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Tim Lee Carter

Tim Lee Carter
Tim Lee Carter.jpg
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 5th district
In office
January 3, 1965 – January 3, 1981
Preceded by Eugene Siler (5th)
Succeeded by Hal Rogers
Personal details
Born (1910-09-02)September 2, 1910
Tompkinsville, Kentucky
Died March 27, 1987(1987-03-27) (aged 76)
Glasgow, Kentucky
Political party Republican

Tim Lee Carter (September 2, 1910 – March 27, 1987) was a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives for the commonwealth of Kentucky from 1965 until 1981.

Congressman Carter was born in Tompkinsville, Kentucky. He attended Western Kentucky State College (now Western Kentucky University) in Bowling Green, having pursued a pre-med curricula. Carter went on to earn his medical degree from the University of Tennessee in 1937. He then volunteered to serve as a medic in World War II, traveling with the Thirty-Eighth Infantry for over three and a half years. Later Carter returned to practice medicine in Tompkinsville.

In 1964, Carter sought the Republican nomination for Congress, following the retirement of Representative Eugene Siler. Carter won the election over Democrat Frances Jones Mills and served in the U.S. House of Representatives until his retirement in 1981. He was one of the few bright spots in a disastrous year for the GOP. However, he represented one of the few ancestrally Republican districts south of the Ohio River. Voters in this region identified with the Republicans after the Civil War, and have supported the GOP through good times and bad ever since. As a veteran physician, he was considered a moderate-progressive Republican in Washington.

In 1966, Congressman Carter was sent by President Johnson to Vietnam along with ten other war-veteran congressmen on a "Speaker's Committee." Upon his return, he was asked by Johnson about his opinion of the state of the war. Carter went against the nine other delegates, stating: "No, Mr. President, you are not winning the war,". Carter later came to be known as the first Republican Congressman to call for the end of the Vietnam War. Rising before the U.S. House of Representatives on August 28, 1967, Carter stated "Let us now, while we are yet strong, bring our men home, every man jack of them. The Vietcong fight fiercely and tenaciously because it is their land and we are foreigners intervening in their civil war. If we must fight, let us fight in defense of our homeland and our own hemisphere."


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