

- John c stennis battle group full#
- John c stennis battle group pro#
- John c stennis battle group trial#

John c stennis battle group full#
He was elected to a full term in 1952, and was reelected five more times. Upon the death of Senator Theodore Bilbo in 1947, Stennis won the special election to fill the vacancy, winning the seat from a field of five candidates (including two sitting Congressmen, John E. His son, John Hampton Stennis (1935–2013), an attorney in Jackson, Mississippi, ran unsuccessfully in 1978 for the United States House of Representatives, defeated by the Republican Jon C. Stennis married Coy Hines, and together they had two children, John Hampton and Margaret Jane. Mississippi, the Supreme Court ruled that it was a clear deception of court and jury by the presentation of testimony known to be perjured, and a clear denial of due process. He was the prosecuting attorney in a case where three African Americans had been beaten and tortured for a confession in Brown v. Stennis was a prosecutor from 1932 to 1937 and a circuit judge from 1937 to 1947, both for Mississippi's Sixteenth Judicial District. While in law school, he won a seat in the Mississippi House of Representatives, representing Kemper County, in which he served until 1932. In 1928, Stennis obtained a law degree from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and Alpha Chi Rho fraternity. He received a bachelor's degree from Mississippi State University in Starkville (then Mississippi A&M) in 1923. His great-grandfather, John Stenhouse, emigrated from Scotland to Greenville, South Carolina, just before the American Revolution. John Stennis was born into a middle-class family in Kemper County, Mississippi, as the son of Hampton Howell Stennis and Margaret Cornelia Adams.
John c stennis battle group trial#
The transcript of the trial indicated Stennis was fully aware that the confession was obtained by subjecting three black defendants to brutal whippings and hanging by the officers. He was also the trial level prosecutor of Brown v. He supported the extension of the Voting Rights Act in 1982 but voted against the establishment of Martin Luther King Jr. He also voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Civil Rights Act of 1968. Along with James Eastland, he supported the Dixiecrat ticket in 1948 headed by Strom Thurmond, and signed the Southern Manifesto, which called for massive resistance to the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Stennis was a zealous supporter of racial segregation.

In 1973, President Richard Nixon proposed the Stennis Compromise, whereby the famously hard-of-hearing Stennis would be allowed to listen to, and summarize, the Watergate tapes, but this idea was rejected by Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox.
John c stennis battle group pro#
He also served as President pro tempore of the Senate from 1987 to 1989. Stennis became the first Chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee and also chaired the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Appropriations. He won election to a full term in 1952 and remained in the Senate until he declined to seek re-election in 1988. Senate vacancy following the death of Theodore G. After serving as a prosecutor and state judge, Stennis won a special election to fill the U.S. While attending law school, Stennis won a seat in the Mississippi House of Representatives, holding office from 1928 to 1932. Furthermore, at the time of his retirement, Stennis was the last United States Senator to have served during the presidency of Harry S. He retired from the Senate in 1989, and is, to date, the last Democrat to have been a U.S. He was a Democrat who served in the Senate for over 41 years, becoming its most senior member for his last eight years. John Cornelius Stennis (August 3, 1901 – April 23, 1995) was an American politician who served as a U.S. Stennis (left) visited the Marshall Space Flight Center in mid-November 1967, where he was greeted at the Redstone Airfield by Center Director Wernher von Braun.
