The Tuscaloosa News

John Sparkman built his legacy in the U.S. Senate

- Inside the Statehouse

In my 2015 book, “Of Goats and Governors: Six Decades of Colorful Alabama Political Stories,” I have a chapter entitled “Alabama's Three Greatest Senators.”

I chronicle the lives and accomplish­ments of Richard Shelby, Lister Hill and John Sparkman. Last week, we gave you the history of Lister Hill. This week we will give you a brief story of the legacy of the great John Sparkman.

Hill and Sparkman served as a tandem in Washington for more than 20 years and were respected giants on Capitol Hill. Our Hill-Sparkman team was unsurpasse­d in power and prestige from 1946 to 1970. They were admired, not only in Alabama and the South, but throughout the nation. They were powerful and extremely effective for our state, but also portrayed a good image as erudite Southern gentlemen.

Sparkman served an amazing 32 years in the United States Senate from 1946 through 1978. He served 12 years in the U.S. Congress from Huntsville and the Tennessee Valley before being elected to the Senate. He made his presence known as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, which at the time oversaw housing for America. Furthermor­e, he was the Democratic nominee for vice president in 1952.

Sparkman is the father of the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville. His legacy lives on today with the growth and aerospace prominence of Alabama's Rocket City. Our fastest-growing and most economical­ly prosperous metropolit­an area began its presence in the 1960s because of Sparkman. In fact, the city should probably be referred to as Sparkmanvi­lle rather than Huntsville.

Sparkman was not born into privilege, like Hill. Sparkman was born and raised on an unpretenti­ous tenant farm near Hartselle in Morgan County. He had 10 brothers and sisters.

In 1917, by making a cotton crop and netting $75, he was able to enroll in the University of Alabama. At Alabama he was editor of the Crimson and White and like Hill, he was elected president of the student body. At the same time, he worked his way through school shoveling coal and feeding furnaces.

After graduation from the University of Alabama School of Law, he practiced law in Huntsville for 12 years before being elected to Congress in 1936. Like Hill, he supported President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal. The passage of the Tennessee Valley Authority (“TVA”) Act was a tremendous boost for his North Alabama Tennessee Valley district. The TVA Act transforme­d North

Alabama.

In 1946, he had served his North Alabama congressio­nal district well for over a decade and was elected to the U.S. Senate. Sen. John Bankhead had died in office and Sparkman won the seat handily with strong backing of labor unions, which were in their heyday in Alabama politics.

Sparkman rose to power and prominence in the Senate. He made his mark as the father of federal housing for the poor. He became chairman of the very powerful Senate Banking Committee, as well as its Housing Subcommitt­ee. Sparkman was the author of practicall­y every major housing bill after World War II, and is also known as the father of the Small Business Administra­tion. He was also the ranking majority member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

For more than two decades, Sparkman and Hill served together as a team, the most powerful and respected tandem in Washington. While some Southern senators were making racist speeches on the floor of the U.S. Senate, Hill and Sparkman refused to race bait. They preferred to quietly bring home the bacon to Alabama with dignity. They had a team approach to helping Alabama and their voting records on major issues, which faced the nation, were identical.

Both men served as president of the student body of the University of Alabama, and both were products of what is known as the political “machine” at the University of Alabama.

Sparkman was a giant in the United States Senate and an icon in Alabama political history.

Steve Flowers is Alabama’s leading political columnist. His weekly column appears in over 60 Alabama newspapers. He served 16 years in the state legislatur­e. Steve can be reached at www.steveflowe­rs.us.

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