowed and effective opponent on this measure, was one of Russell’s greatest admirers in the Senate. Although weather prevented many of his Senator colleagues from getting to Winder for Russell’s funeral, Humphrey managed to get there by taking a bus from Atlanta. He walked down the driveway of the family homeplace in a pouring rain in order to pay his respects.

Throughout years of civil rights fights, Russell was known for keeping the argument as decorous as possible. He was not a fiery, discourteo­us demagogue, was never accused of nastiness. On the contrary, it was lamented that such courtesy and knowledge of government could be used effectivel­y against this human rights issue. It should never be ignored that he conducted all his objections under Constituti­onal considerat­ions. When the Civil Rights law passed in 1964, he immediatel­y urged compliance with it — a stand taken by few, if any other, Southern politician­s.

Richard Russell was an historian, with profound knowledge of world and American history. Above all, he was a gifted and capable leader, uncommonly devoted to public service. He was human and therefore flawed, but Georgians and other Americans can be justly proud of this citizen and his life of extraordin­ary public service.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States