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Saturday, May 19, 2012
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You are here ::PoliticsThe FordsHarold Ford, Sr.
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Harold Ford

Born: 1945

 

Harold Eugene Ford, Sr. (born May 20, 1945) was a United States Representative from Tennessee from 1975 to 1997. He is a Democrat.

Ford was born in Memphis to a prominent black family who were leaders in the funeral industry in Memphis' black community, dating back to the days of E.H. Crump. He attended Tennessee State University in Nashville, graduating in 1967. He also received a mortuary science degree from John A. Gupton College, a private mortuary science school also located in Nashville, in 1969. (He was later to earn a M.B.A. degree at Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1982.)

Political Career

Ford was elected to the Tennessee House of Representatives in 1970, one of the youngest members and one of only a few blacks to have served in the Tennessee General Assembly to that point in the 20th century. He was a delegate to the Democratic State Convention and the Democratic National Convention in 1972.

After two terms, he ran for and won the Democratic nomination for the Memphis-based 8th Congressional District in 1974. He faced Republican incumbent Dan Kukyendall. Ford received a significant boost from the 1970 round of redistricting, in which Tennessee lost a congressional district. In the process, they gave the 8th a considerably larger number of black voters than had previously been in the district. While Kuykendall won reelection in 1972, many analysts believed that this district would not stay Republican for long. Ford waged a tremendous get-out-the-vote campaign in the black community. The race was very close, and when the votes were first counted it looked like Kuykendall had eked out a narrow victory. Ford's supporters found eight ballot boxes in a dumpster behind the offices of the Republican, all-white Shelby County Election Commission. The votes in those boxes gave Ford the win in what is still considered an upset by some analysts, making him the first black U.S. Representative elected from the Southeast in the 20th century. However, Ford never faced another election nearly that close. During tenure in Congress, he served on the House Select Committee on Assassinations.

Ford was extremely popular in the Memphis black community, in part due to his sometimes-confrontational attitude toward whites, especially those whom he felt were not showing him the respect that he and his office were due. Conversely, he was extremely unpopular with many Memphis whites. However, in the 1980s round of redistricting, the district was renumbered the 9th (after Tennessee gained a district) and drawn as a majority-black district, and Republicans subsequently lost interest in the seat.

While Ford never achieved much national distinction, he seemed to be under constant investigation during his time in Congress particularly during Republican national administrations. His detractors said this was due to corruption, while his supporters maintained that he was merely the victim of harassment for effectively representing his constituents. One case so polarized Memphis that a jury from outside of Memphis was brought in in an attempt to try the case fairly. (He was never convicted of anything.) Ford also suffered in the eyes of many for the antics of his brother John, who had been elected to the Tennessee State Senate in the same 1974 election. John Ford was even more confrontational than his brother and was famous for, among other things, driving between Memphis and Nashville at high speeds in possession of a firearm (although he was never convicted of such charges, either). Harold Ford pointed out that his brother was a separate person over whom he had no control.

Ford had long groomed his son Harold, Jr. to be his successor and decided that 1996 would be the year that this would occur, as that was the year that young Ford completed law school (at the University of Michigan, where he received little of the attention that likely would have been focused on him had he attended in the South). Harold, Sr. has publicly stated that he hoped that the confrontational tactics that he had sometimes used, particularly with regard to race, would never need to be employed by his son. This attitude has served his son well, as the district was considerably enlarged in the 2000 redistricting and now again includes a substantial minority of white voters.

Ford, Sr. now lives in Miami and is still active in Democratic Party politics.

Source: www.wikipedia.com

  
Here the history of Memphis is presented.  From the Chickasaw to the great New Madrid earthquake of 1811 on to the land's purchase by John Overton and Andrew Jackson, followed by incorporation and Civil War occupation.  Picking up with the yellow fever followed by the surrender of the city charter and the tenure of the former city as a taxing district of Shelby County and the state of Tennessee.  We continue Memphis history into the days of Crump and the progressive era when the city would be made to conform to order.  Memphis history is rich with time, music and commerce.  From the blues of Beale Street to Elvis Presley and Sun Records the City of Memphis been enriched by transporation, cotton, mules and hardware; bridge openings to celebrate and the sorrows of the 1968 Sanitation Strike which culminated in the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  Memphis has persevered through pain and has been anything but dull.  This is our story...
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