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Howard Swint, who brought his two daughters to the funeral, recalled meeting Byrd. "I found him to be a man of tremendous grace despite his years of powerful positions," he said. Graduate student Matt Noerpel attended a visitation as the senator lay in repose overnight at the Capitol. "It's Robert Byrd. He's as much a political legend as there is," he said. Byrd's body was to be flown back to Virginia, where he will be buried Tuesday next to his wife, Erma, who died in 2006. Byrd was the nation's longest-serving senator, spending more than a half-century there. He began his political career in the West Virginia House of Delegates and went on to serve in the state Senate before being elected to Congress in 1953. He served first in the House and then for 51 years in the Senate, where he developed a reputation as a master of the chamber's rules and an oft-feared advocate for West Virginia. In his home state, Byrd directed billions of dollars to projects ranging from government buildings to the FBI's national repository for computerized fingerprint records. Many facilities bear his name, including the federal courthouse in Charleston and a huge radio telescope in the Allegheny Mountain town of Green Bank. Byrd evolved over the decades, from a segregationist opposed to civil rights legislation, to a liberal hero for his opposition to the Iraq war and a supporter of the rights of gays to serve in the military. And he proudly became a free-spender as chairman of the Appropriations Committee. It took him just two years to reach his goal of bringing more than $1 billion in federal funds back to West Virginia for highways, bridges, buildings and other projects. He once referred to himself as "Big Daddy" for his ability to secure federal funds for his state. Byrd was born Nov. 20, 1917, in North Wilkesboro, N.C., as Cornelius Calvin Sale Jr. His mother died before his first birthday, and his father sent him to live with aunt and uncle Vlurma and Titus Byrd. They renamed him Robert and moved to Stotesbury, W.Va.
[Associated
Press;
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