Copyright 2010 * All rights reserved
J.C. (Jim) Tumblin, OD, DOS
3604 Kesterwood Drive, East
Knoxville, Tennessee 37918-2557
(865) 687-1948

(1940-1985)
The handwriting was on the wall early.
When Joe Gorman attended Central High
School, he played bass drum in O’dell Willis’ band for four years, was a
member of the Junior Honor Society, a member of the Key Club, delegate to
Boys’ State, a member of the Senior Honor Society and its president during his
senior year, and a member of the Student Council.
Joseph Bruce Gorman was born in Knoxville
on Nov. 6, 1940, the youngest of four children of James D.
and Georgia (Stanberry) Gorman. Many will remember J.D. Gorman as a
long-time broker with Fountain City Real Estate and Georgia S. Gorman as a
teacher in the Knox County schools. They were members the Central Baptist Church
of Fountain City. Joe’s older sisters, Billie (Waldrop) (CHS 1945), Jimmie
(Renfro) (CHS 1946) and Johnnie (Hall) (CHS 1954) preceded him at Central. The
family home was at 3825 Terrace View Dr. in Harrill Hills.

After attending
Too often we associate the 1960s with
“excess, hallucinogens and rock and roll,” but those years represented much
more than that. During that time, segments of corporate America, like General
Electric, were effectively promoting “the brightest and best” of our young
adults.
In 1962, four University of Tennessee
students, Anne C. Dempster, Harold M. Wimberly Jr., David L. Rubin and Joseph B.
Gorman, were chosen from nearly 200 applicants to represent the university in
the GE College Bowl competition, a highlight of Sunday afternoon television.
There was spirited competition on campus
for the four positions. Joe Gorman emerged as a member and was chosen captain of
the four person team. Prior to the first contest, the team members prepared
themselves by group study of over 6,000 possible questions for some 75 hours
total. Then they held practice sessions with faculty members from the English,
classical literature, art, history, physics, political science, economics,
philosophy and music departments.
The team won the first three rounds.
Local fans were irate and deluged the television station with complaints when
the fourth round of competition with St. Olaf College (Minnesota) was pre-empted
by a news conference with astronaut Scott Carpenter. The UT team won and the
fifth and final match was scheduled with the University of Rochester in New York
City. It was preceded by a parade down Gay Street in the three buses chartered
so that many of their fans could accompany them to New York.
UT’s final exams occurred between the
fourth and fifth rounds. The
After completing his master’s degree,
Gorman taught history for three years in a Fairfax County, Va. high school, but
his interest in still more education led him to apply to Harvard University.
Gorman was accepted in the doctoral program and received his doctorate in
history in 1970. He won the East Tennessee Historical Society’s prestigious
McClung Award for the outstanding paper of the year, “The Early Career of
Estes Kefauver,” which was printed in the 1970 “Journal of East Tennessee
History.” His expanded dissertation
was published in book form by the Oxford University Press with the title
“Kefauver: A Political Biography” (1971).
Not long ago the author asked Bill
Eigelsbach, the person responsible for the Kefauver Collection as a Special
Collections librarian at UT, “Who wrote the definitive biography of Sen.
Kefauver.” He replied, “Dr. Joseph Gorman, of course.” Obviously, his book
stood the test of time.
Dr. Gorman’s very readable biography
traces Sen. Estes Kefauver (1903-1963) from his roots in Madisonville (Monroe
County) to Washington. He was the “Man in the Coonskin Cap” who battled the
notorious “Boss” Crump organization to be elected to the U.S. Senate in
1948. He led the Senate crime investigation and co-sponsored the landmark
Kefauver-Harris act of 1962 which established vitally needed standards for
pharmaceutical use and safety.
Kefauver was Adlai Stevenson’s
vice-presidential candidate in the 1956 presidential race when the ticket lost
to war hero Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard M. Nixon. Kefauver had won
stunning re-election victories to the Senate in 1954 and he won again in 1960.
At the height of his career, when he died unexpectedly in 1963, he had chaired
the powerful Senate Anti-Trust and Monopoly Subcommittee since 1957.
In 1972, Dr. Gorman became a specialist
in American Government for the Congressional Research Service of the Library of
Congress, where he did research and writing on subjects posed by members of
Congress. His hobby in real estate development in historic Old Town Alexandria,
Va., where the family lived, complemented his wife’s successful career in real
estate sales.
Sadly, after a brave battle with cancer,
Dr. Joseph Bruce Gorman passed away at only 45 years of age on Nov. 30, 1985, in
George Washington University Hospital near his home.
He was survived by his wife of 22 years, Bette Stubbs Gorman, a native of
Oak Ridge, and their two daughters, Elizabeth Ann and Jennifer Alice.
Author’s Note: Thanks
to the late Billie (Gorman) Waldrop, Susan (Waldrop) Ward and Charles Harrington
for their assistance with the text and photographs. Additional information may
be found on www.fountaincitytnhistory.info/.
D-GormannJosB-0210 (2/2/10= 965 words)