Huckabee: The Authorized Biography

Huckabee: The Authorized Biography

by Scott Lamb
Huckabee: The Authorized Biography

Huckabee: The Authorized Biography

by Scott Lamb

eBook

$13.49  $17.99 Save 25% Current price is $13.49, Original price is $17.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

“How does a man go from . . . pastoring churches . . . to running for President? [This] authorized biography tells this story in all its fascinating detail.” —The Pathway

For the first time, the former governor of Arkansas opens up the vault to friend and biographer Scott Lamb to tell his life story. In this thoroughly unique biography of one of the most likeable, influential leaders in America, Lamb covers the entire scope of Mike Huckabee’s life and career. With full, unfettered access to Governor Huckabee’s personal library, files, and family records, fans will finally get the definitive account of one humble man’s rise to political prominence.

The son of a local fireman in Hope, Arkansas, Huckabee began his time in the limelight at the side of James Robison during the early years of his television ministry. He hit his ministerial stride in the early 1980s, when he took the helm of Immanuel Baptist Church in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, from 1980 to 1986.

Most people, however, know Mike Huckabee as a politician. In 1994, he became lieutenant governor and faced the now infamous Whitewater scandal that sent then-governor Jim Guy Tucker into court to face felony charges of corruption and fraud. Huckabee’s courageous handling of the debacle endeared him to the hearts of many citizens, causing him to serve as the forty-fourth governor of Arkansas from 1996 until 2007. During his 2008 presidential bid, he finished second to John McCain.

As the host of the talk show Huckabee, he garnered even more fans, who will now have the opportunity to get to know the man behind the famous, reassuring smile.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780718039141
Publisher: HarperCollins Christian Publishing
Publication date: 03/21/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 351
Sales rank: 900,424
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Scott Lamb serves as the President of Reformation Press and the Executive Director of the Presbyterian Lay Committee in Nashville, Tennessee. He is a Baptist pastor who has shepherded churches in Alabama, Missouri, and Kentucky. He and his wife, Pearl, have six children. He is the author of Pujols: More than the Game (Thomas Nelson, 2011).

Read an Excerpt

Huckabee

The Authorized Biography


By Scott Lamb

Thomas Nelson

Copyright © 2015 Walter Scott Lamb
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7180-3915-8



CHAPTER 1

LAND OF HOPE AND DREAMS

1830–1901


What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?

— MICAH 6 : 8 k j v


Randy Sims recalls the first time he met his remarkable friend. As first-semester freshmen entering Ouachita Baptist University together, they enrolled in the same class, Introduction to Political Science. Legendary professor Jim Ranchino taught the course. Ranchino pioneered poll-driven political-demographic work throughout Arkansas, and, like just about every other person in the state of Arkansas, he was a Democrat.

"Ranchino was asking all these crazy questions, really challenging us — but nobody would say anything back," Sims recalled.

"That's when some guy in the back spoke up and said, 'You know, I don't agree with you at all.'" The room of eighteen-year-olds sat in silence, waiting for the professor to turn their classmate into a heap of academic ashes.

"This guy was the only one who had the nerve to do it. He started arguing back and forth with Ranchino. I thought, Who is that guy? He's smart and knows how to speak clearly." Later that day, Sims met the guy — "Hi. I'm Mike Huckabee" — and discovered they were hall mates in the now-nonexistent dorm known as Daniel Hall, named after the Old Testament character. Sims thought, This Huckabee guy is going to either be the next Billy Graham or he's going to be a politician. He is clearly headed somewhere.

* * *

In 1853, the State of Arkansas commissioned the Cairo and Fulton Railroad to build a line of track across the state from Missouri to Texas. Delayed by the Civil War and poor finances, it was not completed until the early 1870s. Missouri rail bosses had built a line from St. Louis downward through the state to reach the iron ore deposits in what was aptly named Iron Mountain. Jesse James robbed one of these trains in 1874 but refused to take items from men who had "working man's hands." He was after the Yankee money of bankers and businessmen. Revenge for the so-called War of Northern Aggression made good motivation for robbing trains.

That rail line coming out of St. Louis eventually extended all the way down to the Arkansas-Texas border. And for good reason. Connecting an entire state's worth of Southern neighbors to the excitement of St. Louis and Chicago made good business sense. In a time when horseback travel through some sections of Arkansas might take you a mere seven miles per day, the railroads advertised their line with this claim: "This is positively the only line that runs its entire trains from St. Louis to Texas without change."

In addition to creating the quickest path from Missouri to Texas, the railroads planned their specific route through Arkansas due to the lay of the land. For the sake of simplicity, geologists divide Arkansas diagonally from the northeast corner all the way down to the southwest corner where Arkansas meets Texas, culminating in a town called Texarkana. North of the geological divide is called "highlands," and south of the divide they call "lowlands." When people envision Arkansas "hillbilly" culture and history, it is the mountainous Ozark region of the northwest to which they are referring. But when talking about Old South realities present within Arkansas culture — sharecropping, agriculture dependence, plantations, and Memphis blues — that refers to the lowlands of the Delta and Gulf Coastal Plains. Therefore, central Arkansas sits at the intersection of three cultural regions, as embodied by the cities one would travel to upon leaving Little Rock in opposite directions: St. Louis (Midwest), Memphis (Deep South), and Dallas (Southwest). And heading northwest out of Arkansas would take you into "Indian Territory," now known to us as the state of Oklahoma. Arkansas was a crossroads and a land of untapped potential. The railroads were about to change that.

Texarkana came into existence as a railroad supply town. As the railroad companies in Texas and Arkansas each laid down their tracks, they joined up on the state line. Early city planners decided to obtain one hundred feet from the railroads — fifty feet from each company — to create the main street of the town that would straddle the state line. On the Arkansas side of the dealings, it was Joseph A. Longborough, an executive with the St. Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad, who granted them their fifty feet.

Of course, Texarkana wasn't the only town springing into existence along the route of the new railroad lines. Thirty miles up from Texarkana, Longborough's team decided to build a train depot, a stopping point for people to board the trains that would soon be coming through. They built the train depot in 1874. But people who waited for trains often needed food, lodging, and supplies. So businesses cropped up, the first ones being on land purchased from the railroad companies. Residential houses came after that, followed by churches, a school, and a post office. In a short amount of time, an entire town had sprung up around the original depot and rail lines. But no matter how humble its beginnings, every town needs a name. Mr. Longborough decided this particular train-depot town was worthy of being named after his daughter, Hope.

* * *

On January 16, 1901, Virgil Huckabee entered the world in Hempstead County, Arkansas. The Huckabees had called Hempstead County their home for a few generations, long before it even had the name. They trickled over from North Carolina and Georgia and settled in the region almost two hundred years ago. Just south of Hope, you'll find a cemetery with a fresh sign at the entrance: "Huckabee Cemetery, est. 1830." Keep in mind that Arkansas didn't become a state until 1836, so the Huckabee tribe can lay claim to deep roots in the region. Dozens of Mike Huckabee's relatives are buried here, though his own parents are buried in town. The cemetery sits adjacent to Huckabee Road. If you've got enough Huckabees around to have a cemetery and a road named after you, then you must have a lot of kinfolk in that "neck of the woods," as they say.

Over the years, the local newspaper, the Hope Star, printed stories about "the recent biennial Huckabee family reunion." They would include the many names of the Huckabee adults in attendance, along with a description of the meat, side items, and desserts served. Local newspapers sell copies when local people know their name is in print, so these kinds of stories fill up the pages of small-town papers in the early twentieth century. Now, of course, there is Facebook.

The best that research can tell, it was Berryman William Huckabee — Mike's great-great-grandpa — who brought his family over to Arkansas from North Carolina. He was the father of eleven children. The third child, a son they named Lucius Elmore, came along in 1876. In 1898, Lucius married a local girl named Lula, who bore Lucius seven children, then died in 1944 at the age of sixty-six — not a short life span for the time. But though the aver- age life span for a man born in the 1870s was forty-five, Lucius lived to be almost ninety-four. That is to say, when Lucius died in 1970, not only had he outlived his wife by twenty-six years, but he also had lived more than twice as long as the average baby boy from the 1870s. In fact, he died only eight years ahead of his son Virgil. When friends of Mike Huckabee talk about his physical stamina, his work ethic, and the short amount of sleep he requires, they ask, "I wonder if that runs in his family." The longevity of his great-grandpa Lucius, along with many other Huckabees named on the gravestones at Huckabee Cemetery — with eighty- and ninety-year life spans — indicates as much.

As other Huckabees would also do, Virgil Huckabee chose a wife from the Betts family, marrying Ernie Jerome Betts in the early 1920s. The couple became parents to a son, Dorsey Wiles Huckabee — Mike's father — in 1923. Fifteen years later, in 1938, they gave Dorsey a sister, Alta Joyce. So after coming from a family of eleven children, Virgil fathered just two. That explains why, when asked about his relatives who remain in the area, Huckabee answers, "Distant cousins mostly ... second and third cousins."

William Thomas Elder, Huckabee's maternal grandfather, was born in 1868, three years after the assassination of President Lincoln. Huckabee did not know this grandfather, however, because he died in 1945 at age seventy-eight. The bare facts of William's adult life are fascinating enough to leave us wishing for more of the story. Here is what we do know: William served during the Spanish-American War. Then, in 1903, at the age of thirty-five, he married a local girl from his native Kentucky. Mary L. "Mollie" Murrell bore him two children in the first two years of their marriage and died at some point between 1910 and 1920.

Now a widower living in Arkansas with his two sons, William married a second wife, Eva Lorene Whitney. We're not sure exactly when they tied the knot, but we do know their first baby, Mae Elder — Mike Huckabee's mother — arrived in 1925. Eva, a native of Illinois, was born in 1904, the same year as William's oldest son from his late wife. William was fifty-seven and Eva was twenty-one when she gave birth to Mae. They would go on to have seven children altogether. This means that William spent his first thirty-five years as a bachelor, but then died forty-two years later as the father of nine.

Though Mike never met his maternal grandfather, he wrote about him based on his mother's description:


She didn't talk about him much, and when she did, it was not with affection, but rather with a level of contempt that probably hid a lot of stuff I didn't need to know. She did tell me that he was an alcoholic and that he could often be harsh, even abusive. But in general, my mother buried her memories of her father deep within her soul and never, to my knowledge, talked about them to anyone.


Huckabee also wrote about the two sons William sired by his first wife, the boys old enough to be a father to Huckabee's mother. One of those brothers, "Uncle Garvin," became a significant presence in the Huckabee household. Huckabee describes him as "the closest thing to an actual father figure she (Mae) had." Though Garvin spent his adult life as a bachelor in Houston, Texas, he died of cancer in the Huckabees' home and is buried in the Huckabee cemetery.

After William's death in 1945, Eva eventually remarried, to a "Mr. Garner," and lived until 1989. In August 1973, as Mike Huckabee left for college, the Hope Star highlighted Eva, then sixty-nine, in its Celebrity Corner column. It says a lot about her, but also about the family and the times in which Mike Huckabee came of age. Here is an excerpt:


Eva Lorene Elder Garner ... known as "Miz Elder" or "Miz Garner" to so many friends, is better known to her 15 grandchildren as "Go-Go", not a frivolous term, but one derived by being a person constantly on the go, whether she feels like it or not.

Go, go, go has been her lot in life, not from choice actually, but some- thing she has accepted without grumbling and with grace. Walking and the ability to walk has been a mainstay in this spunky lady's life, she has never driven an automobile. The scripture, Micah 6:8 — "... and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" could best depict her long, busy, useful life.9


Suffice it to say, Eva was a strong woman who gave her children and grandchildren an example to live by. And her "go, go, go" manner of life foreshadowed an oft-used description of her famous grandson, Mike Huckabee — always on the go.

* * *

An individual cannot take credit for the moral strength and stability of the family into which he was born. But he can only be grateful for what he has received.

All six direct ancestors of Mike Huckabee written about in this chapter are buried in Hempstead County, Arkansas. However much the world changed during the last 150 years, the Huckabees from which Mike Huckabee descended gave him the inheritance of family stability. His grandparents remained married for more than fifty years, supporting their family with everyday work in an obscure little town in order to give their children's children a sturdy foundation for the future.

Geography and economic realities have a strong influence on our lives. Had the trains not cut through the Arkansas landscape in the 1870s, life would have gone on for the Huckabees. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness were theirs even without trains. But the fact that the trains did, in fact, come to Arkansas, and that geographical terrain guided the railroad executives to lay down track just north of where the Huckabee tribes had already established their roots forty years earlier — this all seems providential.

To be sure, the first generation of Huckabees felt the influence of the trains chief ly because of the new f low of products, in and out, that the trains provided. But then, over the next hundred years, the machines of modernity took the residents of Hope places they would never have gone otherwise. Because of the trains — and later on, the interstate system that followed the same path — the sons and daughters of Hope gained access to a world that may have eluded them if they had been born elsewhere, like up in the Ozark Mountains, where transport did not come easily.

But along with the positive advances of modernity also came the scourge of efficient evil. Leaders who desired to inflict either joy or sorrow upon the world could now do so with greater speed and in greater quantity. By 1940, the dominant nations of the world took advantage of the major leaps in technological advancement, creating war machines unimaginable at the time of the birth of William Elder (1868) or Lucius Huckabee (1876). The nineteenth-century doctrine of Charles Darwin's "survival of the fittest" began bearing its fruit in the 1930s, as evil men like Adolf Hitler sought to ensure their own nations would be the fittest and survive. People deemed as "unworthy of life" were simply eliminated. The same train lines in Europe that had brought families together in previous years now stripped them apart, as millions were sent by rail line to concentration camps in far reaches of land under a tyrant's control. The world marched into another global war.

Meanwhile, half a world away in Hope, Arkansas, two generations of Mike Huckabee's forefathers picked up the Saturday, June 7, 1941, Hope Star and saw in massive font at the top of the front page: "HOPE OBTAINS BIG WAR-PLANT." The effects of Hitler's killing machine were headed for Hope. Nothing would ever be the same again.

CHAPTER 2

SMALL TOWN

c. 1920–1955

The bride was becomingly attired in a two piece suit of chocolate brown covert with winter white and green accessories.

— HOPE STAR DESCRIPTION OF MAE HUCKABEE, NOVEMBER 3, 1948


Just months before the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the War Department sent eviction notices to four hundred families near Hope, Arkansas. The government had chosen six locations in Arkansas as sites for the building of ordnance plants, and residents of the acquired lands were given a one-month notice to vacate. With war on the way, time was of the essence. The construction of the ammunition testing facility began with a fury of manpower and funding: 40,000 to 50,000 acres seized, $15 million (1941 dollars), 4,000 to 5,000 temporary construction jobs, and 500 permanent jobs until the end of the war. The installation was called the Southwestern Proving Grounds, or SPG for short.

When first constructed, the runways of the SPG airport were the third largest in the nation. The War Department had needed them on that scale so that the large bombers could take off on trial bombing raids over the Gulf of Mexico. After the war the city of Hope obtained the airport, and it continues to be used as a municipal airport to this day. Undoubtedly,

Hope's immense runways are the envy of every other town of ten thousand people. Although the testing of ammunition ceased with the end of the war, the economic and cultural impact of the SPG would continue for a generation.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Huckabee by Scott Lamb. Copyright © 2015 Walter Scott Lamb. Excerpted by permission of Thomas Nelson.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Prologue: Empire State of Mind, xiii,
Part 1 — backstory, birth, and boyhood,
Chapter 1 Land of Hope and Dreams, 3,
Chapter 2 Small Town, 11,
Chapter 3 One Day in 1955, 21,
Chapter 4 American Pie, 29,
Part 2 — faith, Hope, Love, and the beatles,
Chapter 5 Guitars, Hobos, and Kool-Aid, 39,
Chapter 6 Fortunate Son, 45,
Chapter 7 Bridge over Troubled Water, 53,
Chapter 8 Rocket Man, 67,
Chapter 9 (No) Teenage Wasteland, 71,
Part 3 — the city of God,
Chapter 10 The Christian Woodstock, 83,
Chapter 11 Live and Let Live, 89,
Chapter 12 I Wish We'd All Been Ready, 99,
Chapter 13 Ouachita, 105,
Chapter 14 I Walk the Line, 115,
Chapter 15 Born to Run, 121,
Chapter 16 Son of a Preacher Man, 129,
Chapter 17 Revolution, 139,
Chapter 18 A Pastor for All Seasons, 147,
Chapter 19 Texarkana, 157,
Chapter 20 Can't We All Just Get Along?, 165,
Chapter 21 Experiencing God, 175,
Part 4 — the city of man,
Chapter 22 You Can't Always Get What You Want, 187,
Chapter 23 Even the Losers Get Lucky Sometimes, 197,
Chapter 24 Under Pressure, 205,
Chapter 25 Life Is a Highway, 223,
Chapter 26 Another Brick in the Wall, 233,
Chapter 27 With a Little Help from My Friends, 249,
Chapter 28 We Are the Champions, 267,
Chapter 29 If I Were a Rich Man, 271,
Chapter 30 Dream On, 281,
Epilogue: All About That Base, 287,
Notes, 295,
Acknowledgments, 329,
About the Author, 331,
Index, 333,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews