Fletcher Thompson | |
State: | Georgia |
District: | 5th |
Term Start: | January 3, 1967 |
Term End: | January 3, 1973 |
Preceded: | Charles Weltner |
Succeeded: | Andrew Young |
State Senate1: | Georgia |
District1: | 34th |
Term Start1: | January 11, 1965 |
Term End1: | January 9, 1967 |
Preceded1: | Charlie Brown |
Succeeded1: | W. Armstrong Smith |
Birth Name: | Standish Fletcher Thompson |
Birth Date: | 5 February 1925 |
Birth Place: | College Park, Georgia, U.S. |
Education: | Emory University (AB) Woodrow Wilson College of Law (LLB)[1] |
Death Place: | Marietta, Georgia, U.S. |
Occupation: | Lawyer, politician |
Party: | Republican |
Allegiance: | United States |
Branch: | United States Army United States Air Force |
Serviceyears: | 1943–1953 |
Battles: | World War II Korean War |
Unit: | U.S. Army Air Corps |
Standish Fletcher Thompson (February 5, 1925 – September 13, 2022) was an American lawyer, World War II veteran and Republican politician who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1967 to 1973 from the 5th Congressional District of Georgia.
Thompson was born near Atlanta in College Park in Fulton County, Georgia. He graduated from Russell High School in East Point, Georgia. While at Russell High School, Thompson was the president of the Model Airplane Club.
Thompson completed Basic Training with the 90th Infantry Division before he was transferred to the Aviation Cadet Training Program in Wichita Falls, Texas. Thompson qualified as both a pilot and as a navigator. A growing need for Army Air Corps navigators resulted in his assignment as a navigator within the 6th Emergency Air-sea Rescue Squadron. Over the next several years, Thompson would earn seven service stars along with an Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal.[2] On demobilization, he attended the Methodist-affiliated Emory University in Atlanta, from which he graduated in 1949. During the Korean War, Thompson re-enlisted in the United States Air Force as a pilot.
On returning from South Korea, Thompson graduated in 1957 from the now-closed Woodrow Wilson College of Law in Atlanta. The following year he was admitted to the Georgia bar and established a law firm in East Point. He was also president of an aviation insurance firm.
In the November 3, 1964 general election, in which Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona became the first Republican presidential nominee to win Georgia's electoral votes, Thompson defeated then senior Democratic State Senator Charlie Brown in District 34.[3] Thompson was one of only four Republican members of the upper chamber of the legislature at the time. He was selected by the Democratic majority to represent Fulton County in the drafting and sponsorship of the Metropolitan Rapid Transit Authority Act.
Two years later, Thompson ran for Congress, becoming the first Republican since the Reconstruction era to represent Atlanta and the 5th Congressional District in the United States House.[4] The Democratic Executive Committee chose Archie Lindsey, then the chairman of the Fulton County Commission. Lindsey had three weeks to mount a campaign. Thompson prevailed, 55,423 (60.1 percent) to Lindsey's 36,751 (39.9 percent).[5] Thompson netted some 30% of the Black vote. Thompson was the only member of the state's congressional delegation to vote for the Civil Rights Act of 1968.[6] Thompson was re-elected in 1968 and 1970, when he defeated Andrew Young, who after the next election in 1972 in a revised district succeeded Thompson in the Fifth District.
See main article: articles and 1972 United States Senate elections in Georgia. In 1972, Thompson ran for the U.S. Senate. Sam Nunn defeated David H. Gambrell in the Democratic primary; Gambrell had been appointed by then Governor Jimmy Carter to succeed the late Richard B. Russell Jr. Thompson lost to Nunn, 362,501 votes (46.5 percent) to 404,890 (52 percent).[7]
After leaving the U.S. House, Thompson returned to his law firm in Atlanta. In 1985, he was made a member of the Atlanta Regional Commission. From 2009 until 2011, Thompson served as the Commander of the Atlanta World War II Roundtable, an organization that was created in 1986 "to hear and record the war experiences of World War II and to pass on to posterity the knowledge of World War II and the price – human and material – that was paid by our nation for the preservation of freedom in the United States and the world".[8]
Thompson died on September 13, 2022, aged 97.[9]
Year | Republican | Votes | % | Democratic | Votes | % | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1966 | √ Fletcher Thompson | 55,249 | 60.1% | Archie L. Lindsey | 36,751 | 39.9% | |||||||||
1968 | √ Fletcher Thompson | 79,258 | 55.6% | Charles L. Weltner | 63,183 | 44.4% | |||||||||
1970 | √ Fletcher Thompson | 78,540 | 57.4% | Andrew Young | 58,394 | 42.6% |
Retrieved on 2008-01-24
Retrieved on 2008-01-24
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