Patterson, John Malcolm, 1921-
Biography:
"JOHN MALCOLM PATTERSON was born in Goldville, Alabama, on September 27, 1921, to Albert Love and Agnes Louise Patterson. In 1939 he joined the U.S. Army after graduating from Central High School in Phenix City, Alabama. During World War II, Patterson participated in seven campaigns in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, Southern France, and Germany. After being honorably discharged with the rank of major, Patterson attended the University of Alabama, earning a law degree in 1949. He was reactivated for service during the Korean War, returned to Phenix City in 1953, and joined the law practice of his father, Albert. With a vow to clean up illegal gambling and crime in Phenix City, Albert Patterson won the Democratic Party's nomination for attorney general. However, the senior Patterson was assassinated before he could assume office. John replaced his father as the Democratic nominee, was elected attorney general, and carried out his father's platform for the next four years. On November 4, 1958, Patterson was elected governor of Alabama, and was sworn into office on January 19, 1959. During his tenure as governor, additional funding was provided for the mentally ill, old age pensions were supplemented, and the first statewide school building program was approved, which resulted in 700 new projects. The State Highway Building and the Industrial Relations Building started construction, and improvements were made to Alabama's docks and waterways. Also, Huntsville was selected as the site for the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, and approval was given to a four-year highway construction project. The civil rights movement played a stormy role during Patterson's administration. Governor Patterson was a staunch supporter of the state's segregationist position and he clashed with the John F. Kennedy administration over the handling of the Freedom Riders. Patterson left office on January 14, 1963, and returned to his law practice in Montgomery. He ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1966, and unsuccessfully for chief justice of the state's supreme court in 1972. Patterson was appointed judge of the appellate court of Alabama in 1984, and remained on the bench until his retirement in January 1997."--National Governors Association Web page.
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Archival Collections and Reference Resources
- Alabama Media Group Collection (Alabama Department of Archives and History)
- Alabama Photographs and Pictures Collection (Alabama Department of Archives and History)
- Attorney General John Patterson during the NAACP hearing before Judge Walter B. Jones. (Negatives (photographs))
- Attorney General John Patterson during the NAACP hearing before Judge Walter B. Jones. (Negatives (photographs))
- Judge Walter B. Jones reading the decision to fine the NAACP, after the organization refused to submit a list of its members. (Negatives (photographs))
- Judge Walter B. Jones reading the decision to fine the NAACP, after the organization refused to submit a list of its members. (Negatives (photographs))
- Robert L. Carter, chief council for the NAACP, testifying on the stand before Judge Walter B. Jones. (Negatives (photographs))
- Encyclopedia of Alabama (Encyclopedia of Alabama)
- Eyes on the Prize Interviews (Washington University in St. Louis University Libraries)
- WSB-TV Newsfilm Collection (Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of a press conference during which Alabama governor John Patterson condemns the Freedom Riders for instigating racial trouble and demands that the Freedom Riders and Martin Luther King, Jr. leave the state, Montgomery, Alabama, 1961 May 23 (moving images)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of a press conference during which Alabama governor John Patterson condemns the Freedom Riders for instigating racial trouble and demands that the Freedom Riders and Martin Luther King, Jr. leave the state, Montgomery, Alabama, 1961 May 23 (news)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of Assistant Attorney General Byron White speaking to reporters about the presence of federal marshals following an attack on the Freedom Riders in Montgomery, Alabama, 1961 May (news)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of Assistant Attorney General Byron White speaking to reporters about the presence of federal marshals following an attack on the Freedom Riders in Montgomery, Alabama, 1961 May (moving images)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of reporter Ray Moore interviewing United States attorney general Robert F. Kennedy about the Freedom Rides and about school integration, Washington, D.C., 1961 (news)
- WSB-TV newsfilm clip of reporter Ray Moore interviewing United States attorney general Robert F. Kennedy about the Freedom Rides and about school integration, Washington, D.C., 1961 (moving images)