1970 Alabama Senate election
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All 35 seats in the Alabama State Senate 18 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Democratic hold Democratic gain Democratic: 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% 90–100% Unopposed Votes unknown | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Elections in Alabama |
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The 1970 Alabama Senate election took place on Tuesday, November 3, 1970, to elect 35 representatives to serve four-year terms in the Alabama Senate. The result was an electoral wipeout, as all 35 candidates elected were members of the Democratic Party. Every single seat was won by a white male Democrat.[1] In the previous general election, one Republican, Leland Childs, was elected, but had unsuccessfully sought re-election as a Democrat.[2]
The Democratic primaries were held on May 5 with runoffs on June 2, which candidates had until February 28 to qualify for. Neither the Republican Party nor the NDPA held primaries for state office, instead opting to nominate by party convention. The Republican convention took place in Birmingham on July 17.[3]
This was the last state senate election in Alabama before a 1973 federal court order mandated a new legislative map with single-member districts. At this point, the state had used a mixed system of single-member and multi-member districts to allocate seats in the legislature, all based on pre-existing county lines.[4]
Summary
[edit]
Single-member: 1-county 2-county 3-county 4-county 5-county (District 10) | Multi-member: |
Party | Candidates | Seats | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Num. | Vote | % | Before | Won | +/– | ||||
Democratic | 35 | 793,931 | 76.42% | 34 | 35 | ![]() | |||
NDPA | 12 | 173,153 | 16.67% | 0 | 0 | ![]() | |||
Conservative | 9 | 51,114 | 4.92% | 0 | 0 | ![]() | |||
Independent Party | 2 | 12,815 | 1.23% | 0 | 0 | ![]() | |||
Republican | 2 | 5,582 | 0.54% | 1 | 0 | ![]() | |||
Whig | 1 | 2,377 | 0.23% | 0 | 0 | ![]() | |||
Total | 61 | 1,038,972 | 100% | 35 | 35 | ![]() |
By district
[edit]†: Incumbent did not run for reelection. ‡: Lost re-nomination.
District | Incumbent | Party | Elected Senator | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Stewart O'Bannon | Dem | Stewart O'Bannon | Dem | ||
2nd | Bob Harris | Dem | Bob Harris | Dem | ||
3rd | Jack Giles | Dem | Gene McLain | Dem | ||
4th | Dan Stone‡ | Dem | Kenneth Hammond | Dem | ||
5th | Emmet Oden † | Dem | Joe Fine | Dem | ||
6th | Fred Folsom † | Dem | Bob Wilson | Dem | ||
7th | Aubrey Carr | Dem | Aubrey Carr | Dem | ||
8th | Ollie Nabors † | Dem | Richard Malone | Dem | ||
9th | Woodrow Albea‡ | Dem | Fred Ray Lybrand | Dem | ||
10th | Jimmy Branyon | Dem | Jimmy Branyon | Dem | ||
11th | E. W. Skidmore † | Dem | Richard Shelby | Dem | ||
12th p. 1 | Pat Vacca | Dem | Pat Vacca | Dem | ||
12th p. 2 | Leland Childs | Rep[c] | Tom King | Dem | ||
12th p. 3 | John Hawkins | Dem | John Hawkins | Dem | ||
12th p. 4 | Richard Dominick | Dem | Richard Dominick | Dem | ||
12th p. 5 | George L. Bailes | Dem | George L. Bailes | Dem | ||
12th p. 6 | Eddie H. Gilmore | Dem | Eddie H. Gilmore | Dem | ||
12th p. 7 | Hugh Morrow † | Dem | Doug Cook | Dem | ||
13th | G. Kyser Leonard † | Dem | Robert Weaver | Dem | ||
14th | Walter C. Givhan | Dem | Walter C. Givhan | Dem | ||
15th | W. G. McCarley † | Dem | Obee J. Littleton | Dem | ||
16th | Tom Radney | Dem | Robert H. Wilder | Dem | ||
17th | Bo Torbert † | Dem | Don Horne | Dem | ||
18th | Pat Lindsey | Dem | Pat Lindsey | Dem | ||
19th | Roland Cooper | Dem | Roland Cooper | Dem | ||
20th | Alton Turner † | Dem | Crum Foshee | Dem | ||
21st p. 1 | Junie Pierce | Dem | Junie Pierce | Dem | ||
21st p. 2 | O. J. Goodwyn | Dem | Tom Jones | Dem | ||
22nd | W. Ray Lolley‡ | Dem | L. L. Dozier | Dem | ||
23rd | James S. Clark | Dem | James S. Clark | Dem | ||
24th p. 1 | L. W. Noonan | Dem | L. W. Noonan | Dem | ||
24th p. 2 | Pierre Pelham | Dem | Pierre Pelham | Dem | ||
24th p. 3 | William McDermott | Dem | Robert W. Edington | Dem | ||
25th | J. Ernest Jackon † | Dem | Dick Owen Jr. | Dem | ||
26th | Jim Adams † | Dem | Larry Register | Dem |
Incumbents
[edit]Won re-election
[edit]The following incumbent senators sought and won re-election:
- District 1: Stewart O'Bannon
- District 2: Bob Harris
- District 7: Aubrey Carr
- District 10: Jimmy Branyon
- District 12, place 1: Pat Vacca
- District 12, place 3: John Hawkins
- District 12, place 4: Richard Dominick
- District 12, place 5: George L. Bailes
- District 12, place 6: Eddie H. Gilmore
- District 14: Walter C. Givhan
- District 18: Pat Lindsey
- District 19: Roland Cooper
- District 21, place 1: Junie Pierce
- District 23: James S. Clark
- District 24, place 1: L. W. Noonan
- District 24, place 2: Pierre Pelham
Eliminated in primary
[edit]The following incumbent senators were defeated at their respective Democratic primary:
- District 4: Dan Stone lost re-nomination to Kenneth Hammond.
- District 9: Woodrow lost re-nomination to Albea Fred Lybrand.
- District 12, place 2: Leland Childs (R–Jefferson) ran for re-election as a Democrat, but lost the nomination to Tom King.
- District 22: W. Ray Lolley lost re-nomination to L. L. Dozier.
Did not seek re-election
[edit]The following incumbent senators did not seek re-election:
- District 3: Jack Giles (D–Madison) ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor.
- District 5: Emmet Oden (D–Franklin) retired.
- District 6: Fred Folsom (D–Cullman) retired.
- District 8: Ollie Nabors (D–Etowah) retired.
- District 11: E. W. Skidmore (D–Tuscaloosa) retired.
- District 12, place 7: Hugh Morrow (D–Jefferson) ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor.
- District 13: G. Kyser Leonard (D–Talladega) was elected probate judge of Talladega County.[5]
- District 15: W. G. McCarley (D–Autauga) ran unsuccessfully for Place No. 2 on the Alabama Public Service Commission.
- District 16: Tom Radney (D–Tallapoosa) ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor.
- District 17: Bo Torbert (D–Lee) retired.
- District 20: Alton Turner (D–Crenshaw) retired.
- District 21, place 2: President pro tempore O. J. Goodwyn (D–Montgomery) ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor.
- District 24, place 3: William McDermott (D–Mobile) retired.
- District 25: J. Ernest Jackon (D–Escambia) ran unsuccessfully for an Alabama House of Representatives seat in Escambia County.[6]
- District 26: Jim Adams (D–Houston) retired.
General election results
[edit]District | Democratic | National Democratic | Others | Total | Ref | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Votes | Maj. | Mrg. | ||
2nd | Bob Harris (inc.) | 18,226 | 95.10% | Tom King | 940 | 4.90% | — | — | — | 19,166 | +17,286 | +90.19% | [7] |
7th | Aubrey Carr (inc.) | 6,153 | 93.68% | Lynn Ridgeway | 415 | 6.32% | — | — | — | 6,568 | +5,738 | +87.36% | [8] |
9th | Fred Ray Lybrand | 13,934 | 76.74% | — | — | — | Robert Simmons Jr. (Rep.) | 4,223 | 23.26% | 18,157 | +9,711 | +53.48% | [9] |
10th | Jimmy Branyon (inc.) | Won | H. Western | Lost | — | — | — | Unknown | [1] | ||||
12th p. 1 | Pat Vacca (inc.) | 93,826 | 74.39% | John Billingsley | 25,917 | 20.55% | William Mori (Con.) | 6,380 | 5.06% | 126,123 | +67,909 | +53.84% | [10][11] |
12th p. 2 | Tom King | 91,650 | 72.30% | T. L. Crowell | 24,001 | 18.93% | Lionel Ledbetter (Con.) | 11,104 | 8.76% | 126,755 | +67,649 | +53.37% | |
12th p. 3 | John Hawkins (inc.) | 98,577 | 79.88% | Herbert Johnson | 22,448 | 18.19% | Virginia Davis (Whi.) | 2,377 | 1.93% | 123,402 | +76,129 | +61.69% | |
12th p. 4 | Richard Dominick (inc.) | 90,759 | 72.56% | William. M. Pruitt | 23,062 | 18.44% | William L. Gann (Con.) | 11,255 | 9.00% | 125,076 | +67,697 | +54.12% | |
12th p. 5 | George L. Bailes (inc.) | 87,568 | 68.52% | Georgia Price | 23,816 | 18.64% | 2 others[d] | 16,412 | 12.85% | 127,796 | +63,752 | +49.89% | |
12th p. 6 | Eddie H. Gilmore (inc.) | 96,054 | 77.00% | Charles F. Williams | 23,160 | 18.57% | Homer Sanders (Con.) | 5,534 | 4.44% | 124,748 | +72,894 | +58.43% | |
12th p. 7 | Doug Cook | 95,265 | 76.25% | Emory. L. Whittaker | 24,424 | 19.55% | Wesley Jacobs (Con.) | 5,242 | 4.20% | 124,931 | +70,841 | +56.70% | |
16th | Robert H. Wilder | 6,290 | 84.17% | — | — | — | Bill Lacy (Con.) | 1,183 | 15.83% | 7,473 | +5,107 | +68.34% | [12] |
18th | Pat Lindsay (inc.) | 9,503 | 65.12% | O. B. Wilson | 3,731 | 25.57% | E. T. Rolison Jr. (Rep.) | 1,359 | 9.31% | 14,593 | +5,772 | +39.55% | [13] |
19th | Roland Cooper (inc.) | 5,879 | 82.59% | Damon Kiel | 1,239 | 17.41% | — | — | — | 7,118 | +4,640 | +65.19% | [14] |
21st p. 2 | Tom Jones | 27,372 | 95.43% | — | — | — | Virgil Chrane (Con.) | 1,311 | 4.57% | 28,683 | +26,061 | +90.86% | [15] |
23rd | James S. Clark (inc.) | 4,689 | 92.41% | — | — | — | Zeke Calhoun (AIP) | 385 | 7.59% | 5,074 | +4,304 | +84.82% | [16] |
24th p. 3 | Robert W. Edington | 48,186 | 90.39% | — | — | — | W. C. Boykin (Con.) | 5,123 | 9.61% | 53,309 | +43,063 | +80.78% | [17] |
Elected without opposition
[edit]The following candidates were the only candidates to file for their district's general election:
- District 1: Stewart O'Bannon (inc.)
- District 3: Gene McLain
- District 4: Kenneth Hammond
- District 5: Joe Fine
- District 6: Bob Wilson
- District 8: Richard Malone
- District 11: Richard Shelby
- District 13: Robert Weaver
- District 14: Walter C. Givhan
- District 15: Obee J. Littleton
- District 17: Don Horne
- District 20: Crum Foshee
- District 21, place 1: Junie Pierce (inc.)
- District 22: L. L. Dozier
- District 24, place 1: L. W. Noonan
- District 24, place 2: Pierre Pelham (inc.)
- District 25: Dick Owen
- District 26: Larry Register
Democratic primary results
[edit]Five Black Americans ran in the state senate primaries. Henry Parker, Larry F. Haygood and Austin Sumbry were eliminated in the first round in May, while L. H. Pitts and L. L. Anderson advanced to the June runoff.[18] Neither won the Democratic nomination.
Runoff results by district
[edit]Three incumbent senators won re-nomination in the runoff, while three lost re-nomination.[19] Robert H. Wilder initially faced a runoff in District 16 against L. L. Still, but Still declined to participate in the runoff, allowing Wilder to advance to the general election.[20]
Candidates in boldface advanced to the general election. An asterisk (*) denotes a runoff winner who was the runner-up in the first round.
District | Winner | Loser | Total | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Votes | Maj. | Mrg. | |
1st | Stewart O'Bannon (inc.) | 16,639 | 50.27% | Murry Beasley | 16,459 | 49.73% | 33,098 | +180 | +0.54% |
4th | Kenneth Hammond | 16,999 | 58.23% | Dan Stone (inc.) | 12,193 | 41.77% | 29,192 | +4,806 | +16.46% |
6th | Robert Wilson | 21,088 | 54.13% | Hubert Taylor | 17,871 | 45.87% | 38,959 | +3,217 | +8.26% |
8th | Richard Malone* | 14,922 | 50.55% | Gary Burns | 14,599 | 49.45% | 29,521 | +323 | +1.09% |
9th | Fred Lybrand | 13,878 | 50.49% | Woodrow Albea (inc.) | 13,607 | 49.51% | 27,485 | +271 | +0.99% |
12th p. 1 | Pat Vacca (inc.) | 98,051 | 56.91% | Lucius Pitts | 74,234 | 43.09% | 172,285 | +23,817 | +13.82% |
12th p. 2 | Tom King | 94,455 | 57.01% | Leland Childs (inc.) | 71,240 | 42.99% | 165,695 | +23,215 | +14.01% |
13th | Robert Weaver | 13,440 | 62.97% | Mallory Hammonds | 7,903 | 37.03% | 21,343 | +5,537 | +25.94% |
14th | Walter C. Givhan (inc.) | 14,560 | 65.56% | L. L. Anderson | 7,650 | 34.44% | 22,210 | +6,910 | +31.11% |
21st p. 2 | W. Tom Jones* | 23,423 | 53.13% | James W. Cameron | 20,662 | 46.87% | 44,085 | +2,761 | +6.26% |
22nd | L. L. Dozier* | 15,607 | 51.63% | Neil Metcalf | 14,619 | 48.37% | 30,226 | +988 | +3.27% |
26th | Larry Register* | 15,489 | 55.62% | William Matthews | 12,358 | 44.38% | 27,847 | +3,131 | +11.24% |
Source: The Huntsville Times[19] |
First round results by district
[edit]Candidates in boldface advanced to either the general election or a runoff, first-place winners with an asterisk (*) did not face a runoff.
District | First place | Runners-up | Others | Total | Ref. | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Votes | Maj. | Mrg. | ||
1st | Stewart O'Bannon (inc.) | 6,025 | 39.53% | Bob Broadfoot | 3,586 | 23.53% | 2 others[e] | 5,632 | 36.95% | 15,243 | +2,439 | +16.00% | [21] |
3rd | Gene McLain* | 22,548 | 60.39% | Harry L. Pennington | 14,790 | 39.61% | — | — | — | 37,338 | +7,758 | +20.78% | [22] |
4th | Kenneth Hammond | 11,188 | 42.69% | Dan Stone (inc.) | 7,965 | 30.39% | Bernard Cabiness | 7,053 | 26.91% | 26,206 | +3,223 | +12.30% | [23] |
5th | Joe Fine* | 4,162 | 58.50% | Thomas E. Snoddy | 1,261 | 17.73% | 3 others [f] | 1,691 | 23.77% | 7,114 | +2,901 | +40.78% | [21] |
6th | Hubert Taylor | 16,864 | 46.36% | Robert T. Wilson | 15,858 | 43.59% | Leonard Wilson | 3,658 | 10.05% | 36,380 | +1,006 | +2.77% | [24] |
7th | Aubrey J. Carr (inc.)* | 10,905 | 52.58% | John W. Starnes | 9,835 | 47.42% | — | — | — | 20,740 | +1,070 | +5.16% | [21] |
8th | Gary F. Burns | 8,431 | 44.00% | Richard Malone | 7,275 | 37.96% | Birch Anderson | 3,457 | 18.04% | 19,163 | +1,156 | +6.03% | |
9th | Fred Lybrand | 10,448 | 45.07% | Woodrow Albea (inc.) | 8,861 | 38.22% | L. S. Suggs | 3,875 | 16.71% | 23,184 | +1,587 | +6.85% | [25] |
11th | Richard C. Shelby* | 14,006 | 59.55% | Olin W. Zeanah | 9,513 | 40.45% | — | — | — | 23,519 | +4,493 | +19.10% | [21] |
12th p. 1 | Paul Vacca (inc.) | 73,296 | 49.90% | Lucius H. Pitts | 57,906 | 39.42% | M. L. Roton | 15,693 | 10.68% | 146,895 | +15,390 | +10.48% | [26] |
12th p. 2 | Tom King | 66,782 | 47.06% | Leland Childs (inc.) | 62,973 | 44.37% | Curtis Belcher | 12,166 | 8.57% | 141,921 | +3,809 | +2.68% | |
12th p. 4 | Richard Dominick (inc.)* | 67,287 | 51.21% | Jack H. Harrison | 57,952 | 44.10% | Robert S. Watters | 6,157 | 4.69% | 131,396 | +9,335 | +7.10% | |
12th p. 5 | George L. Bailes (inc.)* | 70,391 | 51.12% | Don Watts | 50,852 | 36.93% | H. L. Parker | 16,442 | 11.94% | 137,685 | +19,539 | +14.19% | |
12th p. 7 | Doug Cook* | 85,516 | 66.36% | Louis Moore | 31,810 | 24.68% | Sam L. Chestnut | 11,540 | 8.96% | 128,866 | +53,706 | +41.68% | |
13th | Robert Weaver | 13,752 | 49.80% | Mallory W. Hammonds | 9,035 | 32.72% | Sam Venable | 4,829 | 17.49% | 27,616 | +4,717 | +17.08% | [27] |
14th | Walter C. Givhan (inc.) | 6,865 | 44.22% | Louis Lloyd Anderson | 4,820 | 31.05% | Carl C. Morgan | 3,839 | 24.73% | 15,524 | +2,045 | +13.17% | [28] |
15th | Obie Littleton* | 12,786 | 59.52% | Alex Hayes | 6,622 | 30.82% | H. A. Rubin | 2,075 | 9.66% | 21,483 | +6,164 | +28.69% | [21] |
16th | Robert H. Wilder | 9,285 | 35.26% | L. L. Still | 5,523 | 20.97% | 3 others[g] | 11,527 | 43.77% | 26,335 | +3,762 | +14.29% | |
17th | Don Horne* | 6,011 | 66.24% | Charles E. Fuller | 3,063 | 33.76% | — | — | — | 9,074 | +2,948 | +32.49% | |
19th | Roland Cooper (inc.)* | 7,874 | 58.16% | Gene Garrett | 4,443 | 32.82% | Rob Andress | 1,222 | 9.03% | 13,539 | +3,431 | +25.34% | [29] |
20th | E. C. Foshee* | 15,477 | 56.88% | Fletcher Jones | 11,735 | 43.12% | — | — | — | 27,212 | +3,742 | +13.75% | [30] |
21st p. 1 | Junie Pierce (inc.)* | 19,898 | 56.36% | J. C. Snowden | 12,155 | 34.43% | James V. Scoma | 3,251 | 9.21% | 35,304 | +7,743 | +21.93% | [31] |
21st p. 2 | James W. Cameron | 11,975 | 32.74% | W. Tom Jones | 11,666 | 31.89% | 2 others[h] | 12,939 | 35.37% | 36,580 | +309 | +0.84% | |
22nd | Neil Metcalf | 7,522 | 34.50% | L. L. Dozier | 6,269 | 28.75% | 2 others [i] | 8,011 | 36.74% | 21,802 | +1,253 | +5.75% | [21] |
23rd | James S. Clark (inc.)* | 2,585 | 75.70% | Austin Sumbry | 830 | 24.30% | — | — | — | 3,415 | +1,755 | +51.39% | [32] |
24th p. 3 | Robert S. Edington* | 32,256 | 55.33% | Rassie G. Smith | 26,045 | 44.67% | — | — | — | 58,301 | +6,211 | +10.65% | [21] |
26th | William Matthews | 9,660 | 43.14% | Larry Register | 8,109 | 36.21% | 2 others[j] | 4,624 | 20.65% | 22,393 | +1,551 | +6.93% |
Nominated without opposition
[edit]The following candidates were the only candidates to file for their district's Democratic primary, which automatically gave them the nomination:[33]
- District 2: Bob Harris (inc.)
- District 10: Jimmy Branyon (inc.)
- District 12, place 3: John Hawkins (inc.)
- District 12, place 6: Eddie H. Gilmore (inc.)
- District 18: Pat Lindsey (inc.)
- District 24, place 1: L. W. Noonan
- District 24, place 2: Pierre Pelham (inc.)
- District 25: Dick Owen originally faced opposition in the Democratic primary, but his opponents withdrew.[34]
Republican convention
[edit]On July 17–18, the Republican state convention nominated three candidates for state senate:[35]
- District 9: Robert Simmons Jr.
- District 17: Jerry Cook
- District 18: E. T. Rolison Jr.
Cook, however, had withdrawn as a candidate a few days before the convention. An attempt was made to get Democratic incumbent Bo Torbert to run as a Republican, he rejected the offer.[36]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Popular vote total based on combination of complete and incomplete unofficial general election returns. Includes combined totals in multi-member districts and excludes unreported totals in uncontested races.
- ^ Ran in the Democratic primaries
- ^ First elected as a Republican, unsuccessfully ran for re-election as a Democrat
- ^ Don Watts (AIP): 12,430, 9.73%; Jim McLendon (Con.): 3,982, 3.12%
- ^ James D. Alexander: 2,824, 18.53%; Murray W. Beasley: 2,808, 18.42%
- ^ Wayne Gentry: 897, 12.61%; Frank Murray: 611, 8.59%; Edsel F. Moore: 183, 2.57%
- ^ Larry F. Haygood: 4,997, 18.97%; W. C. Forehand: 4,903, 18.62%; Oscar David Cook: 1,627, 6.18%
- ^ Calvin Whitesell: 10,266, 28.06%; Robert Muncaster: 2,673, 7.31%
- ^ W. Ray Lolley (inc.): 4,131, 18.95%; John B. Crawley: 3,880, 17.80%
- ^ Charles H. Davis: 2,334, 10.42%; George L. Keel: 2,290, 10.23%
References
[edit]- ^ a b "State Senate Stays Male, White, Demo". The Montgomery Advertiser. 5 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Pro-Wallace men will dominate Senate". The Birmingham News. 9 November 1966. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Candidates Are Named During Primary Voting". The Montgomery Advertiser. 1 March 1970. Retrieved 3 June 2025.
- ^ Sellers, Bill (6 February 1974). "Reapportionment Causes Headaches For Many In State". The Mobile Register. Retrieved 31 May 2025.
- ^ "Voters to decide 13 offices". The Anniston Star. 30 October 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "55 House races will be decided in runoff election". The Birmingham News. 17 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Morgan Beats NDPA Ticket By Big Edge; Demo Winner In Limestone County Fight". The Huntsville Times. 4 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Marshall Retains Control of Roads". The Huntsville Times. 4 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ Sherman, Mike (4 November 1970). "Democratic sweep cuts GOP effort". The Anniston Star. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Election oddity-more votes for 2nd spot than 1st". The Birmingham News. 8 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ Bennett, James (4 November 1970). "Democrats dash Republican hopes for Jeffco legislative seats". Birmingham Post-Herald. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Elmore Gives Thumbs Down To Tax Hike". Alabama Journal. 4 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Late Results of Southwest Alabama Elections Reported". The Mobile Press. 5 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Late County Results". Alabama Journal. 5 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Demos Win all Local Legislative Races". The Montgomery Advertiser. Associated Press. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Charlie Gilmore Elected Sheriff For Barbour". The Dothan Eagle. 4 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Area Canvass Confirms Unofficial Vote Results". The Mobile Press. 7 November 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Eight Negroes Make Runoffs". The Huntsville Times. Associated Press. 14 May 2025. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ a b "10 House Members Fall In State Vote". The Huntsville Times. Associated Press. 3 June 1970. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Official Vote Count in; Candidates Eye Run-offs". Alexander City Outlook. 14 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Cooper apparently wins another bid; Sen. Givhan ahead". The Birmingham News. 6 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Box-by-Box Results in Local and State Races". The Huntsville Times. 6 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Three-County Runoffs Seen". The Huntsville Times. 6 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "11 Senate Seats On Tuesday Ballot". The Montgomery Advertiser. 31 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Official Vote". The Anniston Star. 7 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ Bruer, Frank (14 May 1970). "Official county vote canvass makes no change in standings". Birmingham Post-Herald. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Five Win In Talladega; Five Offices Go To Runoff". The Anniston Star. 7 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "County Votes To Name Four Local Officers Tuesday". The Selma Times-Journal. 31 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Sen. Cooper Leading 2 Opponents". The Montgomery Advertiser. 6 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ Bailey, Stan (8 May 1970). "Two-County Seat 29 Features Photo Finish". Alabama Journal. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ Skinner, Franklin (8 May 1970). "Brewer Wins Montgomery County by 6,148 Votes". The Montgomery Advertiser. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Little Apparent Barbour County Judge Nominee". The Dothan Eagle. 6 May 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ Fox, Al (1 March 1970). "21 legislative candidates draw no opposition in primary". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "Johnson Withdraws from Senate Race". The Mobile Press. 18 March 1970. Retrieved 2 June 2025.
- ^ "GOP Slate". The Mobile Press. 20 July 1970. Retrieved 3 June 2025.
- ^ "Cook Withdraws From Senate Race". The Opelika-Auburn News. 16 July 1970. Retrieved 3 June 2025.