Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
12:36 pm Saturday, May 4, 2002

Meridian originals

By By Buddy Bynum / editor
April 28, 2002
Today, a little political history in the person of Meridian's first three Republicans. I had the pleasure of talking to them the other day when prospective GOP gubernatorial candidate Haley Barbour came through town. All three are still active in party politics and, should Barbour make the 2003 race, I have no doubt they'll be making contributions not only financial to his campaign, too.
I hope I have this right. I'm sure they'll correct me if I'm reporting it incorrectly.
In the 1960s, at a time when the late Alabama Gov. George Wallace was casting a long shadow over independent party affairs and as U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond, now a Republican of South Carolina, was lining up Dixiecrats to oppose the national political parties, Meridian's own Jimmie LeLaurin stepped forward to claim the distinction as the city's first publicly-pronounced, unabashed Republican.
LeLaurin recruited engineer Gene Damon and, together, they recruited then-car dealer Gil Carmichael. They even printed up a few membership cards, giving Carmichael the honor of getting the first one. It still hangs on his office wall.
Before long, the old joke about Republicans meeting in a phone booth grew stale as LeLaurin, Damon and Carmichael organized a viable local Republican Party branch and recruited others. They have fond memories of the early days of their involvement in various political campaigns at a time when being called a Republican was akin to an insult.
Well, it wasn't akin to an insult. It was an insult.
The Civil War and the carpet-bagging years of Reconstruction did tend to give Republicans a bad name and drove most Mississippians to the polls to cast ballots for Democrats no matter what. Republican candidates for statewide office failed against mostly segregationist, yellow-dog Democrats. Mississippians even initially preferred Wallace over Richard Nixon, at least until 1972.
Carmichael tried for the U.S. Senate once and for governor twice. Not until 1991 would Mississippians elect a Republican governor. That's when a virtually unknown Vicksburg contractor named Kirk Fordice won the office. He was reelected in 1995 and served two terms. Fordice was the first Republican governor since Reconstruction, the first person to be elected to successive terms and the first to complete two successive terms.
Now, Meridian's had two Republican mayors, the late Tom Stuart and John Robert Smith, who has been elected three times. Two U.S. Senators, Thad Cochran and Trent Lott, both Republicans, are entrenched. Both get landslide proportions of the local vote. A Republican conservative congressman, Chip Pickering, was elected to the U.S. House seat held by conservative Democrat G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery. Republicans hold city and county offices.
The party of lower taxes, less government and conservative values has made a place for itself in once die-hard Democrat East Mississippi. People in the area have begun to notice that political party affiliation can matter. And the local groundwork was laid nearly four decades ago by LeLaurin, Damon and Carmichael.
What does the future hold? Maybe we should ask them.
The Main Event'
The Lauderdale County Agri-Center was clearly the place to be on Thursday as hundreds of folks turned out for a fine trade show sponsored by the East Mississippi Business Development Corp.
The 14th annual Main Event was the most successful yet. It was a showcase of the diversity in Meridian's businesses community. It contributed to a key marketing technique we don't see enough anymore face-to-face contact.
It was a good opportunity to see what kinds of business services and products are produced by local people. Congratulations to the organizers and, most of all, to the more than 100 local business enterprises that participated. Good show.

Also on Franklin County Times
Roberts pleads not guilty to 106 counts
Main, News, Russellville
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A Georgia woman facing 106 counts ranging from possession of child pornography to first-degree sodomy has pleaded not guilty to the cha...
Ex-mayor Oliver, 82, dies
Franklin County, Main, News, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
Former Russellville mayor and retired U.S. Army National Guard Major General Troy Oliver, 82, a 1961 graduate of Belgreen High School, died Saturday. ...
Patriotic banner donated to Tharptown VFD
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
R U S S E L L V I L L E — Lottie Coan, who has served as secretary- treasurer for the Tharptown Volunteer Fire Department since 2015, was sitting in h...
Miller Family Dairy opens processing facility
Features, Main, News, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
CROOKED OAK — Miller Family Dairy unveiled its new milk processing facility June 30, bringing the business one step closer to bottling its own milk, p...
Great Pretenders take stage July 16
Columnists, News, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
July 8, 2026
Each summer, the W.C. Handy Music Festival brings outstanding music and entertainment to communities across the Shoals. For more than four decades, th...
DAR chapter unearths patriot’s story
Franklin County, News
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
In a forgotten patch of woods on a farm near Cloverdale, history had lain hidden for generations. It took a determined group of local historians, gene...
Hartley shares her ancestor’s legacy
News
By Chelsea Retherford Staff Writer 
July 8, 2026
Patricia Hartley has always felt a strong sense of patriotism and duty to community and family. It was only recently that she discovered those were fa...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *