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128th Georgia General Assembly

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128th Georgia General Assembly
127th 129th
Great Seal of the State of Georgia
Overview
Legislative bodyGeorgia General Assembly
Meeting placeCapitol Building - Atlanta
Senate
Members54
President of the SenatePeter Zack Geer
Party controlDemocratic Party
House of Representatives
Members180
Speaker of the HouseGeorge T. Smith
Party controlDemocratic Party

The 128th Georgia General Assembly convened its first session on January 13, 1965, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta. The 128th Georgia General Assembly succeeded the 127th and served as the precedent for the 129th General Assembly in 1967.

Governor Carl Sanders, who was elected in 1962 as the first governor elected by popular vote since 1908, spearheaded a massive reapportionment of Georgia's General Assembly and 10 U.S. Congressional districts, providing more proportional representation to the state's urban areas.[1] This, as well as passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 had opened voter registration to blacks, saw eleven African Americans elected to the Georgia House of Representatives in special elections in 1965 and 1966. By ending the disfranchisement of blacks through discriminatory voter registration, African Americans regained the ability to vote and entered the political process.[2] This was the first time that African-Americans had sat in the House since W. H. Rogers of McIntosh resigned his seat in 1907 during the 99th Assembly. Among them were six from Atlanta (William Alexander, Julian Bond, Benjamin Brown, J. C. Daugherty, J. D. Grier, Grace Towns Hamilton, John Hood) and one each from Columbus (Albert Thompson) and Augusta (Richard Dent). Horace T. Ward also joined Leroy Johnson as the second African-American in the State Senate.

Controversy

On January 10, 1966, Georgia state representatives voted 184–12 not to seat Julian Bond, one of the eleven African-American members, because he had publicly endorsed SNCC's policy regarding opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War.[3] They disliked his stated sympathy for persons who were "unwilling to respond to a military draft".[4] A three-judge panel on the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia ruled in a 2–1 decision that the Georgia House had not violated any of Bond's constitutional rights. In 1966, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled 9–0 in the case of Bond v. Floyd (385 U.S. 116) that the Georgia House of Representatives had denied Bond his freedom of speech and was required to seat him.

Party standing

Senate

  • Republicans: 9
  • Democrats: 44
  • Independents: 1

House

Officers

Senate

House

Members of the State Senate

District Senator Party Residence
1 Frank O. Downing Democratic Savannah
2 William Searcey Democratic Savannah
3 Joseph Tribble Republican Savannah
4 B. Avant Edenfield Democratic Statesboro
5 John M. Gayner, III Democratic Brunswick
6 Roscoe E. Dean, Jr. Democratic Jesup
7 Frank Eldridge, Jr. Democratic Waycross
8 Bobby Rowan Democratic Enigma
9 Ford Spinks Democratic Tifton
10 William H. Flowers Democratic Thomasvile
11 Julian Webb Democratic Donalsonville
12 Al Holloway Democratic Albany
13 Martin Young Democratic Rebecca
14 Jimmy Carter Democratic Plains
15 A. Perry Gordy Republican Columbus
16 Ivey William Gregory Republican Columbus
17 John Thomas McKenzie Democratic Montezuma
18 Stanley Smith Democratic Perry
19 Roy Noble Democratic Vienna
20 Hugh Gillis Democratic Soperton
21 Roy G. Foster Republican Wadley
22 Rudolph Holley Democratic Augusta
23 Michael Padgett Independent McBean
24 Sam P. McGill Democratic Washington
25 Culver Kidd Democratic Milledgeville
26 John W. Adams III Republican Macon
27 Oliver Bateman Republican Macon
28 Robert Smalley Democratic Griffin
29 Render Hill Democratic Greenville
30 Lamar Plunkett Democratic Bowdon
31 Albert F. Moore Democratic Cedartown
32 Edward Kendrick Democratic Marietta
33 Kyle Yancey Democratic Austell
34 Standish Thompson Republican East Point
35 Frank Coggin Democratic Hapeville
36 Joe Salome Democratic Atlanta
37 James Wesberry Democratic Atlanta
38 Leroy Johnson Democratic Atlanta
39 Horace Ward Democratic Atlanta
40 Dan MacIntyre Republican Atlanta
41 Gene Sanders Republican Tucker
42 Ben F. Johnson Democratic Atlanta
43 Frank G. Miller Republican Decatur
44 Kenneth Kilpatrick Democratic Forest Park
45 Brooks Pennington Democratic Madison
46 Paul C. Broun Democratic Athens
47 Robert Lee Democratic Hartwell
48 J. Albert Minish Democratic Commerce
49 Erwin Owens Democratic Dahlonega
50 Robert Ballew Democratic Blue Ridge
51 Jack Fincher Democratic Canton
52 James Battle Hall Democratic Rome
53 Joseph Loggins Democratic Summerville
54 W.W. (Bill) Fincher, Jr. Democratic Chatsworth

Members of the House

District Representative Party Residence
1-1 Maddox Hale Democratic Trenton
1-2 Billy Shaw Abney Democratic LaFayette
1-3 Wayne Snow, Jr. Democratic Chickamauga
2 Joe T. Clark Democratic Ringgold
3-1 Thomas M. Mitchell Democratic Dalton
3-2 Virgil T. Smith Democratic Dalton
3-3 Gerald H. Leonard Democratic Chatsworth
4 A.C. Duncan Democratic McCaysville
5 Carlton Colwell Democratic Blairsville
6 Fulton Lovell Democratic Clayton
7 James H. Floyd Democratic Trion
8 J.C. Maddox Democratic Calhoun
9 Charles B. Watkins Democratic Ellijay
10 James Otwell Democratic Cumming
11 Thomas Irvin Democratic Mt. Airy
12 Don C. Moore Democratic Toccoa
13-1 Sidney Lowrey Democratic Rome
13-2 Jerry Lee Minge Democratic Rome
13-3 Dick Starnes Democratic Rome
14-1 Joe Frank Harris Democratic Cartersville
14-2 David N. Vaughn Democratic Cartersville
15 Thomas Roach Democratic Ball Ground
16-1 Bill Williams Democratic Gainesville
16-2 Howard T. Overby Democratic Gainesville
16-3 Joe Terrell Wood Democratic Gainesville
17 Thomas Stovall Democratic Danielsville
18 A.T. Mauldin Democratic Carnesville
19 M. Parks Brown Democratic Hartwell
20-1 J. Harvey Moore Democratic Cedartown
20-2 Nathan D. Dean Democratic Rockmart
21 George Bagby Democratic Dallas
22-1 Earl P. Story Democratic Lawrenceville
22-2 Tom O. Watson Democratic Lawrenceville

References

  1. ^ Cook, James F. (September 12, 2002). "Carl Sanders". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
  2. ^ Timothy Crimmins, Anne H. Farrisee; University of Georgia Press (2007). Democracy Restored: A History of the Georgia State Capitol. books.google.com. pp. 140–144. ISBN 978-0820329116.
  3. ^ "Julian Bond Only Candidate For Vacant Post". Rome News-Tribune. February 8, 1966. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  4. ^ The World Almanac 1967, pp. 54–55

External links