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{{Infobox officeholder
 
{{Infobox officeholder
| name=Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth
+
| name=Duncan McLauchlin<br>"Lauch" Faircloth
 
| image=Lauch Faircloth of NC.jpg
 
| image=Lauch Faircloth of NC.jpg
| office=[[United States Senator]] for [[North Carolina]]
+
| office=[[United States Senator]]<br> for [[North Carolina]]
 
| term_start=January 3, 1993
 
| term_start=January 3, 1993
 
| term_end=January 3, 1999
 
| term_end=January 3, 1999
| predecessor=[[Terry Sanford]]
+
| predecessor=Terry Sanford
 
| successor=[[John Edwards]]
 
| successor=[[John Edwards]]
| office2=5th North Carolina Secretary of Commerce
+
| office2=5th North Carolina<br> Secretary of Commerce
| governor2=James B. Hunt, III
+
| governor2=James Baxter Hunt, Jr.
 
| term_start2=1977
 
| term_start2=1977
 
| term_end2=1985
 
| term_end2=1985
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| succeeded2=Howard Haworth
 
| succeeded2=Howard Haworth
 
| birth_date=January 14, 1928
 
| birth_date=January 14, 1928
| birth_place=Sampson County, North Carolina.
+
| birth_place=Sampson County,<br>North Carolina.
 
| death_date=
 
| death_date=
 
| death_place=
 
| death_place=
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Two grandchildren  
 
Two grandchildren  
 
| residence=Clinton, Sampson County<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=295|publisher=Our Campaigns | title=Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth|accessdate=August 2, 2021}}.</ref>
 
| residence=Clinton, Sampson County<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=295|publisher=Our Campaigns | title=Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth|accessdate=August 2, 2021}}.</ref>
| branch=[[United States Army]]}}
+
| allegiance=[[United States]]
| serviceyears=1954-1955
+
| branch=[[United States Army]]
 +
| serviceyears=1954–1955
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Duncan McLauchlin Faircloth''', known as '''Lauch Faircloth''' (pronounced LOCK) (born January 14, 1928), is a former one-term [[Republican Party|Republican]] [[United States Senator]] for his native state of [[North Carolina]]. His term was sandwiched between [[Democratic Party|Democrat]] Senators Terry Sanford and [[John Edwards]]. Faircloth served as Secretary of Commerce in the administration of Democratic [[Governor]] James Baxter Hunt, Jr. (born 1937). In 1984, Governor Hunt ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate against [[conservative]] Republican [[Jesse Helms]] in the nation's most high- profile Senate race that year.
+
'''Duncan McLauchlin Faircloth''' (born January 14, 1928), known as '''Lauch Faircloth''' (pronounced LOCK), is a former one-term [[Republican Party|Republican]] [[United States Senator]] for his native state of [[North Carolina]]. His term was sandwiched between [[Democratic Party|Democrat]] Senators Terry Sanford and [[John Edwards]]. Faircloth served as Secretary of Commerce in the administration of Democratic [[Governor]] James Baxter Hunt, Jr. (born 1937). In 1984, Faircloth ran for governor, while Hunt ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate against [[conservative]] Republican [[Jesse Helms]] in the nation's most high-profile Senate race that year.
  
Before his Senate service, Faircloth was a prominent hog [[farmer]] in Sampson County in southern North Carolina.. He had entered the political realm as a [[Conservative Democrat]] because he opposed regulations targeting large hog farmers. Years earlier, he worked as a driver for Democratic Senator William Kerr Scott (1896-1958), who helped him to gain a hardship discharge from the [[Korean War]]. An early supporter of Terry Sanford's 1960 gubernatorial bid, Sanford named Faircloth to the state highway commission. Faircloth helped Robert Walter "Bob" Scott (1929-2009), a son of W. Kerr Scott, in Scott's successful bid for the governorship in 1968 over the Republican [[U.S. Representative]] James Carson Gardner (born 1933) of Rocky Mount. Scott named Faircloth chairman of the highway commission, and he subsequently servedas  Secretary of Commerce in the Hunt administration.
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==Political life==
 +
Before his Senate service, Faircloth was a prominent hog [[farmer]] in Sampson County in southern North Carolina.. He had entered the political realm as a [[Conservative Democrat]] because he opposed regulations targeting large hog farmers. Years earlier, he worked as a driver for Democratic Senator William Kerr Scott (1896–1958). An early supporter of Terry Sanford's 1960 gubernatorial campaign, Sanford named Faircloth to the state highway commission. Faircloth helped Robert Walter "Bob" Scott (1929–2009), a son of W. Kerr Scott, in Scott's successful bid for the governorship in 1968 over the Republican [[U.S. Representative]] [[Jim Gardner (North Carolina politician)|James Carson Gardner]] of Rocky Mount in Nash County. Scott named Faircloth chairman of the highway commission, and he subsequently served as Secretary of Commerce in the Hunt administration.
  
Faircloth aspired to the governor's office himself, buthe lost the Democratic [[primary]] in 1984. He also considered running for the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Senator [[John Porter East]] in 1986, but he was discouraged from doing so by the entry of Sanford, who went on to win the race against appointed James Thomas "Jim" Broyhill (born 1927), a part of the Broyhill Furniture Company, who had served in the [[U.S. House of Representatives]] from  1963 to 1986. After Broyhill won the Republican nomination to succeed East, who committed suicide in June 1986.Then Republican Governor James Grubbs Martin (born 1935) appointed Broyhill to fill the remaining six months vacated by East. Broyhill then lost the general election to Terry Sanford.
+
Faircloth lost his bid for the Democratic gubernatorial in 1984 and considered running for the Senate seat being vacated in 1986 by Republican Senator [[John Porter East]] in 1986, but he was discouraged from doing so by the entry of Sanford, who went on to win the race against appointed James Thomas "Jim" Broyhill (born 1927), a part of the Broyhill Furniture Company, who had served in the [[U.S. House of Representatives]] from  1963 to 1986. After Broyhill won the Republican nomination to succeed East, who committed suicide in June 1986, then Republican Governor James Grubbs Martin (born 1935) appointed Broyhill to fill the remaining six months vacated by East. Broyhill then lost the general election to Terry Sanford.
  
In 1990, after forty years as a Democrat, Faircloth switched his party registration and began preparations to seek the Republican Senate nomination in 1992. He carried the support of Senator Helms's political organization, and defeated [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]] [[Mayor]] Sue Myrick in the primary. His opponent in the general election was former ally Terry Sanford, whom Faircloth then branded as a tax-and-spend [[liberal]] even though Sanford had helped Faircloth raise money for Faircloth's failed gubernatorial bid in 1984, when Hunt ran for the U.S. Senate against Helms. Faircloth was said to have become agitated after he learned that Sanford had dismissed Faircloth's chances in a statewide contest.<ref>Howard E. Covington, Jr., and Marion A. Ellis, ''Terry Sanford: Politics, Progress, and Outrageous Ambitions'' (Durham, North Carolina: [[Duke University]] Press, 1999), p.  489.</ref> Faircloth beat Sanford, 1,297, 892 (50 percent) to 1,194,015 (46 percent), a margin in excess of 100,000 votes in an otherwise Democratic year nationally.
+
In 1990, after forty years as a Democrat, Faircloth switched his party registration and began preparations to seek the Republican Senate nomination in 1992. He carried the support of Senator Helms's political organization, and defeated in the primary [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]] [[Mayor]] Sue Wilkins Myrick (born 1941). Faircloth's  opponent in the general election was former ally Terry Sanford, whom Faircloth then branded as a tax-and-spend [[liberal]] even though Sanford had helped Faircloth raise money for Faircloth's failed gubernatorial bid in 1984, when Hunt ran for the U.S. Senate against Helms. Faircloth was said to have become agitated after he learned that Sanford had dismissed Faircloth's chances in a statewide contest.<ref>Howard E. Covington, Jr., and Marion A. Ellis, ''Terry Sanford: Politics, Progress, and Outrageous Ambitions'' (Durham, North Carolina: [[Duke University]] Press, 1999), p.  489.</ref> Faircloth beat Sanford, 1,297, 892 (50 percent) to 1,194,015 (46 percent), a margin in excess of 100,000 votes in an otherwise Democratic year nationally.
  
Faircloth lost his bid for a second Senate term in 1998, a Democrat-leaning year that prompted the resignation of Republican House [[Speaker]] [[Newt Gingrich]], to Democrat wealthy trial lawyer [[John Edwards]], 1,029,237votes (51 percent) to 945,943 (47percent). Faircloth told supporters on election night that he felt "that I let you down...because we should have won."<ref>{{cite web|url=North Carolina Senate - November 3, 1998 (cnn.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
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Faircloth lost his bid for a second Senate term in 1998, a Democrat-leaning year that prompted the resignation of Republican House [[Speaker]] [[Newt Gingrich]], to Democrat wealthy trial lawyer John Edwards, 1,029,237 votes (51 percent) to 945,943 (47percent). Faircloth told supporters on election night that he felt "that I let you down...because we should have won."<ref>North Carolina Senate - November 3, 1998 (cnn.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
Faircloth married the former Nancy Bryan (c. 1930 &ndash; January 20210), a native of [[New York City]] who was reared in Greensboro, North Carolina. They had a daughter, Ann Faircloth Dufour and two grandchildren. They later divorced, and she moved from his city of Clinton to the capital city of [[Raleigh]].<ref>Nancy Faircloth Obituary (2010) - Raleigh, NC - The News & Observer (legacy.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
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==Personal life==
 +
Faircloth married the former Nancy Bryan (c. 1930 &ndash; January 2010), a native of [[New York City]] who was reared in Greensboro, North Carolina. They had a daughter, Ann Faircloth Dufour and two grandchildren. They later divorced, and she moved from his city of Clinton to the capital city of [[Raleigh]].<ref>Nancy Faircloth Obituary (2010) - Raleigh, NC - The News & Observer (legacy.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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[[Category:Former Democrats]]
 
[[Category:Former Democrats]]
 
[[Category:Republicans]]
 
[[Category:Republicans]]
 +
[[Category:United States Army]]

Latest revision as of 02:10, August 4, 2021

Duncan McLauchlin
"Lauch" Faircloth


In office
January 3, 1993 – January 3, 1999
Preceded by Terry Sanford
Succeeded by John Edwards

5th North Carolina
Secretary of Commerce
In office
1977–1985
Governor James Baxter Hunt, Jr.
Preceded by Donald R. Beason
Succeeded by Howard Haworth

Born January 14, 1928
Sampson County,
North Carolina.
Nationality American
Political party Democrat-turned-Republican (1990)
Spouse(s) Nancy Bryan Faircloth (divorced)
Children Ann Faircloth Dufour

Two grandchildren

Residence Clinton, Sampson County[1]

Military Service
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1954–1955

Duncan McLauchlin Faircloth (born January 14, 1928), known as Lauch Faircloth (pronounced LOCK), is a former one-term Republican United States Senator for his native state of North Carolina. His term was sandwiched between Democrat Senators Terry Sanford and John Edwards. Faircloth served as Secretary of Commerce in the administration of Democratic Governor James Baxter Hunt, Jr. (born 1937). In 1984, Faircloth ran for governor, while Hunt ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate against conservative Republican Jesse Helms in the nation's most high-profile Senate race that year.

Political life

Before his Senate service, Faircloth was a prominent hog farmer in Sampson County in southern North Carolina.. He had entered the political realm as a Conservative Democrat because he opposed regulations targeting large hog farmers. Years earlier, he worked as a driver for Democratic Senator William Kerr Scott (1896–1958). An early supporter of Terry Sanford's 1960 gubernatorial campaign, Sanford named Faircloth to the state highway commission. Faircloth helped Robert Walter "Bob" Scott (1929–2009), a son of W. Kerr Scott, in Scott's successful bid for the governorship in 1968 over the Republican U.S. Representative James Carson Gardner of Rocky Mount in Nash County. Scott named Faircloth chairman of the highway commission, and he subsequently served as Secretary of Commerce in the Hunt administration.

Faircloth lost his bid for the Democratic gubernatorial in 1984 and considered running for the Senate seat being vacated in 1986 by Republican Senator John Porter East in 1986, but he was discouraged from doing so by the entry of Sanford, who went on to win the race against appointed James Thomas "Jim" Broyhill (born 1927), a part of the Broyhill Furniture Company, who had served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1963 to 1986. After Broyhill won the Republican nomination to succeed East, who committed suicide in June 1986, then Republican Governor James Grubbs Martin (born 1935) appointed Broyhill to fill the remaining six months vacated by East. Broyhill then lost the general election to Terry Sanford.

In 1990, after forty years as a Democrat, Faircloth switched his party registration and began preparations to seek the Republican Senate nomination in 1992. He carried the support of Senator Helms's political organization, and defeated in the primary Charlotte Mayor Sue Wilkins Myrick (born 1941). Faircloth's opponent in the general election was former ally Terry Sanford, whom Faircloth then branded as a tax-and-spend liberal even though Sanford had helped Faircloth raise money for Faircloth's failed gubernatorial bid in 1984, when Hunt ran for the U.S. Senate against Helms. Faircloth was said to have become agitated after he learned that Sanford had dismissed Faircloth's chances in a statewide contest.[2] Faircloth beat Sanford, 1,297, 892 (50 percent) to 1,194,015 (46 percent), a margin in excess of 100,000 votes in an otherwise Democratic year nationally.

Faircloth lost his bid for a second Senate term in 1998, a Democrat-leaning year that prompted the resignation of Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich, to Democrat wealthy trial lawyer John Edwards, 1,029,237 votes (51 percent) to 945,943 (47percent). Faircloth told supporters on election night that he felt "that I let you down...because we should have won."[3]

Personal life

Faircloth married the former Nancy Bryan (c. 1930 – January 2010), a native of New York City who was reared in Greensboro, North Carolina. They had a daughter, Ann Faircloth Dufour and two grandchildren. They later divorced, and she moved from his city of Clinton to the capital city of Raleigh.[4]

References

  1. Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth. Our Campaigns. Retrieved on August 2, 2021..
  2. Howard E. Covington, Jr., and Marion A. Ellis, Terry Sanford: Politics, Progress, and Outrageous Ambitions (Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1999), p. 489.
  3. North Carolina Senate - November 3, 1998 (cnn.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  4. Nancy Faircloth Obituary (2010) - Raleigh, NC - The News & Observer (legacy.com), accessed August 2, 2021.