Admitted to the Virginia
bar, Darden began his legal practice in
Norfolk, Virginia. He became active in the local Democratic party and aligned with the
Byrd Organization. In 1929, Darden won his first election, becoming one of Norfolk's four (part-time) representatives to the
Virginia House of Delegates. He also won re-election and served alongside Daniel Coleman,
Vivian L. Page and Wilson W. Vellines from 1930 to 1933, when Darden resigned because of his election to Congress. Ralph H. Daughton and Richard W. Ruffin replaced Darden and the deceased Vellines in the special election for the vacancies.
Congressional service In 1932, Darden won election as a Democrat in an
At-large election to select Virginia's
U.S. Representatives to the
73rd Congress. The Byrd Organization controlling the Virginia legislature had switched from an election by congressional districts to an at-large method that year in order to unseat Republican
Menalcus Lankford, who represented the
2nd district, and thus Democrats swept all Virginia's congressional seats in that election.
Electoral history •
1932; Darden was elected to Congress with the rest of the Democratic slate as an at-large member winning 8.24% of the vote in a 24-way race. •
1934; Darden was re-elected defeating Republican Gerould M. Rumble, Socialist George Rohlsen, and Communist Herbert S. Carrington, winning 76.14% of the vote. •
1938; Darden was re-elected defeating Independent Carl P. Spaeth, winning 87.7% of the vote. •
1940; Darden was re-elected unopposed.
Governor of Virginia Darden was elected Governor of Virginia with 80.72% of the vote, defeating Republican
Benjamin Muse, Communist Alice Burke, and Socialist M. Hilliard Bernstein. Inaugurated on January 21, 1942, Darden served until January 16, 1946. As governor, Darden reorganized Virginia's civil defense during
World War II, reformed Virginia's penal system, and created a pension plan for state employees and teachers. He also eliminated the state debt (a core value of the Byrd organization) and created a surplus which was allocated to vocational schools, colleges, hospitals and other public services (including electrification of all Virginia educational institutions). However, Darden's record on race relations reflected the Byrd organization's
segregationist values: blacks would receive financial help to study at
Meharry Medical College in Tennessee (since Virginia medical schools remained only for whites) and he called to remove legislative obstacles to blacks serving on juries. Governor Darden also refused to overturn the firing of several black educators following the 1940 federal equal pay decision in
Alston v School Board of Norfolk.
President of the University of Virginia Darden was elected president of the University of Virginia in 1947, despite public misgivings from some among the university faculty, who resented his lack of faculty experience, and some students who feared that he planned to abolish the fraternity system at the university. The latter concern had its origin in Darden's actions as Governor of Virginia, where he recommended barring students at the College of William and Mary from living in fraternity or sorority houses on the grounds that it was "undemocratic" and placed undue financial burden on parents. While Darden did not impose similar restrictions at Virginia, he did attempt to implement other measures, such as a ban on first year rushing. While Darden favored admitting African Americans to professional and graduate schools after the Supreme Court mandated such, he otherwise shared the "separate but equal" stance of many white Southerners of the pre-
Brown v. Board of Education (1954) era. In 1950 Darden advocated that public schools remain, in his words, racially "segregated," but "first-rate." In that year, following federal litigation, Gregory Swanson became the first black student admitted to the
University of Virginia School of Law. Darden also testified as a witness favoring segregation in
Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, one of the companion cases to
Brown, and Judge
Albert Bryan, in the 3-judge decision upholding the unequal schools which the Supreme Court reversed, specifically cited Darden's testimony as influential. In August 1954, Darden also addressed a Ruritan gathering in Southampton and warned about the white race being only a tiny fraction of the population. At Virginia, Darden was responsible for erection of the student union building, named Newcomb Hall for his predecessor
John Lloyd Newcomb; the establishment of the Judiciary Committee (which handled student misconduct that did not rise to the level of an
honor offense); the creation of the graduate school of business administration (named in his memory) and significant improvements to faculty salaries. Upon his retirement, he was presented with the Thomas Jefferson Award and the
Raven Award. President
Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Darden as a U.S. delegate to the
United Nations General Assembly in 1955, as he broke with the Byrd Organization's
Massive Resistance policy. == Death ==