Miami Herald

Late Gov. Bob Graham to lie in state in Tallahasse­e. Miami Lakes memorial service planned

- BY ALEXANDRA GLORIOSO aglorioso@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau staff writers Lawrence Mower and Romy Ellenbogen contribute­d to this report.

TALLAHASSE­E

Former Florida Gov. Bob Graham, who died Tuesday night at the age of 87, will lie in state in Tallahasse­e at the Florida Historic Capitol Museum on Friday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Graham’s body will be in a closed casket accompanie­d by military and state law enforcemen­t honor guards. The public is welcome to attend in person or watch the ceremony online on The Florida Channel.

Afterward, Graham will be buried privately at a service for family members only.

On May 11, there will be a public memorial service in Graham’s hometown of Miami Lakes at the Miami Lakes United Church of Christ. The time of the public memorial will be released after his private burial next week, according to a press release shared with the Miami Herald.

At Gov. Ron DeSantis’ order, U.S. and Florida flags will be flown at half-staff until sunset on Friday. During a recent news conference,

DeSantis said Graham “served this state with honor and integrity and really made a great contributi­on.”

The family is asking that in lieu of flowers, well-wishers make a donation to the Bob Graham Center for Public Service at the University of Florida. The center’s phone number is 352-273-1080.

Graham was first elected to the governorsh­ip in 1978 and held office for eight years. He went on to become a three-term U.S. senator, being first elected in 1986. He ushered in the state’s era of schoolcomp­etency testing, crafted the foundation for its modern environmen­tal policies and grappled with the mass influx of Cubans fleeing across the Straits of Florida in the early 1980s.

Graham left his fingerprin­ts throughout the state over his morethan four decades in Florida politics, during which he became known for his pragmatic, centrist approach. As governor, his 1983 “Save Our Everglades” restoratio­n program served as the foundation for four decades of state and federal efforts to bring back and preserve the natural flow of the River of Grass.

As a senator, he pushed for greater transparen­cy around the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and earned a reputation as a conscienti­ous objector, becoming one of just 23 U.S. senators to oppose then-President George W. Bush’s request to authorize the use of force preceding the 2003 Iraq war.

And on the stump, his “work days” — a series of more-than 400 campaign events that brought him closer to Floridians by working everyman jobs like garbage-loader, short-order cook and bulletproo­fvest maker — created a model for politician­s eager to appear blue collar.

“Bob Graham devoted his life to the betterment of the world around him,” his family said in a statement Tuesday night announcing his death. “The memorials to that devotion are everywhere — from the Everglades and other natural treasures he was determined to preserve, to the colleges and universiti­es he championed with his commitment to higher education, to the global understand­ing he helped to foster through his work with the intelligen­ce community, and so many more.”

 ?? PATRICK FARRELL Miami Herald, file ?? Then-U.S. Senator Bob Graham in 1998 at a home in Miami Beach where he attended a fundraiser.
PATRICK FARRELL Miami Herald, file Then-U.S. Senator Bob Graham in 1998 at a home in Miami Beach where he attended a fundraiser.

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