Daily Progress
|
 
Blog
with Bob Gibson
Executive Director of the Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership and former Daily Progress political reporter


Bob Gibson
Daily Progress political blogger

    Barnie K. Day, a friend and fellow blogger from Patrick County who spent 1997-2001 laboring in the House of Delegates, offered up a few kind words about a book about some fellow characters from the House in the good ol’ days a few decades back.

    Here is Barnie’s review of this 91-page book about House rascals, figures, leaders and ne’er-do-wells (that people should read to figure who was what):

    So now comes to the literature of Virginia politics a self-published good look back, Wading in the Muddy Pool: A Virginia Political Memoir, 1972-1982 ($15.00, Old Favorites Bookshop, PO Box 8347, Richmond, 23226) by Richmond book dealer Gary S. O’Neal.

    O’Neal, who began a 10-year sojourn through Virginia’s political corridors in 1972, when he signed on as an aide to Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates John Warren Cooke, has served up a rare inside look that reads like an oral history, despite wording here and there that seems…well…a touch quaint.

    I’ll translate one for you:  “recently passed from the earthly scene” means somebody died.

    Still, this is a good, snappy read, as much for its candid observations as anything.  (The two-page memory of the House Clerk’s Office is worth the purchase price.)

    Virginia politics now is a bland vanilla team sport.  It used to be a game of individuals.  Many of the personalities here have “passed from the earthly scene,” and won’t be recognized by anyone, even inside players, under the age of 60, or so. 

    A few will stir the dust of memory:

    “Robert B. Ball, Sr., a Democrat from Henrico County, was a self educated man and one time butcher who became a success in the hotel-motel business and real estate.  He amassed a fortune in the 1950’s by putting pay TV sets in his motels and used to brag that he took a wheel barrow of quarters a week to the bank.”

    “William Dudley, Democrat, “Bullet Bill,” a former NFL great and football star at UVA.  Nice man, but fairly dense, more adept at attending local sports banquets than debating the issues of the day.”

    “George Mason Green, Republican, one of the last Arlington County Republicans before the Democrats became the dominant party in that area.  One of the new breed of right wing ideologues.”

    “Frank Mann, Democrat, Alexndria politician and former mayor of that city.  Went back on his word to Delegate Lane (Ed Lane, of Richmond) on a committee vote at the 1973 session, a disagreeable man with little character.”

    “Thomas W. Moss, Democrat, Norfolk politician, liked the ladies and the bottle.”

    “Stanley Owens, Democrat, Prince William County, at that point growing somewhat senile, later known throughout the Assembly for crashing into a water fountain with his car at an Interstate 95 rest stop and then trying to bill the House of Delegates for the damage to his auto.”

    “As Speaker, Philot (Albert Lee, of Henry County) was more politically assertive than Cooke.  He saw the role of the Speaker as that of an active participant in the political process, rather than a nonpartisan referee like Speaker Cooke.  I don’t mean that Cooke had no party loyalty, but he exercised it gently while A. L. used a whip.”

    “Dorothy McDiarmid, Democrat from Fairfax, whose husband Hugh constantly trailed her around the Capitol.”

    O’Neal has given Virginia’s political junkies a tasty appetizer (91 pages).  I wish it had been an entrée. 

    You could do worse than buying this book.

Posted by Bob Gibson @ 02:36 PM · (1) Trackbacks ·
Next entry: English as only official state speech Previous entry: House Dems choose their leadership

Post a Comment

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.

About
Bob Gibson

Bob Gibson was the Daily Progress political reporter for 17 years and also worked for seven years as city editor after covering the police and court beats. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia who hails from Arlington County. He is currently the Executive Director of the Sorenson Institute for Political Leadership.

Recent Entries
Healing, rebuilding in Rwanda
Football, reading and family
Hard to lead in today’s poisonous atmosphere
Hard to lead in today’s poisonous atmosphere
Mary Ann Elwood: A local ‘force of nature’
Recent Comments
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/12/2012
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/10/2012
By nisni90 on:
New forms of journalism emerging
02/08/2012
Monthly Archives
January 2012
December 2011
October 2011
September 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
August 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
August 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
Search


Advanced Search

Syndicate


Advertisement

Advertisement