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  1. Theodore Gilmore Bilbo (October 13, 1877 – August 21, 1947) was an American politician who twice served as governor of Mississippi (1916–1920, 1928–1932) and later was elected a U.S. Senator (1935–1947).

  2. Theodore G. Bilbo was an American politician and Democratic senator from Mississippi (193547), best known for his racist and demagogic rhetoric. Bilbo managed despite poverty to attend Peabody College and the University of Nashville (Tennessee) for a time and later studied law at Vanderbilt.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Although he was only five feet, two inches tall, Theodore G. Bilbo, in life as in legend, was a towering figure who stalked across the pages of Mississippi history. Between 1907 and 1947 “the Man,” as he was called by friends and foes alike, occupied a prominent place in Mississippi politics. Born at Juniper Grove […]

  4. Bilbo’s career, from his return to the governor’s mansion in 1928 through the Senate debate over his seating in 1947, parallels and illustrates the declining tolerance of overt racism and nativism in the United States. Many southern politicians continued to use extreme language similar to Bilbo’s.

  5. 25 de out. de 2019 · I imagine Mr. Bilbo was fully aware of who was behind this, but left that part out for obvious reasons. If he had been successful in his goal, that I imagine it would not have taken long for the jews to undo all of Bilbo's hard work.

  6. Promise and Peril, 1903–1927. Bridging Hardship, 1928-1945. Although he was only five-feet, two-inches tall, Theodore G. Bilbo, in life as in legend, is a towering figure who stalked across the pages of Mississippi history.

  7. Theodore G. Bilbo and the Greater Liberia Act. Born on October 13, 1877, at Juniper Grove in Pearl River County, Theodore G. Bilbo occupied a place of prominence in Mississippi politics from 1909-1947. He served as state senator, lieutenant governor, governor, and United States senator.