Wilson W. Wyatt

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Wilson Watkins Wyatt (November 21, 1905 - June 11, 1996) served as Mayor of Louisville, Kentucky from 1941 to 1945 and as Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky from 1959 to 1963. He was a member of the Democratic Party.

Wyatt was born in Louisville in 1905 and attended the University of Louisville as well as the Jefferson School of Law, becoming an attorney in 1927. He was the principal counsel for the two major Louisville newspapers, The Courier-Journal and the Louisville Times, and the WHAS television and radio stations.

Wyatt's political career began with his election as Mayor of Louisville in 1941. He took office just after the bombing of Pearl Harbor ushered America into World War II. Wyatt made civil defense a priority and was involved with a great deal of planning related to that. Wyatt also initiated Louisville's planning and zoning commission.

As his term as mayor of Louisville ended, President Harry S. Truman appointed Wyatt as United States Housing Expediter for the Office of War Mobilization, a position that was given cabinet-level rank.

With Eleanor Roosevelt and others Wyatt took a leading role in the founding and leadership of Americans for Democratic Action and he was the first chairman of the group in 1947.

Wyatt was campaign manager for Adlai Stevenson's 1952 presidential campaign, and played a prominent role in Stevenson's 1956 presidential campaign.

In 1959 Wyatt planned to run for Governor of Kentucky. He eventually decided to run for Lieutenant Governor with the party's 1955 nominee, Bert T. Combs, at the top of the ticket. Combs and Wyatt were both elected and served in those offices from 1959 through 1963. Combs' administration created the Kentucky Economic Development Commission and Wyatt was its chairman.

In 1962 Wyatt was the Democratic nominee for the United States Senate but lost the election to the Republican incumbent Thurston B. Morton.

In 1963 President John F. Kennedy appointed Wyatt as a special envoy to Indonesia to deal with Indonesian president Sukarno who was threatening to nationalize foreign oil companies there.[1] Wyatt's mission was successful and Sukarno did not nationalize the foreign-owned elements of the Indonesian oil industry.

After leaving the lieutenant governor's office in 1963, Wyatt established the law firm Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs which included Governor Bert Combs with whom Wyatt had served in Frankfort for the preceding four years.

In 1968 Hubert H. Humphrey, the Vice President of the United States and Democratic presidential nominee, had Wyatt play an important role at the Democratic National Convention in working out a compromise over the party's platform on the Vietnam War.

For the remainder of his life Wyatt was active in the legal community and with civic affairs in Kentucky. He and his wife Anne donated $500,000 to the Jefferson County, Kentucky public schools to create scholarships for high school debaters, and another $500,000 to the law school at the University of Louisville, where he had once served as chairman of the board of trustees. The university in turn named its law school building after Wyatt in 1995.

Wyatt died in 1996; he is interred at Cave Hill Cemetery and Arboretum in Louisville.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stars and Stripes May 31, 1963

[edit] Further reading

  • Pearce, John Ed (1987). Divide and Dissent : Kentucky Politics, 1930-1963. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813116139.
  • Wyatt, Sr., Wilson W. (1985). Whistle Stops: Adventures in Public Life. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 081311537X.


Preceded by:
Harry Lee Waterfield
Lieutenant Governors of Kentucky
January 1, 1959–January 1, 1963
Succeeded by:
Harry Lee Waterfield
Preceded by:
Joseph D. Scholtz
Mayor of Louisville, Kentucky
December 1, 1941–December 1, 1945
Succeeded by:
E. Leland Taylor
Preceded by:
Earle C. Clements
Democratic Nominee for the United States Senate (Class 3) from Kentucky
1962-1962
Succeeded by:
Katherine Peden