The Statesman (Georgia)

The Statesman was a weekly newspaper published in the U.S. state of Georgia in the period 1932–1956.

[1] It was founded by the white supremacist politician Eugene Talmadge in 1932.

It printed editorials written by himself claiming that Franklin D. Roosevelt was compromising American sovereignty, making the allegation that the British prime minister Winston Churchill was being allowed to "meddle" in the affairs of Congress with Roosevelt's support.

[3] His son Herman Talmadge took over publishing The Statesman after returning from World War II.

This article about a newspaper of the U.S. state of Georgia is a stub.