'64 Letter Said He Was 'Pressed' for Cash and Williams Was Late to Repay 'Loan'
At a time when he was planning his politically risky switch to the Republican Party, Sen. Strom Thurmond wrote in response to a request for financial aid from his mixed-race daughter that he was "pressed for money" and believed she had not yet repaid an earlier "loan," according to papers found in a voluminous archive of Thurmond's Senate years.
The July 28, 1964, letter to Essie Mae Washington-Williams suggests that Thurmond, who died in June at 100, was less compliant in making financial payments to his secret offspring than Williams has suggested in a whirlwind of national media interviews over the past few weeks.
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A handful of communications found in Thurmond's archives at Clemson University's Strom Thurmond Institute suggest his reluctance to provide money, particularly in 1964, the year that Williams's husband, Julius, died of heart problems and left her a widow with four children.
The letters also show efforts by Thurmond and his Senate office to cloak the true nature of the relationship in official correspondence, sometimes writing to her as if in a code known only to the two of them. Calendars found in the papers document the last visit to Thurmond's Washington office, on June 20, 2002, by Williams's daughter Wanda. Williams has described the visit as part of an annual ritual to pick up money from the senator.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A22759-2003Dec22.html