The 1964 United States presidential election in Georgia took place on November 3, 1964, as part of the 1964 United States presidential election, which was held on that day throughout all 50 states and The District of Columbia. Voters chose 12 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
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County Results
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Republican nominee and U.S. Senator from Arizona Barry Goldwater carried the state by 8.3 percentage points over incumbent Democratic president Lyndon B. Johnson. With his victory, Goldwater became the first Republican to ever carry the state in a presidential election. This was an impressive feat, especially given that Goldwater lost to Lyndon B. Johnson nationally in a landslide. Georgia joined the other Deep South states of Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina and Louisiana in supporting the Arizona senator as a protest against the Civil Rights Act,[1] although it did so by a smaller margin – 8.25% – than any other Deep South state Goldwater carried.[2]
This election was the first time since 1836 that a Democrat would win the presidency without carrying Georgia. Georgia was also one of three states that voted with a certain party for the first time in this election, the other two being Alaska and Vermont, both of which voted for a Democratic presidential candidate for the first time. Georgia was one of five states that swung more Republican in 1964, alongside Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina.[3][4]
Campaign
editJames H. Gray Sr., the chair of the Georgia Democratic Party, supported Goldwater.[5] Calvin F. Craig, the head of the Ku Klux Klan in Georgia, supported Goldwater as he saw the election as a battle between Goldwater's "Americanism" and Johnson's "socialism".[6] A "Democrats for Goldwater" group was also organized by the "Citizens' Council".[7]
The majority of opinion polls between July and early October[8] suggested that, despite this widespread opposition to Johnson's programs, Goldwater would not win Georgia. In fact, in early August, Georgia was viewed as alongside Arkansas and North Carolina as the most secure southern state for Johnson.[9] Nevertheless, those Democratic Party delegates who refused to support Goldwater because of his policies on rural electrification and subsidies to tobacco farmers were concerned that Goldwater could carry Georgia – and the entire South – as early as late August.[10]
Moreover, in Valdosta in the far south, the region where resistance to black civil rights was most extreme, white union workers in September had been polled as supporting Goldwater 315 to 19, with 1 vote for George Wallace who would carry the state in 1968.[11] By the end of September, it was clear that the state was bitterly divided, with the previously rock-solid Democratic south rooting for Goldwater but defections from Republican support during the previous election in the northern counties appearing to be almost as widespread,[12] because there was some hope Johnson could reverse large population declines and win support through his program of War on Poverty.[13] By the end of October, amidst much campaigning in the state by both Johnson and Goldwater, it was generally thought Georgia was leaning towards the Republicans.[14]
Compared to the previous election, Georgia swung to the Republicans by over 34%, though this masked enormous regional differences. Among the rural areas of the "black belt" and the south of the state, there were enormous swings to Goldwater as the whites – the only people who voted – totally deserted Johnson.[15] For instance, Miller County went from 94% for Kennedy to only 14% for Johnson, and Lee County from 69% for Kennedy to only 19 percent for Johnson.
In contrast, only 55% of those Georgian voters who supported Nixon in 1960 remained with Goldwater.[16] Deserting of the Republicans in pro-Union and almost entirely white Appalachia gave Towns County to the Democrats for the first time since 1952, and nearly switched Gilmer and Pickens Counties. Illustrating the "bifurcated" political change in the state[17] was that while FDR carried the state by 83.83 percentage points in 1932, Herbert Hoover had won Towns County by 48 votes. One of the best examples of Pro-Unionists going to Democrats was Long County, which had only given Kennedy 23 percent of the vote in 1960, but gave Johnson 84% in 1964.[18][19] Only 55% of those Georgian voters who supported Nixon in 1960 remained with Goldwater.[20] Goldwater received 65% of the white vote.[21]
During the concurrent House elections of 1964 in Georgia, Republicans picked up a seat from the Democrats, that being the Third District House seat won by Howard Callaway who became the first Republican to be elected to the House of Representatives from Georgia since Reconstruction.
Results
editPro-Union and almost entirely white Appalachia, which previously supported Republican candidates, gave Towns County to the Democrats for the first time since 1952, and nearly switched Gilmer and Pickens Counties. [22][23]
Results by county
editCounty[25] | Barry Goldwater Republican |
Lyndon B. Johnson Democratic |
Various candidates Write-ins |
Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Appling | 2,597 | 62.44% | 1,562 | 37.56% | 1,035 | 24.88% | 4,159 | ||
Atkinson | 1,157 | 58.76% | 811 | 41.19% | 1 | 0.05% | 346 | 17.57% | 1,969 |
Bacon | 2,136 | 64.43% | 1,179 | 35.57% | 957 | 28.86% | 3,315 | ||
Baker | 914 | 60.33% | 600 | 39.60% | 1 | 0.07% | 314 | 20.73% | 1,515 |
Baldwin | 3,430 | 55.59% | 2,740 | 44.41% | 690 | 11.18% | 6,170 | ||
Banks | 548 | 30.34% | 1,258 | 69.66% | -710 | -39.32% | 1,806 | ||
Barrow | 2,316 | 50.42% | 2,277 | 49.58% | 39 | 0.84% | 4,593 | ||
Bartow | 2,813 | 37.77% | 4,635 | 62.23% | -1,822 | -24.46% | 7,448 | ||
Ben Hill | 2,089 | 57.82% | 1,523 | 42.15% | 1 | 0.03% | 566 | 15.67% | 3,613 |
Berrien | 4,073 | 60.51% | 2,658 | 39.49% | 1,415 | 21.02% | 6,731 | ||
Bibb | 25,641 | 58.98% | 17,831 | 41.02% | 7,810 | 17.96% | 43,472 | ||
Bleckley | 2,578 | 72.50% | 978 | 27.50% | 1,600 | 45.00% | 3,556 | ||
Brantley | 1,231 | 57.52% | 909 | 42.48% | 322 | 15.04% | 2,140 | ||
Brooks | 2,342 | 69.50% | 1,027 | 30.47% | 1 | 0.03% | 1,315 | 39.03% | 3,370 |
Bryan | 1,433 | 62.58% | 857 | 37.42% | 576 | 25.16% | 2,290 | ||
Bulloch | 4,823 | 63.94% | 2,720 | 36.06% | 2,103 | 27.88% | 7,543 | ||
Burke | 3,034 | 71.52% | 1,208 | 28.48% | 1,826 | 43.04% | 4,242 | ||
Butts | 1,261 | 45.12% | 1,534 | 54.88% | -273 | -9.76% | 2,795 | ||
Calhoun | 1,066 | 78.67% | 289 | 21.33% | 777 | 57.34% | 1,355 | ||
Camden | 1,802 | 51.56% | 1,693 | 48.44% | 109 | 3.12% | 3,495 | ||
Candler | 1,710 | 68.26% | 795 | 31.74% | 915 | 36.52% | 2,505 | ||
Carroll | 4,984 | 50.96% | 4,794 | 49.02% | 2 | 0.02% | 190 | 1.94% | 9,780 |
Catoosa | 4,143 | 58.59% | 2,922 | 41.32% | 6 | 0.08% | 1,221 | 17.27% | 7,071 |
Charlton | 1,179 | 67.26% | 574 | 32.74% | 605 | 34.52% | 1,753 | ||
Chatham | 33,141 | 58.85% | 23,176 | 41.15% | 1 | 0.00% | 9,965 | 17.70% | 56,318 |
Chattahoochee | 246 | 56.29% | 191 | 43.71% | 55 | 12.58% | 437 | ||
Chattooga | 1,476 | 27.01% | 3,986 | 72.94% | 3 | 0.05% | -2,510 | -45.93% | 5,465 |
Cherokee | 3,398 | 51.59% | 3,189 | 48.41% | 209 | 3.18% | 6,587 | ||
Clarke | 4,875 | 39.33% | 7,519 | 60.67% | -2,644 | -21.34% | 12,394 | ||
Clay | 544 | 60.04% | 360 | 39.74% | 2 | 0.22% | 184 | 20.30% | 906 |
Clayton | 10,488 | 64.08% | 5,869 | 35.86% | 10 | 0.06% | 4,619 | 28.22% | 16,367 |
Clinch | 1,084 | 60.56% | 706 | 39.44% | 378 | 21.12% | 1,790 | ||
Cobb | 20,863 | 55.62% | 16,647 | 44.38% | 1 | 0.00% | 4,216 | 11.24% | 37,511 |
Coffee | 4,392 | 61.76% | 2,719 | 38.24% | 1,673 | 23.52% | 7,111 | ||
Colquitt | 6,493 | 71.67% | 2,563 | 28.29% | 4 | 0.04% | 3,930 | 43.38% | 9,060 |
Columbia | 2,575 | 64.33% | 1,428 | 35.67% | 1,147 | 28.66% | 4,003 | ||
Cook | 2,058 | 60.62% | 1,337 | 39.38% | 721 | 21.24% | 3,395 | ||
Coweta | 3,656 | 49.62% | 3,712 | 50.38% | -56 | -0.76% | 7,368 | ||
Crawford | 957 | 56.96% | 723 | 43.04% | 234 | 13.92% | 1,680 | ||
Crisp | 3,337 | 65.52% | 1,756 | 34.48% | 1,581 | 31.04% | 5,093 | ||
Dade | 1,378 | 52.84% | 1,227 | 47.05% | 3 | 0.12% | 151 | 5.79% | 2,608 |
Dawson | 639 | 40.67% | 932 | 59.33% | -293 | -18.66% | 1,571 | ||
Decatur | 5,060 | 71.55% | 2,011 | 28.44% | 1 | 0.01% | 3,049 | 43.11% | 7,072 |
DeKalb | 49,448 | 57.10% | 37,154 | 42.90% | 12,294 | 14.20% | 86,602 | ||
Dodge | 3,285 | 58.03% | 2,376 | 41.97% | 909 | 16.06% | 5,661 | ||
Dooly | 1,662 | 53.05% | 1,471 | 46.95% | 191 | 6.10% | 3,133 | ||
Dougherty | 12,776 | 70.88% | 5,248 | 29.12% | 7,528 | 41.76% | 18,024 | ||
Douglas | 3,315 | 57.00% | 2,501 | 43.00% | 814 | 14.00% | 5,816 | ||
Early | 2,398 | 75.67% | 771 | 24.33% | 1,627 | 51.34% | 3,169 | ||
Echols | 399 | 68.44% | 184 | 31.56% | 215 | 36.88% | 583 | ||
Effingham | 2,676 | 79.74% | 680 | 20.26% | 1,996 | 59.48% | 3,356 | ||
Elbert | 1,887 | 37.30% | 3,172 | 62.70% | -1,285 | -25.40% | 5,059 | ||
Emanuel | 3,311 | 59.23% | 2,279 | 40.77% | 1,032 | 18.46% | 5,590 | ||
Evans | 1,572 | 66.30% | 799 | 33.70% | 773 | 32.60% | 2,371 | ||
Fannin | 3,433 | 54.77% | 2,834 | 45.21% | 1 | 0.02% | 599 | 9.56% | 6,268 |
Fayette | 1,349 | 59.98% | 896 | 39.84% | 4 | 0.18% | 453 | 20.14% | 2,249 |
Floyd | 9,849 | 52.85% | 8,750 | 46.95% | 37 | 0.20% | 1,099 | 5.90% | 18,636 |
Forsyth | 1,471 | 46.64% | 1,682 | 53.33% | 1 | 0.03% | -211 | -6.69% | 3,154 |
Franklin | 864 | 23.84% | 2,758 | 76.10% | 2 | 0.06% | -1,894 | -52.26% | 3,624 |
Fulton | 73,205 | 43.90% | 93,540 | 56.09% | 11 | 0.01% | -20,335 | -12.19% | 166,756 |
Gilmer | 2,167 | 50.09% | 2,159 | 49.91% | 8 | 0.18% | 4,326 | ||
Glascock | 836 | 86.19% | 134 | 13.81% | 702 | 72.38% | 970 | ||
Glynn | 7,341 | 56.22% | 5,712 | 43.75% | 4 | 0.03% | 1,629 | 12.47% | 13,057 |
Gordon | 2,317 | 41.55% | 3,260 | 58.45% | -943 | -16.90% | 5,577 | ||
Grady | 2,983 | 61.25% | 1,887 | 38.75% | 1,096 | 22.50% | 4,870 | ||
Greene | 1,093 | 28.83% | 2,698 | 71.17% | -1,605 | -42.34% | 3,791 | ||
Gwinnett | 6,823 | 50.42% | 6,705 | 49.55% | 3 | 0.02% | 118 | 0.87% | 13,531 |
Habersham | 1,595 | 31.84% | 3,412 | 68.12% | 2 | 0.04% | -1,817 | -36.28% | 5,009 |
Hall | 4,296 | 34.90% | 8,003 | 65.01% | 11 | 0.09% | -3,707 | -30.11% | 12,310 |
Hancock | 925 | 46.27% | 1,074 | 53.73% | -149 | -7.46% | 1,999 | ||
Haralson | 3,129 | 58.85% | 2,186 | 41.11% | 2 | 0.04% | 943 | 17.74% | 5,317 |
Harris | 2,166 | 69.74% | 940 | 30.26% | 1,226 | 39.48% | 3,106 | ||
Hart | 1,166 | 27.00% | 3,142 | 72.77% | 10 | 0.23% | -1,976 | -45.77% | 4,318 |
Heard | 807 | 43.18% | 1,061 | 56.77% | 1 | 0.05% | -254 | -13.59% | 1,869 |
Henry | 3,125 | 46.58% | 3,583 | 53.41% | 1 | 0.01% | -458 | -6.83% | 6,709 |
Houston | 6,532 | 60.53% | 4,258 | 39.46% | 1 | 0.01% | 2,274 | 21.07% | 10,791 |
Irwin | 2,017 | 73.16% | 740 | 26.84% | 1,277 | 46.32% | 2,757 | ||
Jackson | 1,664 | 29.62% | 3,953 | 70.38% | -2,289 | -40.76% | 5,617 | ||
Jasper | 1,075 | 55.90% | 848 | 44.10% | 227 | 11.80% | 1,923 | ||
Jeff Davis | 1,875 | 71.56% | 745 | 28.44% | 1,130 | 43.12% | 2,620 | ||
Jefferson | 2,950 | 70.15% | 1,253 | 29.80% | 2 | 0.05% | 1,697 | 40.35% | 4,205 |
Jenkins | 1,509 | 62.43% | 908 | 37.57% | 601 | 24.86% | 2,417 | ||
Johnson | 1,940 | 73.99% | 682 | 26.01% | 1,258 | 47.98% | 2,622 | ||
Jones | 1,805 | 56.67% | 1,380 | 43.33% | 425 | 13.34% | 3,185 | ||
Lamar | 1,570 | 50.30% | 1,548 | 49.60% | 3 | 0.10% | 22 | 0.70% | 3,121 |
Lanier | 719 | 52.10% | 661 | 47.90% | 58 | 4.20% | 1,380 | ||
Laurens | 5,457 | 58.76% | 3,828 | 41.22% | 2 | 0.02% | 1,629 | 17.54% | 9,287 |
Lee | 1,041 | 81.01% | 244 | 18.99% | 797 | 62.02% | 1,285 | ||
Liberty | 1,458 | 39.73% | 2,212 | 60.27% | -754 | -20.54% | 3,670 | ||
Lincoln | 943 | 72.76% | 353 | 27.24% | 590 | 45.52% | 1,296 | ||
Long | 246 | 15.55% | 1,336 | 84.45% | -1,090 | -68.90% | 1,582 | ||
Lowndes | 6,811 | 60.95% | 4,363 | 39.04% | 1 | 0.01% | 2,448 | 21.91% | 11,175 |
Lumpkin | 855 | 41.81% | 1,189 | 58.14% | 1 | 0.05% | -334 | -16.33% | 2,045 |
Macon | 1,723 | 61.56% | 1,076 | 38.44% | 647 | 23.12% | 2,799 | ||
Madison | 1,190 | 33.70% | 2,341 | 66.30% | -1,151 | -32.60% | 3,531 | ||
Marion | 719 | 66.27% | 365 | 33.64% | 1 | 0.09% | 354 | 32.63% | 1,085 |
McDuffie | 2,657 | 70.27% | 1,124 | 29.73% | 1,533 | 40.54% | 3,781 | ||
McIntosh | 795 | 39.99% | 1,193 | 60.01% | -398 | -20.02% | 1,988 | ||
Meriwether | 2,250 | 48.14% | 2,423 | 51.84% | 1 | 0.02% | -173 | -3.70% | 4,674 |
Miller | 1,658 | 85.82% | 274 | 14.18% | 1,384 | 71.64% | 1,932 | ||
Mitchell | 3,265 | 73.17% | 1,197 | 26.83% | 2,068 | 46.34% | 4,462 | ||
Monroe | 1,665 | 51.33% | 1,578 | 48.64% | 1 | 0.03% | 87 | 2.69% | 3,244 |
Montgomery | 1,409 | 61.61% | 878 | 38.39% | 531 | 23.22% | 2,287 | ||
Morgan | 1,485 | 47.31% | 1,654 | 52.69% | -169 | -5.38% | 3,139 | ||
Murray | 1,064 | 30.44% | 2,426 | 69.41% | 5 | 0.14% | -1,362 | -38.97% | 3,495 |
Muscogee | 21,025 | 62.81% | 12,446 | 37.18% | 3 | 0.01% | 8,579 | 25.63% | 33,474 |
Newton | 2,678 | 42.52% | 3,620 | 57.48% | -942 | -14.96% | 6,298 | ||
Oconee | 1,241 | 53.63% | 1,073 | 46.37% | 168 | 7.26% | 2,314 | ||
Oglethorpe | 1,126 | 56.58% | 864 | 43.42% | 262 | 13.16% | 1,990 | ||
Paulding | 1,914 | 43.23% | 2,513 | 56.77% | -599 | -13.54% | 4,427 | ||
Peach | 1,970 | 55.40% | 1,585 | 44.57% | 1 | 0.03% | 385 | 10.83% | 3,556 |
Pickens | 1,955 | 50.32% | 1,930 | 49.68% | 25 | 0.64% | 3,885 | ||
Pierce | 1,981 | 66.86% | 982 | 33.14% | 999 | 33.72% | 2,963 | ||
Pike | 1,064 | 52.94% | 946 | 47.06% | 118 | 5.88% | 2,010 | ||
Polk | 3,282 | 41.86% | 4,555 | 58.10% | 3 | 0.04% | -1,273 | -16.24% | 7,840 |
Pulaski | 1,768 | 64.86% | 953 | 34.96% | 5 | 0.18% | 815 | 29.90% | 2,726 |
Putnam | 1,196 | 54.02% | 1,018 | 45.98% | 178 | 8.04% | 2,214 | ||
Quitman | 377 | 62.11% | 230 | 37.89% | 147 | 24.22% | 607 | ||
Rabun | 551 | 23.48% | 1,796 | 76.52% | -1,245 | -53.04% | 2,347 | ||
Randolph | 1,656 | 63.18% | 962 | 36.70% | 3 | 0.11% | 694 | 26.48% | 2,621 |
Richmond | 21,481 | 61.32% | 13,545 | 38.67% | 3 | 0.01% | 7,936 | 22.65% | 35,029 |
Rockdale | 1,503 | 43.25% | 1,972 | 56.75% | -469 | -13.50% | 3,475 | ||
Schley | 577 | 60.48% | 377 | 39.52% | 200 | 20.96% | 954 | ||
Screven | 2,260 | 60.98% | 1,446 | 39.02% | 814 | 21.96% | 3,706 | ||
Seminole | 1,294 | 75.19% | 427 | 24.81% | 867 | 50.38% | 1,721 | ||
Spalding | 4,763 | 46.56% | 5,466 | 53.44% | -703 | -6.88% | 10,229 | ||
Stephens | 1,371 | 28.24% | 3,483 | 71.76% | -2,112 | -43.52% | 4,854 | ||
Stewart | 1,037 | 73.39% | 373 | 26.40% | 3 | 0.21% | 664 | 46.99% | 1,413 |
Sumter | 3,774 | 68.61% | 1,727 | 31.39% | 2,047 | 37.22% | 5,501 | ||
Talbot | 679 | 51.99% | 627 | 48.01% | 52 | 3.98% | 1,306 | ||
Taliaferro | 337 | 34.92% | 628 | 65.08% | -291 | -30.16% | 965 | ||
Tattnall | 3,264 | 66.45% | 1,648 | 33.55% | 1,616 | 32.90% | 4,912 | ||
Taylor | 1,372 | 55.55% | 1,097 | 44.41% | 1 | 0.04% | 275 | 11.14% | 2,470 |
Telfair | 1,914 | 50.55% | 1,872 | 49.45% | 42 | 1.10% | 3,786 | ||
Terrell | 1,921 | 77.15% | 569 | 22.85% | 1,352 | 54.30% | 2,490 | ||
Thomas | 6,306 | 65.94% | 3,257 | 34.06% | 3,049 | 31.88% | 9,563 | ||
Tift | 4,650 | 67.04% | 2,286 | 32.96% | 2,364 | 34.08% | 6,936 | ||
Toombs | 3,543 | 67.77% | 1,685 | 32.23% | 1,858 | 35.54% | 5,228 | ||
Towns | 1,140 | 46.88% | 1,289 | 53.00% | 3 | 0.12% | -149 | -6.12% | 2,432 |
Treutlen | 722 | 35.15% | 1,331 | 64.80% | 1 | 0.05% | -609 | -29.65% | 2,054 |
Troup | 5,277 | 46.66% | 6,032 | 53.34% | -755 | -6.68% | 11,309 | ||
Turner | 1,672 | 69.93% | 719 | 30.07% | 953 | 39.86% | 2,391 | ||
Twiggs | 1,178 | 59.98% | 786 | 40.02% | 392 | 19.96% | 1,964 | ||
Union | 1,473 | 40.83% | 2,135 | 59.17% | -662 | -18.34% | 3,608 | ||
Upson | 3,103 | 48.61% | 3,275 | 51.30% | 6 | 0.09% | -172 | -2.69% | 6,384 |
Walker | 5,939 | 52.09% | 5,454 | 47.84% | 8 | 0.07% | 485 | 4.25% | 11,401 |
Walton | 2,874 | 54.99% | 2,350 | 44.97% | 2 | 0.04% | 524 | 10.02% | 5,226 |
Ware | 4,948 | 48.81% | 5,189 | 51.19% | -241 | -2.38% | 10,137 | ||
Warren | 1,070 | 73.59% | 384 | 26.41% | 686 | 47.18% | 1,454 | ||
Washington | 2,296 | 55.63% | 1,830 | 44.34% | 1 | 0.02% | 466 | 11.29% | 4,127 |
Wayne | 3,619 | 62.39% | 2,182 | 37.61% | 1,437 | 24.78% | 5,801 | ||
Webster | 457 | 76.04% | 144 | 23.96% | 313 | 52.08% | 601 | ||
Wheeler | 849 | 46.42% | 980 | 53.58% | -131 | -7.16% | 1,829 | ||
White | 840 | 35.55% | 1,520 | 64.33% | 3 | 0.13% | -680 | -28.78% | 2,363 |
Whitfield | 4,546 | 38.27% | 7,330 | 61.70% | 4 | 0.03% | -2,784 | -23.43% | 11,880 |
Wilcox | 1,794 | 66.59% | 900 | 33.41% | 894 | 33.18% | 2,694 | ||
Wilkes | 1,652 | 53.48% | 1,437 | 46.52% | 215 | 6.96% | 3,089 | ||
Wilkinson | 2,172 | 69.28% | 963 | 30.72% | 1,209 | 38.56% | 3,135 | ||
Worth | 3,157 | 78.55% | 862 | 21.45% | 2,295 | 57.10% | 4,019 | ||
Totals | 616,584 | 54.12% | 522,557 | 45.87% | 195 | 0.02% | 94,027 | 8.25% | 1,139,336 |
References
edit- ^ Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, pp. 90-92 ISBN 0786422173
- ^ Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections; 1964 Presidential General Election Results – Georgia
- ^ "1964 Presidential General Election Results - National". Dave Leip's election atlas.
- ^ "1960 Presidential General Election Results - National". Dave Leip's election atlas.
- ^ 'Georgia Demos Will Support National Ticket'; Rome News-Tribune, November 10, 1967, p. 1
- ^ 'Georgia KKK Endorses Barry For Presidency', Chicago Daily Defender, July 28, 196, p. 3
- ^ McMillen, Neil R.; The Citizens' Council: Organized Resistance to the Second Reconstruction, 1954-64, p. 351 ISBN 0252064410
- ^ Grimes, Roy; 'Look Away, Look Away...'; The Victoria Advocate, October 11, 1964, p. 4A
- ^ Roberts, Chalmers M.; 'Goldwater Riding High in South, Survey Finds: Has Firm Hold on Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Florida; Texas Rates Tossup'; Los Angeles Times, August 2, 1964, p. 12
- ^ 'South Ponders: "If Georgia Goes to Goldwater ...": Organization Noted'; The Christian Science Monitor, August 25, 1964, p. 1
- ^ 'Goldwater Tops Johnson In a Georgia Union Poll' (Special to The New York Times); The New York Times, September 13, 1964; p. 57
- ^ Baird, Joseph H.; 'Georgia Vote Doubts Build: Opportunism Charged', Christian Science Monitor, September 16, 1964; p. 11
- ^ Hunter, Marjorie; 'Poverty Is Issue in Georgia Hills: Democrats Hope to Reverse Their G.O.P. Tradition' (Special to The New York Times); The New York Times, October 19, 1964, p. 26
- ^ Selover, William C.; 'Nationwide Poll of Polls Shows Wide Agreement on Outcome of Election: Georgia to Goldwater', The Christian Science Monitor, October 30, 1964, p. 6
- ^ Coleman, Kenneth (editor); A History of Georgia, p. 399 ISBN 082031269X
- ^ Gimpel, James G. and Schuknecht, Jason E.; Patchwork Nation: Sectionalism and Political Change in American Politics, p. 204 ISBN 0472022911
- ^ Mickey, Robert; Paths out of Dixie: The Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in America, p. 77 ISBN 1400838789
- ^ Robinson, Edgar Eugene; The Presidential Vote, 1896-1932, p. 172 ISBN 080471696X
- ^ Coleman, Kenneth (editor); A History of Georgia, p. 399 ISBN 082031269X
- ^ Gimpel, James G. and Schuknecht, Jason E.; Patchwork Nation: Sectionalism and Political Change in American Politics, p. 204 ISBN 0472022911
- ^ Black & Black 1992, p. 155.
- ^ Robinson, Edgar Eugene; The Presidential Vote, 1896-1932, p. 172 ISBN 080471696X
- ^ Mickey, Robert; Paths out of Dixie: The Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in America, p. 77 ISBN 1400838789
- ^ Georgia's Official Register, 1963-1964 (PDF). Atlanta, Georgia: Department of Archives and History. pp. 1500–1507, 1532–1533.
- ^ Fortson, Ben W. (1964). Official state of Georgia tabulation by counties for Presidential Electors, U.S. Representatives, state officers and constitutional amendments, General Election November 3, 1964 (PDF). Georgia Secretary of State.