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In the latest episode of History for Cocktail Parties, James Ottley and Thornton Kennedy discuss one of the strangest chapters in American political history: Georgia’s “Three Governors Controversy” of 1946–47. When governor-elect Eugene Talmadge died before taking office, chaos erupted under the Gold Dome. In a spectacle equal parts tragedy, farce, and backroom brawl, three men — outgoing governor Ellis Arnall, lieutenant governor-elect Melvin E. Thompson, and Talmadge’s son Herman — each declared themselves the rightful governor. For weeks, Georgia had three governors with locked offices, a hidden state seal and even a state trooper standoff.
By Thornton Kennedy and James M. Ottley5
1717 ratings
In the latest episode of History for Cocktail Parties, James Ottley and Thornton Kennedy discuss one of the strangest chapters in American political history: Georgia’s “Three Governors Controversy” of 1946–47. When governor-elect Eugene Talmadge died before taking office, chaos erupted under the Gold Dome. In a spectacle equal parts tragedy, farce, and backroom brawl, three men — outgoing governor Ellis Arnall, lieutenant governor-elect Melvin E. Thompson, and Talmadge’s son Herman — each declared themselves the rightful governor. For weeks, Georgia had three governors with locked offices, a hidden state seal and even a state trooper standoff.

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