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Affiliation | Democratic |
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Name | Sidney J. Catts |
Address | DeFuniak Springs, Florida , United States |
Email | None |
Website | None |
Born |
July 31, 1863
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Died | March 09, 1936
(72 years)
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Contributor | Some say... |
Last Modifed | RBH Mar 13, 2019 01:26am |
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Info | Sidney J. Catts was born near Pleasant Hill, Alabama in 1863. He studied law at Auburn and Howard Colleges (both in Alabama) and in 1882 received a law degree from Cumberland University, in Tennessee. After only four years' practice of law, he quit to enter the Baptist ministry. After pastoring churches in Lowndesboro, Ft. Deposit and Tuskegee, Alabama he was called to a church in DeFuniak Springs, Florida. Three years later, in 1915, he resigned this pastorate and began a career selling insurance. This new occupation took him about Florida meeting people - and furnished him an opportunity to build up a political following.
In 1916, Catts entered the Democratic primary as a candidate for Governor. The Democratic organization was not at all pleased with this challenge from a novice and 'outsider' and the primary campaign was hotly contested. Catts was initially declared the winner of the party's nomination, but the Democratic leadership got the State Supreme Court to authorize a recount—and Catts was 'counted out.'
Receiving the aid of a noted Florida Prohibition leader of the day, Catts, in a special caucus, received the nomination of the Independent Prohibition Party. A colorful candidate, often flamboyant on the stump, Catt's demands for reforms won him the support of many as did his attacks on the 'Roman Catholic' menace. After a bitter four-way campaign, Catts was the winner with 39,546 votes to 30,343 for the Democratic candidate, 18,333 for the Republican and 2,470 for the trailing Socialist candidate. With this vote plurality of 43.4% Sidney J. Catts became the first (and to date, the only) Governor elected on a Prohibition Party ticket alone.
As Governor of Florida, Catts found many of his progressive reform proposals blocked by the state legislature; however, reforms in the treatment of the mentally ill and of convicts were made. Road improvements, tax reforms and labor reforms were begun. He appointed a woman to his staff and endorsed suffrage for women. And—a statewide Prohibition Act was passed at his prodding. On the other hand, he shocked many of his followers by supporting local option gambling and found his administration attacked with charges of peonage and counterfeiting.
Never truly a Prohibition Party man, Catts reverted to the Democratic Party almost immediately after his election as Governor and did much to revitalize it by opening it to participation by many younger people. Ineligible to succeed himself in office, he ran for the U.S. Senate in 1920 against incumbent Senator Duncan V. Fletcher and was defeated by a 2 to 1 margin. In 1924 and 1928 he was narrowly defeated in efforts to regain the Governor's office. He led opposition in Florida to the 1928 Democratic nomination of Al Smith for the Presidency. Though never again elected to public office, and a failure in citrus growing and salesmanship, Catts remained a powerful voice in Florida politics until his death in 1936.
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