词条 | Seelig Wise |
释义 |
| name = Seelig Bartel "Bushie" Wise | image = | image_size = | caption = | office=Mississippi State Senator for Coahoma, Tunica, and Quitman counties | term_start=1964 | term_end=1968 | preceded= | succeeded= | party=Republican | birth_date ={{birth date|1913|8|7}} | birth_place= | death_place=Jackson, Hinds County Mississippi, USA | death_date ={{death date and age|2004|9|4|1913|8|7}} | resting_place= | residence=(1) Jonestown Coahoma County Mississippi (2) Jackson, Mississippi | occupation=Cotton and soybean farmer | religion=Southern Baptist | spouse=(1) Miriam Swann Wise (2) Melba Taylor Swift Wise | children=Daniel Reese Wise, Sr. Three grandchildren | relations= | parents= |alma_mater=Mississippi State University |branch=United States Army |battles=World War II |rank=Captain |footnotes= }} Seelig Bartel Wise, sometimes known as Bushie Wise (August 7, 1913 – September 4, 2004), was a cotton and soybean farmer and businessman from Clarksdale, Mississippi, who from 1964 to 1968 was the first Republican in the Mississippi State Senate since Reconstruction. BackgroundWise was a captain in the United States Army during World War II. He graduated from the Chinese Language School in Berkeley, California, and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Agriculture from Mississippi State University in Starkville. For a time, he was a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.[1] His family farm, owned with his brothers, was located at Jonestown in Coahoma County near Clarksdale in northwestern Mississippi.[1] Wise was a Southern Baptist, and had been married twice. He had one son, and three grandchildren.[1] Political lifeIn 1963, Wise ran for the state Senate seat encompassing Coahoma, Tunica, and Quitman counties[1] on the Republican ticket headed by gubernatorial nominee Rubel Phillips of Corinth and Jackson, Mississippi and the candidate for lieutenant governor, Stanford Morse, an outgoing state senator and lawyer from Gulfport on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Democratic Governor Ross Barnett was term-limited in the 1963 election. While Phillips and Morse were defeated by the Democrats Paul B. Johnson, Jr., and Carroll Gartin, respectively, Wise won his race. Buoyed by the Barry Goldwater landslide in Mississippi in 1964, Wise ran unsuccessfully in 1966 against the veteran Democrat Jamie L. Whitten for Mississippi's 2nd congressional district seat. In 1967, though Paul Johnson was ineligible to seek reelection as governor, a provision that has since been changed, Rubel Phillips again carried the Republican nomination for governor, but he was handily defeated by the Democrat U.S. Representative John Bell Williams of Mississippi's 3rd congressional district. By this time, Clarke Reed of Greenville had replaced the original chairman of the Mississippi Republican Party, Wirt Yerger, an insurance agent in Jackson. Wise lost his Senate seat after a single term, as did two freshmen Republican members of the Mississippi House of Representatives, Lewis Leslie McAllister, Jr., a businessman from Meridian and later, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and Charles K. Pringle, a lawyer from Biloxi.[2] In 1969, the administration of U.S. President Richard M. Nixon named Wise the state director of the Farmers Home Administration, an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture. He also headed the Mississippi office of the Agricultural Stabilization and Soil Conservation Service.[1] Later yearsWise served on the board of directors of the Mississippi Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and was the board president of the Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center, a 195-bed hospital in Clarksdale. He co-founded the Mississippi Hospital Association of Governing Boards. Wise died at the age of ninety-one at the Mississippi Baptist Medical Center in Jackson.[1] {{Portalbar|Biography|Mississippi|Politics|Conservatism|Business and Economics|United States Army|World War II|Baptist}}References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite web|url=http://www.pressregister.com/article_b087cf45-a5b0-5c9e-b798-4dd9cf620d9f.html|title=Seelig Bartel "Bushie" Wise, September 7, 2004|publisher=Clarksdale Press Register|accessdate=May 10, 2014}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Wise, Seelig}}2. ^Billy Hathorn, "Challenging the Status Quo: Rubel Lex Phillips and the Mississippi Republican Party (1963–1967)", The Journal of Mississippi History XLVII, November 1985, No. 4, p. 240, 242, 262. 14 : 1913 births|2004 deaths|Mississippi State University alumni|People from Clarksdale, Mississippi|Politicians from Jackson, Mississippi|Mississippi state senators|Mississippi Republicans|Farmers from Mississippi|Businesspeople from Jackson, Mississippi|United States Army officers|American army personnel of World War II|Baptists from Mississippi|20th-century American politicians|People from Jonestown, Mississippi |
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