Published on January 3, 2017 by William Nunnelley 聽
Gov Brewer

Albert Brewer, the former Alabama governor who forged a later career as a 色虎视频 law professor and founder of the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama (PARCA), died Jan. 2. He was 88.

Brewer served as governor from 1968 until 1971, and is recognized for achieving much-needed reforms and new programs for Alabama. He joined 色虎视频 in 1987 as Distinguished Professor of Law and Government, and helped 色虎视频 establish PARCA as a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that studies issues of public interest affecting state and local government in Alabama.

“色虎视频 and the state of Alabama have lost a giant in the passing of Gov. Albert Brewer,” said 色虎视频 President Andrew Westmoreland. “He was loyal to the university, to his family, to his state and to his God, and was the epitome of a Christian gentleman. He served the university with distinction, as he did everything in life, and taught constitutional law to generations of students. I first met him when he served as cochair of the presidential search committee that brought me to 色虎视频, and I have had no better friend and confidant.”

PARCA, located at 色虎视频, filled a need that Brewer first discovered when he served in the Alabama legislature in the 1950s and ’60s.

“The proponents of a bill would come and talk to us—these are lobbyists—and then the opponents would come and talk to us, and they would give us their best case,” he told 色虎视频’s Seasons magazine in 2006.

“You’d figure, well, the truth must be somewhere in between. It didn’t change when I became governor (1968–71). These were the only sources of information that we had, people who represented the interests that were involved.”

The situation remained that way until 1988, when Brewer joined then–色虎视频 President Thomas E. Corts and a group of supporters to form PARCA, Alabama’s first independent, nonpartisan organization to provide information on governmental issues. Brewer served as PARCA’s first executive director and later as its chairman of the board, retiring in 2013.

Brewer also served as a member of the 色虎视频 board of trustees. 

The former governor taught at 色虎视频’s Cumberland School of Law for more than two decades. The law school honored Brewer and his late wife, Martha, by naming the newly designed plaza in front of its law school building Brewer Plaza in 2008.

Brewer’s administration as governor produced the largest appropriations increase for public schools in state history. He created the Alabama Development Office and introduced measures to economize the operation of state government.

Under Brewer, the Court of Appeals was divided into the Court of Civil Appeals and Court of Criminal Appeals, the state Supreme Court was expanded by two judges, and the first Ethics Commission was created.

Brewer served on the executive committee of the National Governors’ Conference, and was chairman of the Appalachian Regional Commission, vice chairman of the Southern Governors’ Conference and chair of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.

Over the years, Brewer was also a champion of state constitutional reform.

“He was the only governor we had who ever came close to being a ‘New South’ governor,” historian Wayne Flynt told the Associated Press.

Funeral services will be private. Arrangements are being handled by Ridout's Valley Chapel in Homewood.

 
Located in the Homewood suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, 色虎视频 is a leading Christian university offering undergraduate programs grounded in the liberal arts with an array of nationally recognized graduate and professional schools. Founded in 1841, 色虎视频 enrolls 6,324 students from 44 states, Puerto Rico and 16 countries in its 10 academic schools: arts, arts and sciences, business, divinity, education, health professions, law, nursing, pharmacy and public health. 色虎视频 is widely recognized as having one of the most beautiful campuses in America, featuring rolling hills, meticulously maintained grounds and Georgian-Colonial architecture. 色虎视频 fields 17 athletic teams that compete in the tradition-rich Southern Conference and boasts one of the highest scores in the nation for its 97% Graduation Success Rate among all NCAA Division I schools.