Graham was born and raised in
Birmingham, Alabama. He attended local public schools and then studied at
Birmingham–Southern College until 1935. In April 1953, Graham was promoted to
colonel and given command of the 167th Infantry Regiment, 31st Infantry Division. He served as
Adjutant General for the State of Alabama from January 1959 to January 1963 and was promoted to
major general in both the National Guard and the
Army Reserve. In September 1961, Graham took on the additional responsibility of assistant commander, 31st Infantry Division. Because this was a one-star position, his Army Reserve rank was reduced to
brigadier general. After turning over command of the Alabama National Guard to Major General Alfred C. Harrison in 1963, Graham continued to serve as assistant commander of the 31st Infantry Division until January 1968 when the
Alabama Army National Guard was reorganized. He then served as assistant commander of the
30th Armored Division until his retirement in 1970. As a general officer, he graduated from fixed-wing flight training at the
Army Aviation School in 1963 and a course at the
Army War College in 1964. At dawn, Graham arranged for the members of the crowd to be escorted to their homes. Two days later, on May 24, Graham was responsible for escorting the Freedom Riders from the Montgomery bus terminal to the Alabama-Mississippi border using a convoy of three planes, two helicopters, and seventeen highway patrol cars. In his most prominent role, on June 11, 1963, General Graham confronted Governor
George Wallace at the
University of Alabama for refusing to allow two black students,
James Hood and
Vivian Malone, to register for classes. Among a crowd of media, Governor Wallace obstructed the doorway of
Foster Auditorium in an attempt to disregard federal law requiring the university to integrate. United States Deputy Attorney General
Nicholas Katzenbach had approached Wallace earlier in the day and requested his cooperation in standing aside. When Wallace refused, President Kennedy
federalized the Alabama National Guard and General Graham was called to the university. Graham approached Wallace with four sergeants, saluted Wallace and said "Sir, it is my sad duty to ask you to step aside under the orders of the
President of the United States." The episode is known as the "
Stand in the Schoolhouse Door." The episode is re-enacted in the 1994 film
Forrest Gump, which includes original footage of General Graham and Governor Wallace outside Foster Auditorium. From March 21 to 24, 1965, General Graham was responsible for escorting voting-rights marchers in their third attempt to walk during the
Selma to Montgomery marches in Alabama. This occurred two weeks after marchers had been beaten and tear-gassed in front of news media for an earlier attempt to march in what became known as
Bloody Sunday. In the 1997 TV movie
George Wallace, Graham was portrayed by Jan Johannes. General Graham died on March 21, 1999, just 6 months after George Wallace. He and his wife, Jane, had four children. He founded the commercial
real estate firm Graham & Company. ==Summary of military career==