Many Americans remember Senator Sam Ervin (1896&#x2013;1985) as the affable Bible-quoting old country lawyer who chaired the Senate Watergate hearings in 1973. Ervin&#x2019;s stories from down home in North Carolina his reciting literary passages ranging from Shakespeare to Aesop&#x2019;s fables and his earnest lectures in defense of civil liberties and constitutional government contributed to the downfall of President Nixon and earned Senator Ervin a reputation as &#x201C;the last of the founding fathers.&#x201D;<br/><br/>Yet for most of his twenty years in the Senate Ervin applied these same rhetorical devices to a very different purpose. Between 1954 and 1974 he was Jim Crow&#x2019;s most talented legal defender as the South&#x2019;s constitutional expert during the congressional debates on civil rights. The paradox of the senator&#x2019;s opposition to civil rights and defense of civil liberties lies at the heart of this biography of Sam Ervin.<br/><br/>Drawing on newly opened archival material Karl Campbell illuminates the character of the man and the historical forces that shaped him. The senator&#x2019;s distrust of centralized power Campbell argues helps explain his ironic reputation as a foe of civil rights and a champion of civil liberties. Campbell demonstrates that the Watergate scandal represented the culmination of an escalating series of clashes between the imperial presidency of Richard Nixon and a congressional counterattack led by Senator Ervin. The issue central to that struggle as well as to many of the other crusades in Ervin&#x2019;s life remains a key question of the American experience today &#x2014; how to exercise legitimate government power while protecting essential individual freedoms.
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