GOVERNOR JIMMIE DAVIS BROUGHT US SUNSHINE!
Thursday, April 6th, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
GOVERNOR JIMMIE DAVIS BROUGHT US SUNSHINE!
It could be the
most recognized American song worldwide. Go to a small Asian community where
little or no English is spoken. Start humming, “You Are My
Sunshine.” More likely than not, the locals will join in singing the
song in English. Everybody knows the words to a down-home tune written by
a Louisiana country singer and movie star. And he was sworn in as Louisiana
Governor seventy-three years ago this month.
Jimmie Davis was a
popular country singer in the 1930s and made a number of western movies
including the likes of Cyclone Prairie Rangers, Mississippi Rhythm and Square Dance Katy.
But throughout the world, he made his mark with Sunshine.
A few years back,
I was in Cambodia at the Golden Triangle, where Burma and Thailand
converge. I was having breakfast in a rural village at an outdoor café,
and the young waitress who knew a few words in English said, “You
American. I love America. I sing about America.” Then, with a big
grin on her face, she broke out in song and danced around the dirt floor
singing “You Are My Sunshine.”
After serving two
terms as Louisiana Governor, Davis spent a lot of time at his farm in northeast
Louisiana, traveling back and forth from the state capitol in Baton
Rouge. The Governor was friends with my senior law partner in Ferriday
and made it a habit to stop at our office for a coffee break. I was a wet
behind the ears 26-year-old attorney and often the only one in the
office. So Jimmie Davis would talk at length about his life and gave me
my first political education.
He would often ask me to notarize some document, which I was
glad to do. “So what do I owe you Brother Brown?” he would say. I
always settled for a few verses of Sunshine. He regularly
inquired if I could find him a raccoon. Up in redneck country, we just call it
a coon. His favorite meal was coon stew. Knowing the coon request would
always come with his visit, I asked some local hunters I represented to drop off
a raccoon. So I would keep one of those critters in the
office freezer ready for the Governor's visit.
Now I know I have
whetted your appetite for a delicious plate of raccoon. When I was elected
Secretary of State some years later, I wrote a cookbook, and the Governor
graciously gave me one of his favorite coon recipes to include in my gourmet
collection of sumptuous dishes.
Davis made one
last futile effort to be elected for a third term in 1971, while I made my
foray in politics running for state senator. He often campaigned with his
band in the district where I was running, and I would put up signs that read:
“Come to the Jim Brown for Senator campaign rally. Special guest:
Governor Jimmie Davis.” Davis laughed when he caught on to what I was doing
and always called me up on the platform to introduce me as the district’s next
state senator. He supported me every time I ran for public office after
that.
Throughout my
28-year political career, Jimmie Davis would often come by my Baton Rouge office
or call me to come visit at him at his home, which was right by the state
capitol. I always knew he needed a notary. My last call was a few
weeks before he died in 2000. He was donating a piece of property, but he
insisted he pay me something. “OK Governor,” I told him. “When you pass
on, I want you to give me your driver’s license number.” You see, Davis
instituted the license requirement during his first term as governor in
1944. And the number on his license? Number one. “A done deal,” he
told me.
Of course, I never
actually got it. But it was good way to end our 35-year relationship with
a smile. And Sunshine? Who was she? A past lover? A devoted
family member? No. Sunshine was Jimmie Davis’s horse. The palomino
mare is buried up on the northeast Louisiana farm. I pass that way occasionally
and remember back on my conversations with the Governor. And yes. I
do hum a few bars of “You Are My Sunshine.”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9:00 am till 11:00 am
Central Time on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
“I rejoice in the
knowledge that death is only the beginning.
It is my hope
and prayer that all of those who visit
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