Ryan deGraffenried Sr: Difference between revisions

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'''William Ryan deGraffenried Sr''' (born [[April 15]], [[1925]] in [[Tuscaloosa]]; died [[February 10]], [[1966]] near [[Fort Payne]]) was an attorney and member of the [[Alabama State House of Representatives]].
'''William Ryan deGraffenried Sr''' (born [[April 15]], [[1925]] in [[Tuscaloosa]]; died [[February 10]], [[1966]] near [[Fort Payne]]) was an attorney and member of the [[Alabama State House of Representatives]].


DeGraffenried was the son of former U.S. Representative [[Edward deGraffenried]]. He married the former Margaret Nell Maxwell in July [[1945]]. He won his first campaign for state legislator in [[1954]].
DeGraffenried was the son of former U.S. Representative [[Edward deGraffenried]] and his wife, the former Grace Ryan. He served with the 3rd Armored Division during [[World War II]] and received a Purple Heart with oak leaf cluster during his service. He married the former Margaret Nell Maxwell in July [[1945]]. He won his first campaign for state legislator in [[1954]].


DeGraffenried ran twice for [[Governor of Alabama]]. He was defeated by [[George Wallace]] in a runoff the [[1962 primary elections|1962 Democratic primary]]. He qualified again four years later, with Wallace ineligible for re-election due to the [[Alabama Constitution of 1901|state constitution]]'s one-term limit. DeGraffenried was known as a progressive, in sharp contrast to Wallace's racist populism. He was considered the most likely nominee, but was killed in a single-passenger [[1966 Lookout Mountain plane crash|plane crash]] on [[Lookout Mountain]] near [[Fort Payne]] early in the campaign. [[Lurleen Wallace]] won the primary and was elected to succeed her husband.
DeGraffenried ran twice for [[Governor of Alabama]]. He was defeated by [[George Wallace]] in a runoff the [[1962 primary elections|1962 Democratic primary]]. He qualified again four years later, with Wallace ineligible for re-election due to the [[Alabama Constitution of 1901|state constitution]]'s one-term limit. DeGraffenried was known as a progressive, in sharp contrast to Wallace's racist populism. He was considered the most likely nominee, but was killed in a single-passenger [[1966 Lookout Mountain plane crash|plane crash]] on [[Lookout Mountain]] near [[Fort Payne]] early in the campaign. [[Lurleen Wallace]] won the primary and was elected to succeed her husband.
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[[Category:1925 births]]
[[Category:1925 births]]
[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:US Army personnel]]
[[Category:World War II veterans]]
[[Category:Purple Heart recipients]]
[[Category:Attorneys]]
[[Category:State legislators]]
[[Category:State legislators]]

Revision as of 14:10, 10 February 2016

William Ryan deGraffenried Sr (born April 15, 1925 in Tuscaloosa; died February 10, 1966 near Fort Payne) was an attorney and member of the Alabama State House of Representatives.

DeGraffenried was the son of former U.S. Representative Edward deGraffenried and his wife, the former Grace Ryan. He served with the 3rd Armored Division during World War II and received a Purple Heart with oak leaf cluster during his service. He married the former Margaret Nell Maxwell in July 1945. He won his first campaign for state legislator in 1954.

DeGraffenried ran twice for Governor of Alabama. He was defeated by George Wallace in a runoff the 1962 Democratic primary. He qualified again four years later, with Wallace ineligible for re-election due to the state constitution's one-term limit. DeGraffenried was known as a progressive, in sharp contrast to Wallace's racist populism. He was considered the most likely nominee, but was killed in a single-passenger plane crash on Lookout Mountain near Fort Payne early in the campaign. Lurleen Wallace won the primary and was elected to succeed her husband.

DeGraffenried's son, Ryan Jr followed in his father's footsteps as a State Senator and acting Lieutenant Governor of Alabama.

References

External links