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Arthur Ravenel Jr.
Arthur Ravenel Jr
Member of the United States House of Representatives
In office
January 3, 1987 – January 3, 1995
Preceded by Thomas F. Hartnett
Succeeded by Mark Sanford
Member of the South Carolina Senate from the 34th District

In office
January 3, 1997 – January 3, 2005
Preceded by Greg Smith
Succeeded by Raymond E. Cleary III
Member of the South Carolina Senate from the 44th District

In office
January 8, 1985 – January 3, 1987
Preceded by District established
Succeeded by Sherry Shealy Martschink
Member of the South Carolina Senate from the 16th District

In office
January 13, 1981 – January 8, 1985
Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from Charleston County

In office
January 13, 1953 – January 13, 1959
Personal details
Born March 29, 1927(1927-03-29) (age 97)
Charleston, South Carolina
Political party Republican
Religion French Huguenot

Arthur Ravenel Jr. (born March 29, 1927) is a businessman and a Republican politician from Charleston, South Carolina.

Early life[]

The Charleston-born Ravenel served in the United States Marine Corps from 1945 to 1946. He thereafter received a bachelor of science degree from the College of Charleston in 1950. He is a realtor and general contractor. He was a Democrat member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from 1953 to 1959. He switched to Republican affiliation in the early 1960s and ran many times for office. He lost a total of five elections for the South Carolina State Senate (1962, 1974, and 1976), for the United States House of Representatives (1971 special election), and for mayor of Charleston (also 1971).

Political career[]

Ravenel was elected as a Republican to the South Carolina Senate in 1980. He served until 1986, when he was elected to the U.S. Congress from the Charleston-based 1st District. He was reelected three more times without serious opposition. He did not run for reelection in 1994, but instead ran for governor. He finished second in the Republican primary to then State Representative David Beasley, but lost the runoff. Beasley, considered more conservative than Ravenel, went on to win the general election. In 1996, Ravenel was elected to his old seat in the state Senate, where he served until 2005.

Ravenel staged a comeback in 2006, having been elected at the age of 79 to a seat on the school board of Charleston County. Only a year earlier, he had suffered a bout of Guillain–Barré syndrome.[1] In the same election, his son Thomas Ravenel, also a Republican, was elected state treasurer.

Controversies[]

Ravenel said that he had run for the state Senate in 1996 specifically to seek funding for a new bridge between Charleston and Mount Pleasant to replace the John P. Grace Memorial Bridge and Silas N. Pearman Bridge. Both bridges were nearing the end of their useful lives, and had been criticized as safety hazards. Due to his efforts in passing laws for the new bridge's funding, fellow lawmakers voted to name the cable-stayed bridge in Charleston the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge. Some felt that the bridge should not be named after Ravenel, with the head of the South Carolina infrastructure bank saying in 1999, "Certainly, Arthur Ravenel is a fine, decent person, but that bridge is bigger than any one individual and it should reflect all the qualities of the state and not some state senator who happens to be in the Legislature the time the structure is being built."[2]

Ravenel is a member of Moultrie Camp, Sons of Confederate Veterans, and is a supporter of the Confederate flag being flown at the South Carolina statehouse. He provoked controversy at a rally for the flag in 2000 when he referred to the NAACP as the “National Association for Retarded People”.[3] Ravenel upset even more people after he apologized to mentally handicapped people for comparing them to the NAACP. Many called for the Charleston bridge to be renamed.[2] Ravenel once said that his fellow white congressional committee members operated on "black time", which he characterized as meaning "fashionably late".[4]

References[]


  • Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
Thomas F. Hartnett
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina's 1st congressional district

1987–1995
Succeeded by
Mark Sanford
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