Jamelle Folsom

Jamelle Folsom
First Lady of Alabama
In role
1948  January 15, 1951
Governor Jim Folsom
Preceded by Position vacant (1947-1948)
Succeeded by Alice Boyd McKeithen
First Lady of Alabama
In role
January 17, 1955  January 19, 1959
Preceded by Alice Boyd McKeithen
Succeeded by Mary Jo Patterson
Personal details
Born November 11, 1927
Died November 30, 2012(2012-11-30) (aged 85)
Cullman, Alabama
Political party Democratic Party
Spouse(s) Jim Folsom
Children Jim Folsom, Jr.

Jamelle Moore Folsom (November 11, 1927 – November 30, 2012) was an American former First Lady of the U.S. state of Alabama, serving from 1948 to 1951 and again from 1955 to 1959. She was the wife and widow of former Governor of Alabama James E. "Big Jim" Folsom and the mother of former Governor Jim Folsom, Jr.[1][2] She is the only Alabama woman in history to have both married and given birth to a state governor.[2]

Biography

Early life

Folsom was born Jamelle Moore to E.M. Moore and Ebelene Utley Moore. She was a native of Berry, Alabama, in Fayette County.[2]

First Lady of Alabama

Folsom met her future husband, Jim Folsom, while attending his campaign rally in Berry, Alabama, in 1946 when she was just seventeen years old.[1][2] Jim Folsom's first wife, Sarah, had died in 1944 due to pregnancy complications,[2] and he had been described at the time as one of Alabama's and the United States' most eligible bachelors.[1][2] Jim Folsom saw Jamelle listening to his speech while sitting on the hood of a car. He quickly told the crowd, "they sure did have a lot of pretty girls in Berry, Alabama."[1] After the rally, Folsom invited Jamelle to have a soda in a local drugstore and the two quickly began dating.[1] Jim Folsom was elected Governor of Alabama later in 1946 and the pair continued dating for two years.[2] In 1948, Jim and Jamelle eloped and were married by a probate judge, a friend of Governor Folsom's, in Rockford, Alabama.[1] Jamelle Folson served as First Lady of Alabama for the remainder of his first term, beginning in 1948[1] According to an account by the retired Chairman of the University of Alabama's political science department, William Stewart, Jamelle Folsom played a major role in settling her husband's fast-paced lifelstyle, "She seemed to calm him down and she was a very faithful companion to him for the rest of his life."[1] Jamelle Folsom, who was twenty years younger than "Big Jim," had seven children, including Governor Jim Folsom, Jr., as well as two stepchildren from her husband's first marriage.[2] All three of her sons were born during her tenures as First Lady.[2]

Folsom moved to Cullman, Alabama, in 1951 after her husband completed his first, non-consecutive term in office.[2] State law, at the time, forbid any sitting, incumbent Governor from seeking re-election to a second, consecutive term.[2][3] The Folsoms chose Cullman County to build up his political base in the Northern Alabama region.[2] Jamelle Folsom resumed her duties as First Lady in Montgomery, Alabama, upon her husband's election to a second term.[2]

Later life

Jim Folsom died in 1987, leaving Jamelle Folsom a widow. Jamelle Folsom returned to government after his death, this time as an executive officer for the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries.[2] Originally appointed by former Agriculture and Industry Commissioner A.W. Todd in 1991, Folsom spent eleven years at the agency.[2][4] Her position proved controversial in its early years, including an unsuccessful move by Republican Agriculture and Industry Commissioner Jack Thompson to eliminate her post soon after he defeated Todd in the 1994 election.[5]

Jamelle Folsom remained active in Alabama politics and other public functions throughout the remainder of her life.[2]

Folsom died at Cullman Regional Medical Center in Cullman, Alabama, at approximately 2:30 p.m on November 30, 2012, at the age of 85.[1][3] She was survived by five of her seven children - Jim Folsom Jr., Bama Folsom, Thelma Folsom, Melody Folsom, and Layla Folsom, and two stepchildren from Jim Folsom's first marriage, Rachel Lichenstein and Melissa Boyen.[1] Alabama news organizations described the death of the former First Lady as one of the state's top stories of 2012.[6]

References

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