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Cover of Dan Daniel and the persistence of conservatism in Virginia

Dan Daniel and the persistence of conservatism in Virginia

By J. I. Hayes

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Publish Date

1997

Publisher

Mercer University Press

Language

eng

Pages

258

Description:

A national commander of the American Legion, state legislator, and United States congressman for twenty years before his death in 1988, Dan Daniel helped mold modern Virginia, exemplified Southern conservatism, and strengthened America's national defense. Wilbur Clarence (Dan) Daniel was born on 12 May 1914, near the Huntstown community of Pittsylvania County, Virginia, one mile west of the town of Chatham. He was the second child of Reuben Earl Daniel and Georgia Lee Grant Daniel. Born and raised in poverty, Daniel used his winsome personality, mental acuity, eloquence in speech, fondness for hard work, and loyalty to mentors to rise to prominence. By the time of his death on 23 January 1988, he had been Assistant to the Chairman of the Board of Dan River Mills, National Commander of the American Legion, member of the House of Delegates of the Commonwealth of Virginia, President of the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce, and member of the House of representatives of the United States of America. According to his congressional aides, the conscientious congressman ordered his personal papers destroyed several years before his death in order to make room for more recent congressional files. Daniel donated his remaining papers to Averett College and they are housed at the Mary B. Blount Library of Averett College. The papers are an extensive collection of scrapbooks, photographs, speeches, congressional committee working papers, and memorabilia.