Shreveport, Louisiana James Houston Davis, better known as Jimmie Davis, (September 11, 1899(?) - November 5, 2000) was a noted singer of both sacred and popular songs who served two nonconsecutive terms as a Democratic governor of Louisiana in the mid-twentieth century.
He graduated from Beech Springs High School and Soule Business College, New Orleans campus. The late Congressman Otto Passman, a Louisiana Democrat, also graduated from Soule, but from the Bogalusa campus. Davis received his bachelor's degree in history from the Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville. He received a master's degree from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
Davis taught history (and, unofficially, yodeling) for a year at the women's Dodd College of Shreveport during the late 1920s.
Davis became the popular "singing governor" who often performed music during his campaign stops. While governor, he had a No. 1 hit single in 1945 with "There's a New Moon Over My Shoulder." A long-time member of the Baptist faith, he also recorded a number of southern gospel music albums and in 1967 served as president of the Gospel Music Association. He was a close friend of the North Dakota-born band leader Lawrence Welk who frequently reminded viewers of his television program of his association with Governor Davis.
A number of his songs were used as part of motion picture soundtracks, and Davis himself appeared in half a dozen films, one with the popular entertainers Ozzie and Harriet.
Davis was elected governor as a Democrat in 1944. He defeated Lewis L. Morgan of Covington who had been backed by former Governor Earl Long and New Orleans Mayor Robert Maestri. Davis received 251,228 (53.6 percent) to Morgan's 217,915 (46.5 percent). Long was seeking the lieutenant governorship on the Morgan "ticket." Democrats in Louisiana often formed non-binding "tickets" for governor and lieutenant governor and sometimes lower constitutional offices as well. But voters could "split tickets" by voting, for example, for a Long candidate for governor and an anti-Long candidate for lieutenant governor or vice versa. Louisiana's Constitution, until amended in 1966, only allowed governors to serve for one consecutive term. Therefore Davis stepped down in 1948 at the completion of his term of office.
In 1959-1960, Davis, with a pledge to fight for segregation in public education, sought a second term as governor. He won the Democratic gubernatorial nomination over a crowded field that included staunchly segregationist State Senator William M. Rainach of Claiborne Parish, former Lieutenant Governor William J. "Bill" Dodd of Baton Rouge, former Governor James A. Noe, Sr., of Monroe, and New Orleans Mayor deLesseps Story Morrison, Sr. Davis ran second to "Chep" Morrison, considered a liberal by Louisiana standards, in the primary and then defeated him in the party runoff held in January 1960. Davis polled 213,551 (25.3 percent) to Morrison's 278,956 (33.1 percent).
Rainach ran third with 143,095 (17 percent). Noe was fourth with 97,654 (11.6 percent), and Dodd followed with 85,436 (10.1 percent). Davis won the northern and central parts of the state plus Baton Rouge, while Morrison dominated the southern portion of the state, particularly the French cultural parishes. In the runoff, Davis prevailed, 487,681 (54.1 percent) to Morrison's 414,110 (45.5 percent). It was estimated that Davis drew virtually all of the Rainach support from the first primary.
In the 1959 campaign, Dodd attacked Davis ferociously: it was part of Dodd's strategy to get Davis to withdraw from the primary. "Nothing personal in his heart, just a cold-blooded plan to wind up in a second primary against Morrison, who he figurd could not win against anyone [else in a runoff," said Davis in the introduction to Dodd's memoirs, Peapatch Politics: The Earl Long Era in Louisiana Politics. Dodd then endorsed Morrison in the runoff, but he had a long-term reason for doing so. Dodd planned to run for school superintendent in the 1963 primary, and he wanted to have at least the neutrality of Morrison.
Dodd and Davis later became close friends. In Davis' words:
"Bill and I have many things in common. We share the same type of religion and boyhood background; we got our start as schoolteachers and figured prominently in public education; we both served in public life at or near the top. And I like to feel that we share a common appreciation and respect for people, all people. One of the greatest rewards in politics is meeting people. And one of the greatest and most unusual men I've ever met is Bill Dodd."
On April 19, 1960, Davis defeated Republican Francis Grevemberg, a Lafayette native, by a margin of nearly 82-17 percent. Grevemberg had been head of the state police under Governor Robert F. Kennon and had fought organized crime. He called for the origin of a two-party system for Louisiana. As the Democratic nominee, Davis had no worries and did little campaigning for the general election.
In 1971, Davis entered another crowded Democratic gubernatorial primary field, but he finished in an unimpressive fourth place with 138,756 ballots (only 11.8 percent), for time had passed him by.
In a runoff election held in December 1971, Congressman Edwin Washington Edwards of Crowley in Acadiana defeated then State Senator Bennett Johnston, of Shreveport for the party nomination. That vote was very close: Edwards, 584,262 (50.2 percent) to Johnston's 579,774 (49.8 percent). Edwards then beat Republican David C. Treen in the March 1972 general election. Davis's days as a politician were clearly behind him at that point.
In 1999, with only months left to live, he spoke out for the reelection of Republican Governor (Murphy J.) Mike Foster, another former Louisiana Democrat who faced a challenge that year from black Democratic Congressman Bill Jefferson of New Orleans. Jefferson had once been an assistant to J. Bennett Johnston, Jr.
During his second term, Davis built the Sunshine Bridge, the new Governor's Mansion and the Toledo Bend Reservoir - all criticized at the time, but later recognized as beneficial to the state. Davis coordinated the pay periods of state employees, who had sometimes received their checks a week late, a particular hardship to those with low incomes.
During his time as governor, Jimmie Davis attempted to enforce policies of racial segregation, but federal law slowly brought about desegregation. Davis apologized for his actions later in life. One time during his tenure, he rode his horse up the steps of the state Capitol to protest integration.
He died at the probable age of 101 and is buried in the Davis Family Cemetery in Quitman in Jackson Parish.
1899 births | 2000 deaths | American actors | American male singers | American songwriters | Baptists | Centenarians | Country musicians | Gospel singers | Governors of Louisiana | Entertainers who died in their 100s
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