This deeply moving story chronicles the tenacity and vision that
carried Carl Elliott from the hills of northwest Alabama to eight
distinguished terms in the United States House of
Representatives.
Born in a log cabin on a tenant farm in 1913, Carl Elliott
worked his way through The University of Alabama during the Great
Depression and was elected to Congress in 1948. With a no-nonsense
philosophy of fairness and equal opportunity, he established
himself as one of the most effective members of the House of
Representatives during the 1950s. He was a progressive Democrat and
he fought hard for the dirt farmers and coal miners he grew up with
and who sent him to Congress.
In an era when racial segregationists dominated southern
politics, Elliott worked with many of the important political
leaders of the 20th century, including Presidents Truman,
Eisenhower, and Kennedy and powerful House Speaker Sam Rayburn. He
was instrumental in passing the National Defense Education Act of
1958, which continues to provide college loans to more than 20
million Americans. But his brave stand against racism and George
Wallace in the 1966 Alabama gubernatorial race ruined him
professionally (he never returned to elected office) and
financially (he cashed in his congressional pension to help fund
the campaign). Even as a destitute invalid in his old age, however,
Elliott kept his dignity and integrity intact.
The life story of Carl Elliott is full of humor and wry wisdom
and explains how he made his way across a stage as big as America,
influencing its politics and future, and then emerged, belatedly,
as an unsung hero of the fight for civil rights and equality.
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