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Memory Of Gov. Wallace Shooting Fades
CBS ^ | 5/15/07

Posted on 05/15/2007 8:21:15 AM PDT by Borges

On 35th Anniversary, Memory Of Gov. Wallace Assassination Attempt Fades In Maryland Town

Many of Laurel's older residents can point to the precise spot in the shopping center where Arthur Bremer's gunshots paralyzed Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and cut short his campaign for the White House in 1972.

They recall just what they were doing that May 15 afternoon when they heard that the loner from Milwaukee had shot Wallace five times as he shook hands in the parking lot of what was then the city's main retail plaza.

But 35 years later, as Laurel struggles to retain its small-town identity, the collective memory of its most famous event is fading.

"People say it happened over near the bank, but other people say it was over there" by the drug store, said Scott Branch, standing behind the counter of the Hobby Works store he manages in the Laurel Shopping Center.

Branch said he frequently uses the shooting as a landmark in giving directions to the store. But with the younger set, "I tell them it's where the Books-A-Million is and they say, 'Oh, I know where that is.'"

Wallace, who had carried five Southern states as a fist-shaking third party candidate in 1968, was mounting a surprisingly successful run in the Democratic primaries in 1972 before Laurel. Billing himself as the candidate of "the average American," he was viewed as a serious wild card in the party and in Republican President Richard Nixon's bid for re-election.

A former segregationist, Wallace was best known for standing defiantly at the all-white University of Alabama in a symbolic face-off with the Justice Department as the National Guard stood by and two black students enrolled in 1963. By 1972, he had tempered his racist rhetoric and adopted a more subtle approach, denouncing federal courts over the "involuntary busing" of schoolchildren to meet desegregation orders and pledging a return to a "law and order" society.

Wallace had consistently fared well in polls and a few weeks before Laurel had led the crowded Democratic field in the presidential primary in Florida, where he carried every county. Even as he lay in the hospital after the assassination attempt, he led in Maryland and Michigan.

But the shooting effectively ended his national career, diminishing the fiery charisma that had made him a dominant political force in Alabama and leaving him in a wheelchair until his death in 1998.

There has never been much discussion of erecting a public marker on the site, city spokesman Jim Collins said. Even though Wallace ultimately apologized and asked forgiveness for his segregationist stands, a memorial would probably meet opposition because of his past, Collins said.

Views might be different had Wallace died at the site, he said. Memorials are more common at sites where historical figures died, such as John F. Kennedy in Dallas or the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis. There is no marker, for example, at the Washington hotel where President Reagan was wounded in a 1981 shooting.

Michael Brey, who owns the Hobby Works store, said a simple marker might be appropriate. But he said it could be tricky.

"How do you do it without making it seem like it's a monument to a man who stood out in front of a school blocking black children from attending?" he said.

Today, Laurel hardly resembles the small mill town it once was. Growth from the nation's capital about 20 miles to the south has surrounded the city with suburbs, and a busy commercial district with fast-food restaurants and car dealerships now dwarfs the strip center where Wallace was shot.

No one seems to know what happened to the wooden stage that the shopping center would roll out for community events and that Wallace stood upon to deliver his stump speech before wading into the crowd.

The bank that sits alone in the middle of the parking lot _ and is closest to the shooting site _ once displayed a large photograph of the scene in the lobby. But the national chain that bought the bank took it dwn years ago.

"I heard about it when I first opened my account," said 20-year Laurel resident Dianne W. Shields as she left the bank recently. "They had (the photo) posted right there in front. You couldn't miss it ... everybody would talk about it."

Wallace's family has never considered requesting a marker at the site, said Wallace's son, George Wallace Jr., a former Alabama Public Service commissioner who lost a bid to become lieutenant governor last year. If the local community wanted one, the family wouldn't object, he said. But it isn't planning to get involved.

"Time passes, memories fade. It's part of life," he said. "It is a very historic site though. It sure is."


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 05/15/2007 8:21:19 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

So the story is...time passes?


2 posted on 05/15/2007 8:26:24 AM PDT by BackInBlack ("The act of defending any of the cardinal virtues has today all the exhilaration of a vice.")
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To: BackInBlack
So the story is...time passes?

It's a nervy thesis but I bet the AP thinks it will catch on in years to come.
3 posted on 05/15/2007 8:27:50 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

I remember the day because I turned on the TV after school to see a show I think Vin Scully was doing at the time on CBS and saw “Uncle Walter” instead saying Wallace had been shot.

After all the other “shootings” like King and RFK I remembered from 1968, it seemed almost “normal” for this kind of stuff to be happening back then.

Bremer was some sort of left winger as I remember with news reports said he had been stalking Richard Nixon before going after Wallace.


4 posted on 05/15/2007 8:27:55 AM PDT by Nextrush ( Chris Matthews Band: "I get high....I get high.....I get high.....McCain......")
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To: Borges

I remember the day because I turned on the TV after school to see a show I think Vin Scully was doing at the time on CBS and saw “Uncle Walter” instead saying Wallace had been shot.

After all the other “shootings” like King and RFK I remembered from 1968, it seemed almost “normal” for this kind of stuff to be happening back then.

Bremer was some sort of left winger as I remember with news reports said he had been stalking Richard Nixon before going after Wallace.


5 posted on 05/15/2007 8:27:59 AM PDT by Nextrush ( Chris Matthews Band: "I get high....I get high.....I get high.....McCain......")
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To: Borges
There has never been much discussion of erecting a public marker on the site, city spokesman Jim Collins said. Even though Wallace ultimately apologized and asked forgiveness for his segregationist stands, a memorial would probably meet opposition because of his past, Collins said.

Hasn't been a problem for former Klan Recruiter Byrd.

6 posted on 05/15/2007 8:29:12 AM PDT by mikeus_maximus (Abort Rudy.)
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To: Borges

I remember that I was at a friend’s house in Timonium, Maryland, I was playing in the back yard.

I don’t know why I know that though. I had no interest in that stuff, except as it was assigned in school (I remember doing something about Nixon in which I did a “press conference” where I asked the questions and then used little clips of songs to provide Nixon’s answers, like one was the song “On a slow boat to China”).


7 posted on 05/15/2007 8:30:58 AM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Borges

In Birmingham they love the governor
Now we all did what we could do
Now Watergate does not bother me
Does your conscience bother you?
Tell the truth


8 posted on 05/15/2007 8:49:50 AM PDT by Vaquero (" an armed society is a polite society" Heinlein "MOLON LABE!" Leonidas of Sparta)
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To: Borges

What are the odds that TWO prominent (and typical) Democrats like segregationist George C. Wallace and pornographer Larry Flint would get shot and paralyzed, and end up in wheelchairs?


9 posted on 05/15/2007 8:59:30 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: Vaquero

I hope Neil Young will remember
Southern man don’t need him around
Anyhow.


10 posted on 05/15/2007 9:01:07 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: Vaquero

Ah...The redneck National Anthem! Turn it up!


11 posted on 05/15/2007 9:03:21 AM PDT by fungoking
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To: Borges
Even though Wallace ultimately apologized and asked forgiveness for his segregationist stands, a memorial would probably meet opposition because of his past, Collins said.

This is a very unforgiving country. As I recall, Wallace's best friend in his later years was a black man (minister?).

12 posted on 05/15/2007 9:10:05 AM PDT by Monk Dimittis
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To: Monk Dimittis

“Now Watergate does not bother me..”

Me neither, Ronnie.

Never did.

Watergate was a total propaganda media event driven by the Democrat Congress and their close allies in the media. Payback for Richard Nixon’s earlier HUAC activities.

As Ann Coulter has pointed out, Watergate was a minor event compared to some of the business-as-usual-shenanigans of the Democratic administrations of Kennedy and Johnson.

Leftist music critics have opined that Ronnie van Zandt was in fact distancing himself from the policies of George Wallace in the great southern anthem, Sweet Home Alabama.

Maybe. But then again, maybe not


13 posted on 05/15/2007 9:20:04 AM PDT by EyeGuy
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To: Lancey Howard
“...TWO prominent (and typical) Democrats...”

Wallace was a politician's politician but does not deserve comparison to Flint who should be looked down upon even by other pornographers.

14 posted on 05/15/2007 10:00:06 AM PDT by Monterrosa-24 (...even more American than a French bikini and a Russian AK-47.)
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To: EyeGuy
Watergate was a total propaganda media event driven by the Democratic Congress and their close allies in the media.

That is putting it in a nutshell. As you know, but it is well worth repeating, President Nixon did not have any idea about the break-in. Being an absolutely loyal man, he unwisely plunged into the mire. Had he have said "your problem" and closed his eyes, he would have been a President up there with the greatest. This he is, as far as some discerning persons may be concerned.

Thanks to old friend Wikipedia, I have the skinny on Arthur Bremmer, the would be assassin. I would have lost money if someone opined that, he would not be free today. I learn he is still incarcerated. He has a parole in 2015. He was born in 1950.

Yet Bernstein and Woodward are free today. No justice. (laughs).

15 posted on 05/15/2007 10:06:15 AM PDT by Peter Libra
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To: EyeGuy

I was but a very young lass at the time of Watergate. I always was asking my babysitter’s dad, “Where’s the water?” He watched it every day and I asked the same question every day!


16 posted on 05/15/2007 10:26:44 AM PDT by synbad600
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To: Peter Libra

I may be sorry I asked but what should W&B be in jail for?


17 posted on 05/15/2007 2:02:05 PM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
I remember that day like it was yesterday.

Heard it on the car radio on my maiden drive on the Captital Beltway the day I arrived in Washington.

18 posted on 05/15/2007 2:16:24 PM PDT by DCPatriot ("It aint what you don't know that kills you. It's what you know that aint so" Theodore Sturgeon))
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To: Borges
On Woodward and Bernstein.

Just a little lame joke of mine, Borges. Being as they are citizens of the United States they are entitled to get away with murder.

Sorry, this is another lame joke.

19 posted on 05/15/2007 6:13:20 PM PDT by Peter Libra
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