Charles Summers
During segregation blacks were kept separate from whites. This is because blacks were not viewed as equal to the whites.
Andrew Johnson was US senator from Tennessee when the war began. He remained loyal to the union when Tennessee seceded. In March 1862 Lincoln appointed him military governor of Tennessee with the rank of Brigadier General. In 1864 he was elected Vice-President.
this dick
Yes they did, during apartheid laws were passed that ensured and promoted the well-being and domination of other races over blacks, there was no equal opportunities to all races which meant that whites especially enjoyed supremacy over blacks.
Joseph McCarthy
He was the only Southern Senator left in the Senate.
andrew johnson
to eliminate all black rights; completely segregate blacks from whites during reconstruction.
Tennessee Senator Andrew Johnson and Texas Governor Sam Houston
Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy never attended Virginia Tech. But he was a student -- as of 1956 -- in Charlottesville at the University of Virginia's School of Law, from which he graduated in 1959.
JFK was the senator for Massachuesetts from January 3, 1953 - December 22, 1960. Oddly enough he won the seat from Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. who would later run as Nixon's vice president against JFK in the 1960 election.
Andrew Johnson of Tennessee. He had his reward by becoming the Vice Presidential candidate on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864, replacing Hannibal Hamlin, who was Vice President during Lincoln's first term. Johnson became President when Lincoln was murdered.
Thomas Benton was the Missouri senator during Manifest Destiny.
During Ronald Reagan's presidency, the leader of the Senate was Senator Ted Kennedy, a Democrat from Massachusetts, for a significant portion of his first term. However, from 1981 to 1987, the Republican Party held a majority in the Senate, with Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee serving as the Senate Majority Leader for much of that time. Baker played a key role in advancing Reagan's legislative agenda during his administration.
He was in the navy during WW 2, got a job writing for a newspaper, then got into politics, getting elected first to the House of Representatives and then as Us Senator from Massachusetts.
Joseph Barss was an American politician known for his role in the Massachusetts legislature during the 19th century. He served as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and later as a state senator. Barss was influential in various legislative initiatives, particularly those related to education and infrastructure, contributing to the development of his community and the state. His work helped shape policies that addressed the needs of his constituents during a period of significant change in Massachusetts.
During segregation blacks were kept separate from whites. This is because blacks were not viewed as equal to the whites.