Close Menu
Douglas NowDouglas Now
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Community
  • Opinion
  • Obituaries
  • At Home with Pam
  • Contact
What's Hot

CRMC’s Vicki Lewis elected Chair-Elect of the Georgia Hospital Association Board of Trustees

July 21, 2025

Newly renovated Unity Park is open for play

July 21, 2025

Coffee High’s Dominic Mimbang elected Boys Nation Senate president pro tempore

July 21, 2025
Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok
Trending
  • CRMC’s Vicki Lewis elected Chair-Elect of the Georgia Hospital Association Board of Trustees
  • Newly renovated Unity Park is open for play
  • Coffee High’s Dominic Mimbang elected Boys Nation Senate president pro tempore
  • 19-year-old arrested for second time in three weeks, this time on simple battery (family violence) charges
  • Taylor Marie Hughes pleads guilty to murder, sentenced to life in connection with the death of her four-year-old daughter in Toombs County
Facebook YouTube Instagram TikTok Pinterest
Douglas NowDouglas Now
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Community
  • Opinion
  • Obituaries
  • At Home with Pam
  • Contact
Facebook YouTube Instagram TikTok
Douglas NowDouglas Now
Home»News»GI Bill display arrives at Satilla Regional Library
News

GI Bill display arrives at Satilla Regional Library

Staff ReportsBy Staff ReportsFebruary 20, 20192 Views
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Facebook YouTube Instagram TikTok
Photo by Holly K. Soria/The American Legion
Two great-nephews of Rep. John S. Gibson, Cedric Sweat and Bullock County Ga. commissioner Walter Gibson spoke during the opening ceremonies for “The Greatest Legislation: An American Legion Salute to the GI Bill,” at the Satilla Regional Library.
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

“The Greatest Legislation: An American Legion Salute to the GI Bill” has arrived at the Satilla Regional Library. The display is traveling to multiple sites throughout the country and this is the first stop in Georgia.

 

U.S. Rep. John Gibson from Douglas saved the GI Bill, formally known as the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, from being defeated. The bill, which The American Legion drafted and endorsed, nearly died in committee. To ensure its passage, the bill’s supporters needed one more vote to get it to President Franklin Roosevelt’s desk by June 22, 1944. The final vote was set to take place on June 9, 1944 – right after D Day had taken place.

 

Rep. Gibson had left Washington but instructed Rep. John Rankin of Mississippi to cast a proxy vote in favor of the bill. Rankin, however, refused, primarily because the GI Bill granted equal access to both whites and African Americans. Without Gibson’s vote, the bill would never make it out of committee.

 

Gibson needed to get to Washington in a hurry to cast that all-important vote. However, Rep. Gibson was nowhere to be found. What resulted was a statewide search that involved radio announcements, phone calls, and law enforcement notifications to find Gibson. When he was finally located, troopers escorted him at high speeds in the middle of a driving rain to get him to Jacksonville, Fla., where a plane was waiting to fly him to Washington. He made it by the deadline, cast the deciding vote, and President Roosevelt signed the bill into law. It has since been called the most significant piece of legislation Congress passed during the 20th Century. It transformed the middle class and, in turn, transformed the nation.

 

The display at the library features a number of important documents and an interactive screen that highlights the importance of the bill. The original cover and signature page of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, better known as the GI Bill, will be showcased, among other important papers and photos. The original documents, on loan from the National Archives, along with the typed and hand-edited speech given by President Roosevelt after signing the historic GI Bill of Rights, are on loan from the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, will be on display through March 12.

GI Bill Rep John Gibson satilla regional library Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Copy Link
Douglas Now Profile Pic
Staff Reports

Related Posts

CRMC’s Vicki Lewis elected Chair-Elect of the Georgia Hospital Association Board of Trustees

July 21, 2025

Inez Hersey, 77

July 21, 2025

Curtis Harper, Jr., 70

July 21, 2025

Comments are closed.

Top Posts

Convicted child molester allegedly gets drunk, lends truck to girlfriend, forgets and reports it stolen, then gets arrested for failure to register

February 19, 202572,289 Views

18 bodies in various states of decomposition found at funeral home during eviction process

October 27, 202465,699 Views

Cream Cheese Pound Cake

November 11, 202445,057 Views

Three dozen defendants indicted in major South Georgia drug trafficking conspiracy

January 30, 202537,460 Views
RSS Latest Headlines from Fox News
  • Mountain lion attacks 4-year-old walking with family at Washington's Olympic National Park
  • Blue state Democratic lawmaker set to resign after felony burglary conviction: report
  • 'Worst of the worst’ arrested in nationwide criminal illegal-alien crackdown: DHS
  • ICE chief warns AI technology could lead to safety risks for agents: 'Fringe organizations'
  • Fox News Politics Newsletter: El Salvador's Bukele Mocks Hunter Biden Threat
Follow us on Social Media!
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Pinterest
Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok Pinterest
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Community
  • Opinion
  • Obituaries
  • At Home with Pam
  • Contact
© 2025 DouglasNow. All Rights Reserved.

Newell Media

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.