Bill Miller in 1964 RNC Presidential Nomination Acceptance Speech

Basic Information

Name: William Edward Miller

Nicknames: Uh… Bill

Born: March 22, 1914

Died: June 24, 1983

Nationality: American

Hometown: Lockport, New York

WORK & EDUCATION

Occupation: lawyer, WWII veteran, district attorney, U.S. Congressman

Education: Notre Dame & Albany Law School

FAMILY & FRIENDS

Parents: Edward J. Miller & Elizabeth (Hinch) Miller

Siblings: none mentioned

Spouse: Stephanie (Wagner) Miller

Children: Stephanie, William (not a lot of creativity with names in this family), Elizabeth (Libby) Anne, and Mary Karen

Friends: Barry Goldwater

Foes: liberals, moderate Republicans, Nazi war criminals


Analysis

Maybe for some people it's cool to run for Vice President. That's probably less true when one of the slogans about your candidacy is this:

Here's a riddle, it's a killer / Who the hell is William Miller?

As it turns out, plenty of people knew who William Miller was; he was the district attorney for Niagara County in New York before becoming one of the state's Congressman.

He was also extremely conservative and very outspoken, which is probably why he was asked to run with Barry Goldwater.

Politically, they had a lot in common.

But whereas after the campaign, Barry Goldwater continued to be a big name in the political world, Bill Miller pretty much vanished back into the obscurity (outside of New York) from whence he'd come.

In fact, in 1975, Miller did one of the first American Express commercials in a series called, "Do you know me?" The series featured people who had done big things but might not be recognized out on the street. (Others appearing in these commercials included the U.S. Treasurer Francine Neff and novelist Stephen King—how could anyone not recognize him?)

Other than his brief flash in the pan of fame during the 1964 presidential election, Congressman Miller was known mostly for eloquent trash-talking, and for prosecuting Nazi war criminals during the Nuremberg trials. That alone should have made him a little more memorable.

He was apparently also pretty good at gin rummy. And if that isn't enough to keep a person off the list of "Ten Worst Running Mates in Presidential History," well…we just don't know what is.