Everything about Gordon Browning totally explained
Gordon Weaver Browning (
November 22,
1895–
May 23,
1976) was an
American politician who represented
Tennessee in the
United States Congress and was later
Governor of Tennessee from 1937 to 1939 and again from 1949 to 1953.
Browning was a native of
Atwood,
Carroll County, Tennessee and attended
public schools, graduating from
Milan, Tennessee High School. He graduated from
Valparaiso University in
Indiana in 1913. In 1915 he graduated from the
Cumberland School of Law in
Lebanon, Tennessee, passed the
bar examination and began practice as an
attorney in
Huntingdon. Upon U.S. entry into
World War I, he enlisted in the
Tennessee National Guard, later being sent to
Europe, where he was eventually promoted to the rank of captain.
After World War I, Browning returned to the practice of law and ran for the
Democratic nomination for the
United States House of Representatives in 1920, but lost. Running again for that position in 1922 he was successful, serving six terms in that body. In his final term he was selected to be one of the "managers" (prosecutors) in the
Senate impeachment trial of
Harold Louderback,
judge of the
U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. However, his race for the 1934 Democratic nomination for United States Senate wasn't successful and he returned to the practice of law in Huntingdon. When
Memphis political "boss" E. H. Crump had a falling out with
Governor Hill McAlister, McAlister decided not to run for a third term, and Browning became Crump's chosen candidate to succeed him. Browning received the
Democratic nomination for governor in August, 1936, then tantamount to electoral success when campaigning for statewide office in
Tennessee. He coasted to election in November of that year.
However, Browning and Crump came to a parting of the ways shortly after Browning's inauguration as governor. Crump threw his support to newly-elected
state senator Prentice Cooper, who defeated Browning for renomination in August, 1938. Browning never removed himself very far from politics, however. Returning to his hometown of Huntingdon, Browning bided his time through three terms by Cooper and two by his successor,
Jim Nance McCord. During this time he served from 1942 on as a chancery court
judge, this service being interrupted by a return to active military duty in
World War II from February, 1943 until January, 1946, again serving in
Europe. During this period he was promoted to
lieutenant colonel.
In 1948 Browning saw his opportunity, bolstered by the support of
Estes Kefauver, then a popular five-term Congressman making his initial race for the
Senate. McCord had pushed through the
legislature the first
sales tax (2%) in Tennessee history, and had been an advocate of
right-to-work legislation, both of which were very unpopular with much of his base of support. In August, 1948 Browning defeated McCord for the Democratic nomination for governor. With an opponent of his winning statewide nomination, the influence of E. H. Crump over politics at the statewide level was largely over, although he still wielded considerable influence within Memphis itself until his death half a decade later.
However, for the first time over a quarter of a century, the Democratic nominee for governor faced a very well-known and reasonably well-funded
Republican opponent in the November
general election.
Country music entertainer
Roy Acuff was the 1948 Republican nominee for governor. Acuff's position in the race was largely unexpected, even to himself. His entry into the Republican
primary had been encouraged by state Republican officials as a
publicity stunt to foster interest in the Republican primary. The idea was that the presence of Acuff on the ballot would serve as a drawing card to Republican events; the crowds thus assembled would learn about serious Republican candidates, bolstering the party. This tactic backfired when Acuff's popularity, especially in
East Tennessee where he was originally from and where the vast bulk of Republican voters in Tennessee were in that era, resulted in Acuff's receiving the nomination, much to chagrin of party officials, and even Acuff himself.
Thus thrust into the fray, Acuff decided to take his position seriously; however the entertainer versus the experienced former governor proved to be the mismatch that could have been anticipated, and Browning won in a landslide. Acuff sent along his congratulations, admitting that the outcome was probably the best one possible for all concerned. (When a Republican
was elected governor of Tennessee over two decades later, one of the first controversial decisions
Winfield Dunn made as governor was to purchase
Dunbar Cave, a large
cave located near
Clarksville, Tennessee which had previously been used as a summertime entertainment venue prior to the advent of
air conditioning and which was owned by Acuff, for a
state park. This was widely regarded as a payback to Acuff for his role as a political "sacrificial lamb" over twenty years earlier.)
Browning resigned his chancery court judgeship just before his second term as governor began. A staunch advocate of
education, he found that he couldn't push his educational agenda adequately if the sales tax were to be repealed. In many ways Browning was
progressive for a
Southern governor of his era, supporting first
Franklin D. Roosevelt's
New Deal and then
Harry S. Truman's
Fair Deal. He didn't get the right-to-work legislation repealed, however; Tennessee is still an "
open shop"
state. Browning was renominated, turning back the challenge of
Nashville attorney
Clifford Allen, and was re-elected in 1950. However, he faced a new challenge in 1952 in addition to another one from Allen, that from fellow
attorney Frank G. Clement of
Dickson. A brilliant orator and
World War II veteran, who was only 32 at the time, Clement saw Browning's ties to the
railroad interests as a weakness and exploited it by garnering the backing of roadbuilders. Also, although Browning had been himself something of an insurgent and was still only in his mid-50s, he now came across as part of the Old Guard, the last gasp of the World War I generation desperately staving off the young bulls who had served in World War II (even though he also had done so himself), and he lost the 1952 nomination to Clement.
In retirement back in his hometown of Huntingdon, he continued to show an active interest in Democratic politics until very shortly before his death in 1976, apparently being used as an unofficial advisor to younger Democratic
political figures on several occasions. He also engaged in
farming and headed an
insurance concern. He died in Huntingdon and was interred in that community's Oak Hill Cemetery.
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