McAllister, Montana, does not take long to drive through. We have a post office, a cabinet shop, and an empty lot where the old bar and restaurant once stood.
Yet there it was. The American flag hung at half-staff.
Somewhere between the Carolina foothills and a tiny town in southwest Montana, I was reminded that no matter how far life carries us, the places that formed us never quite let us go.
It was not for someone from Montana. It was for a boy from upstate South Carolina.
Standing in the parking lot of that tiny post office, I found myself thinking that southwest Montana might as well be another country from the red clay, pines, and dogwoods of northwest South Carolina.
Yet one lowered flag carried me back more than 2,000 miles, leaving me with an unexpected ache for both places.
Lindsey Graham’s passing felt different. There had been no long illness, no farewell tour, no gradual retreat from public life. He worked until the end. One day, he was in the middle of the nation’s business. The next, the flag in our little Montana town flew at half-staff for a man whose life began just a few miles from mine.
Washington knew him as a senator. The world knew him as a fixture on Sunday morning news programs, in committee hearings, and on diplomatic missions halfway around the globe.
Upstate South Carolina knew him simply as Lindsey.
Our paths crossed long before I could have imagined standing beside a lowered flag in a small Montana town thinking about him.
He grew up in Central. I grew up in nearby Anderson. We may even have been born in the same hospital.
When Lindsey first ran for Congress, my sister worked on his campaign. His district included my parents’ home. For a time, his sister lived only a few doors from them. Years later, one of my four brothers worked closely with him through the State Department on matters involving Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and other countries.
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The first time I met Lindsey personally was at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where my wife, Gracie, had been invited to sing for wounded warriors. We shared dinner that evening with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and his wife, along with Montana’s Conrad Burns.
At one point, Lindsey laughed and said he and I could carry on a conversation without anybody needing subtitles.
After meeting several members of my family over the years, he ran into my parents somewhere back home, shook his head with that familiar grin, and asked, “How many of y’all are there?”
That was Lindsey. For all the demands placed on him, he remembered people.
We disagreed on more than a few things over the years. Some of those disagreements mattered. But disagreement is not the same thing as dismissal.
Somewhere along the way, we have forgotten that.
In an era when too many public careers seem measured by growing fortunes and lucrative opportunities after leaving office, Lindsey’s modest estate told a different story. Whatever history ultimately concludes about every vote he cast or every position he took, it is difficult to argue that he entered public life to enrich himself.
He seemed to take the title literally.
It was public service in the truest sense of the phrase.
Whether one agreed with him or not, Lindsey’s work ethic was undeniable. He left behind a reputation far larger than his estate.
Lindsey Graham died with his boots on.
Only hours earlier, he was still in motion — meeting with allies, working with foreign leaders, talking with colleagues, and carrying the responsibilities that had defined most of his adult life.
Then, almost in an instant, the meetings ended, the phones stopped ringing, and the man who had spent a lifetime helping shape history took his place within it.
Flags across America have been lowered. Soon, they will be raised again. The mail will be sorted. Ranchers will stop by the post office. Life will continue, as it always does.
But standing there in the parking lot of our little post office, I closed my eyes and sighed.
I was not thinking about Washington or the halls of power. I was thinking about upstate South Carolina.
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Photo courtesy of Peter Rosenberger
I was thinking about the red clay my mother could never keep her five sons from tracking into the house. Boiled peanuts from a roadside stand. A sticky, hot Carolina afternoon with pine trees swaying just enough to remind you there was a breeze after all.
I was thinking about familiar voices, familiar roads, and a local boy from Central who somehow found himself helping shape the course of a nation without ever quite losing the cadence of home.
The United States lost a man who served first in uniform, then in the House of Representatives, and finally in the Senate.
South Carolina lost a son.
And somewhere between the Carolina foothills and a tiny town in southwest Montana, I was reminded that no matter how far life carries us, the places that formed us never quite let us go.
I suspect Lindsey Graham never heard of McAllister, Montana.
But that flag outside a tiny post office quietly testified that McAllister, along with countless other towns across America, paused to honor him.
Lindsey graham, Opinion & analysis, Montana, South carolina, American flags, Caregiving, Senate, Republicans
