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Odell McBrayer

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Attorney

Name
  
Odell McBrayer

Religion
  
Baptist

Occupation
  
Attorney


Born
  
August 16, 1930 (
1930-08-16
)
Lakeview, Hall County, Texas, USA

Political party
  
Republican; candidate for nomination for governor of Texas, 1974

Spouse(s)
  
Mary McCurtamn McBrayer

Children
  
Scott McBrayer Tim McBrayer Stacy McBrayer Torrellas Barbara McBrayer Hendricks Lorie McBrayer Gibbons

Died
  
March 18, 2008, Idabel, Oklahoma, United States

Education
  
University of Texas at Austin

Odell Lavon McBrayer (August 16, 1930 – March 18, 2008) was a Fort Worth attorney, Christian layman, and a Republican candidate for governor of Texas in the 1974 party primary election.

Contents

Early life

McBrayer was born in Lakeview, a town in Hall County in the Texas Panhandle, to Odell Luke McBrayer (1907–1979) and the former Ola Gregory (1911–1987). He grew up in Clarendon, the seat of nearby Donley County and graduated from Clarendon High School. McBrayer was a veteran of the United States Air Force, having been trained in Florida and stationed for his entire service at the former Reese Air Force Base in Lubbock. He was a member of the American Legion. McBrayer initially attended Clarendon College, a community college, and subsequently received his Bachelor of Arts and law degrees from the University of Texas at Austin.

Career

A lawyer for thirty-three years, he served for a time as an assistant district attorney in the Fort Worth area. He ran unsuccessfully for a state district judgeship. He was a member of the American and Texas bar associations. In 2002, he became affiliated with the First Baptist Church in Idabel, Oklahoma, upon his retirement from his law practice when he and his wife, the former Mary McCurtamn, moved there to be near their son and daughter-in-law, Tim and Debbie McBrayer. He was a chaplain of the Bible-distribution group, the Gideons International in McCurtain County in southeastern Oklahoma.

Gubernatorial race

In 1974, McBrayer, who adapted the poster theme "Texas Must Have Odell McBrayer for Governor" ran in the party primary against the establishment choice, Jim Granberry, a dentist who had served as mayor of Lubbock from 1970 to 1972, and had been responsible for directing the rebuilding after the deadly tornadoes struck on May 11, 1970. Granberry was a favorite of then United States Senator John G. Tower. McBrayer attracted national attention in his race when he called for the televising of executions in Texas to provide a greater deterrent to the commission of violent crime. McBrayer said: "I favor televising executions only if not done offensively." His campaign is sometimes seen as the forerunner to the "New Right" movement which appeared just two years later to support Ronald W. Reagan in the Texas primary against sitting U.S. President Gerald R. Ford, Jr., the choice of Senator Tower and many other Texas party leaders. By 1980, the New Right forces claimed a role in the nomination and election of Reagan as president.

Granberry easily defeated McBrayer, 53,617 votes (77.6 percent) to 15,489 ballots (22.4 percent) in a low-turnout primary. As the Republican nominee in the November general election, Granberry was in turn crushed by the incumbent Democratic Governor Dolph Briscoe, a rancher, large landowner, and banker from Uvalde in the southern Hill Country.

Death

In addition to his wife and son Tim, Brayer was survived by another son, Scott A. McBrayer (born November 14, 1958) and his wife, Gaylynn McBrayer, of Fort Worth; three daughters, Stacy Torrellas and her husband, Carlos Torrellas, MD, of Jacksonville, Florida, Barbara Hendricks and husband, Matthew Hendricks, and Lorie Gibbons and husband, Tom Gibbons, all of Burleson near Fort Worth; four brothers, Gene McBrayer of White Settlement near Fort Worth, Bud McBrayer of Granbury in Hood County, Jerry McBrayer of Edmond, Oklahoma, and David McBrayer of Los Alamos, New Mexico; a sister, Barbara Brown of Weatherford, the seat of Parker County west of Fort Worth, eleven grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren (Mackinzie, Darian, and Amelia of DFW). Services were held on March 22, 2008, at the First Baptist Church of Idabel.

References

Odell McBrayer Wikipedia