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Series 7: Gubernatorial Series, 1945 - 1955, 1950 - 1954

 Series

Scope and Contents note

This series consists of bills, booklets, a calendar, certificates, clippings, correspondence, forms, lists, memoranda, notes, pamphlets, petitions, photographs, postcards, press releases, receipts, reports, resolutions, speeches/statements, and telegrams.

Materials in the series date from 1948-1955 and cover Byrnes’ campaign for, and single term as, governor of the state of South Carolina, with most of the items in the series dating from 1950-1954. While in office, Byrnes focused much of his attention on improving education in the state by consolidating many school districts and applying revenue from the state’s first sales tax toward education. Byrnes supported segregation, but it was during his term that the Supreme Court issued the Brown v. Board of Education decision, declaring the doctrine of separate-but-equal unconstitutional.

Materials in this series are arranged alphabetically by folder title, and correspondence files are arranged alphabetically by surname or county. Photographs and oversize items have been removed to photograph and oversize storage. See the Photographs Series for photographs removed from this series.

This series consists mainly of campaign correspondence and materials, as well as personal files. Material relating to the 1950 gubernatorial campaign include both out-of-state and in-state correspondence (some of the latter arranged by county) and lists of supporters. The correspondence consists of letters encouraging Byrnes to run and offers of support; requests for help or positions; a few issue-related letters on such topics as cotton, drunk driving, education foreign policy, segregation, and socialism; items relating to campaign advertisements in both print and on radio, including a number of letters from Hank D. Hearn of Charlotte, NC on showings of the “Citizen Byrnes” short by 20th Century Fox in South Carolina; descriptions of the political conditions and level of support for Byrnes in their area; suggestions regarding who to contact for support; and letters from Byrnes requesting support, thanking individuals for their support and other assistance, and asking for reports on political conditions in their area. There are also congratulations on his election to the governorship and material on Byrnes’ inauguration, including arrangements and replies to invitations.

Of particular interest are the materials related to Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1952 presidential campaign. This campaign marked Byrnes’ first official break from the Democratic Party by leading the “South Carolinians for Eisenhower” movement. As a reward for his support, Byrnes was selected as a delegate to the United Nations in 1953. These materials include those relating to the 1952 Democratic State and National Conventions; correspondence pro and con, in and out-of-state on Byrnes’ support of Eisenhower; correspondence regarding Eisenhower’s inauguration; lists of potential supporters; statements made by Byrnes in support of Eisenhower; and some material on Eisenhower’s visit to Columbia on September 30, 1952. Material relating to his term as U.N. delegate includes administrative correspondence, background information on the United Nations and the issues before the Eighth Session of the General Assembly, a calendar noting meetings, and statements by Byrnes and Henry Cabot Lodge.

The personal correspondence includes material relating to his business investments and stocks, including his involvement in the Newmont Mining Corporation; insurance; taxes; and the sale of Byrnes’ Spartanburg home by James C. Grier of Grier & Company. There are invitations; requests for appointments to positions, assistance and information; thank yous; congratulations; and condolences. Some of the correspondence includes comments on civil rights legislation and segregation; foreign policy; national politics; and the 1954 Senatorial campaign between Brown and Thurmond. There is also family correspondence with Fuller and Miner families, much of it having to do with settling the estate of Lieutenant Wallace W. Fuller.

In addition to the letters on civil rights legislation and segregation there is an analysis and other information regarding “bloc voting” by African-Americans in 1952 presidential and 1954 congressional elections, as well as Byrnes’ statements on segregation in South Carolina schools and on the Brown decision. There are also statements by Byrnes in reaction to former President Harry Truman’s criticism of Byrnes in his memoirs and other material relating to Truman, including the draft of first seven chapters of “Fair Deal Follies,” an anti-Truman book and “corrective” to his memoirs, by Burt Drummond. There are few items on Harry Dexter White as well, which supplement the material in the State Department series regarding accusations that the former International Monetary Fund director was a Soviet spy.

[Correspondents include businessmen Bernard Baruch, Walter J. Brown, Lucius D. Clay, Charles Daniel, B. M. Edwards, and Fred Searls; cartoonist Jim Berryman; former governor Strom Thurmond; journalist Porter McKeever; lawyers John W. Davis; and James H. Hammond; U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower; U.S. Senator Burnet Maybank; Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter; and University of South Carolina President Donald Russell. There are also some letters to and from Maude Byrnes and Cassie Connor.

Byrne’s official gubernatorial files can be found at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History in Columbia, SC.

SEPARATION LISTIn Removed Oversize Box 2:

  • “The United Nations and Palestine” by Benjamin V. Cohen, New York Herald Tribune [folder 683(2)], March 16-17, 1948
  • “An Open Letter to the Citizens of South Carolina” (advertisement) by James F. Byrnes, Hartsville Messenger (Darlington, SC) [folder 759(1-2)], July 6, 1950
  • “An Open Letter to the Citizens of South Carolina” (advertisement) by James F. Byrnes, Lake City News (South Carolina), July 6, 1950
  • “Newberry County Will Vote For Tom Pope” (advertisement) [folder 774], [1950]
  • “Forward With Byrnes” (advertisement), Daily Mail (Anderson, SC), [1950], 2 copies
  • “Official Returns of Primary Election” [folder 769(3)], [1950[
  • Common Sense (Union, NJ), January 5, 1952
  • “Extra! Extra! General Ike Visits South Carolina” (advertisement) by South Carolina Democratic Campaign Headquarters (Columbia, SC) [folders 987, 1462], [1952], 2 copies
  • “Governor Byrnes’ Administration Marked by Constructive Progress” by R. E. Grier, The State Magazine (Columbia, SC), January 11, 1953, 2 copies
  • Dates

    • 1945 - 1955
    • 1950 - 1954

    Extent

    From the Collection: 163.3 Cubic Feet ( (3,269 folders, 39 volumes, 1,700 photographs, 28 oversize photographs, 1 film reel, 1 videocassette tape, 37 sound discs, 18 reel-to-reel audio tapes, 10 audio cassette tapes, 9 rolls of microfilm, 266 oversize items, and 76 objects3,269 folders, 39 volumes, 1,700 photographs, 28 oversize photographs, 1 film reel, 1 videocassette tape, 37 sound discs, 18 reel-to-reel audio tapes, 10 audio cassette tapes, 9 rolls of microfilm, 266 oversize items, and 76 objects))

    Language of Materials

    From the Collection: English

    General Physical Description note

    7 cubic feet consisting of 258 folders, 26 photographs, and 9 oversize items.

    Creator

    Repository Details

    Part of the Clemson University Libraries Special Collections and Archives Repository

    Contact:
    230 Kappa St.
    Clemson SC 29634 U.S.A. US