George Corley Wallace Jr. was a remarkable and respectable man. After his younger years as a boxer winning two Golden Gloves state titles in 1936 through 1937, he went to the University of Alabama School of Law to get his law degree. He became a Senator after two years when he got that law degree in 1942. After graduating from University of Alabama Law School, he followed up with military service in World War II. Wallace served as assistant state’s attorney in 1946, after which he was elected for two terms in the state legislature.
George Wallace was born on August 25, 1919, in Clio, Alabama. His father, George Corley Wallace Sr., was a farmer. His mother, Mozelle Smith Wallace, had been abandoned by …show more content…
He won a landslide victory, and was elected as the governor. Wallace won the governorship of Alabama in 1962, on a platform emphasizing segregation and economic issues. Within his first year in office he kept his pledge to stand in the schoolhouse door by blocking the enrollment of black students at the University of Alabama. During his first term as Governor, George initiated a revolution in Alabama industrial progress. He was the first to propose tax abatements and other incentives to firms or industries to relocate to Alabama. In 1963, Wallace stood in front of Foster Auditorium at the University of Alabama, where he refused to let black students enter the university and this event popularly came to be known as the “ stand in the school door”. That same year, he once again attempted to stop the entry of four African American students from enrolling in a number of different schools in Huntsville, but his effort was made in vain. He desperately wanted to retain segregationist ideas in order to become more “popular” among the white majority in Alabama. Wallace took the oath of office in