Upon admission to the Virginia bar, Abbitt had a private legal practice, and was also a bank executive. In 1931 he was elected
Commonwealth's attorney for
Appomattox County and served from 1932 to 1948. He also was elected member of the Virginia Constitutional Convention in 1945.
Congress When U.S. Representative
Patrick H. Drewry died in office, Abbit won the special election to fill the vacancy. A
Democrat, Abbitt won a full term later that year and 11 more times after that (February 17, 1948 – January 3, 1973). He was a member of the
Agriculture Committee and chair of its Subcommittee on Tobacco from 1955 on, an issue of great importance to his district. He supported farm subsidies as well as fiscal conservatism and opposed increased federal intervention in state affairs. Abbitt became known for his opposition to school desegregation in the 1950s, supporting
massive resistance alongside other
Byrd Democrats. For instance, he denounced
Brown v. Board of Education as "the naked and arrogant declaration of nine men." Abbitt signed the
Southern Manifesto in 1956. Abbitt voted against the
Civil Rights Acts of 1957, the
Civil Rights Acts of 1960, the
Civil Rights Acts of 1964, and the
Civil Rights Acts of 1968 as well as the
24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. He was a delegate to the
1964 Democratic National Convention, and chairman of the state Democratic party from 1964-1970. Abbitt announced his retirement to avoid being redistricted into the same congressional district as fellow Democrat
Dan Daniel, who was then reelected. Republican
Robert Daniel won the eastern part of the old district in a 5-candidate general election field, becoming the first Republican to represent
Southside Virginia in the century.
Endorsement of Douglas Wilder Having long since recanted his segregationist views, Abbitt endorsed
L. Douglas Wilder, who became Virginia's first black governor in 1989. According to his son, state delegate
Watkins Abbitt Jr., he and his sisters played a role in his father's change of heart. Watkins Jr. noted that in his later years, his father always worked for free for any black church that needed legal services, and a black minister spoke at the funeral. ==Death and legacy==