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Pork Chop Gang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group of North Floridian Democratic legislators
Pork Chop Gang, 1956.

ThePork Chop Gang was a group of twentyDemocratic Party legislators from rural areas ofNorth Florida who worked together to dominate the Florida legislature, especially to maintainsegregation and conserve the disproportionate political power of mostly rural northern Florida. The origins of the name are obscure, referring either to a purported divide in the state's cuisine (pork supposedly being preferred in the north and lamb being preferred in the south) or to thelegislative pork that the members of the Gang were allegedly awarding themselves.[1] They were active primarily from the 1930s to the 1960s, although the final "nail in their coffin" was in 1977.[2][3] The spokesperson was SenatorCharley Johns. They "had become unusually powerful in the 1950s because the legislative districts of the state had not been redrawn to account for the massive growth of urban areas in earlier years."[4] The key figure in the group, coordinating their activities, although not a legislator, was industrialistEd Ball. LegislatorHowell Lancaster was a leader for the group.[5] Their favorite haunt was the fish camp of legislatorRaeburn C. Horne, at Nutall Rise, inTaylor County on theAucilla River.[4] The group targetedcommunists andhomosexuals.

Photograph of theAucilla River at Nutall Rise byRaeburn C. Horne's fish camp

Membership

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The following legislators were members of the Pork Chop Gang in 1956, according to the captions on a photo of them in the state archives of Florida:[6]

Members of the Pork Chop Gang in 1956
LegislatorHometown
James E. "Nick" ConnorBrooksville
L. K. Edwards Jr.Irvine
Irlo Bronson, Sr.Kissimmee
W. E. BishopLake City
H. B. DouglasBonifay
William A. ShandsGainesville
W. Randolph HodgesCedar Key
Charley Eugene JohnsStarke
John S. RawlsMarianna
Philip D. Beall Jr.Pensacola
Harry O. StrattonCallahan
F. Wilson CarrawayTallahassee
W. Turner DavisMadison
Scott Dilworth ClarkeMonticello
Dewey M. JohnsonQuincy
J. Edwin BakerUmatilla
Edwin G. FraserMacclenny
Basil Charles "Bill" PearceEast Palatka
Woodrow M. MelvinMilton
J. Graham BlackJasper
J. C. Getzen Jr.Bushnell

Their public spokesman was Florida Senate PresidentCharley Eugene Johns fromStarke. The coalition supportedracial segregation (which was practiced at Ball'sSt. Joe Paper Company, as it was at most companies in Florida at the time).

Activities

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The Raeburn C. Horne fish camp (1960s)

For nine years, the Pork Chop Gang, having failed in its investigation of allegedcommunism in theNAACP, devoted its efforts to identifying homosexuals in Florida universities and schools. "By 1963, more than 39 college professors and deans had been dismissed from their positions at the three state universities, and 71 teaching certificates were revoked."[7] In January 1964, theFlorida Legislative Investigation Committee (FLIC) of theFlorida Legislature, led by State SenatorCharley Eugene Johns published theanti-gay propaganda pamphletHomosexuality and Citizenship in Florida, also known as thePurple Pamphlet. It was sold for 25 cents a copy, with a discount for bulk orders of 100 copies or more.[8]

The downfall of the Pork Chop Gang was theFlorida Constitution of 1968, which ended decades of malapportionment that favored rural north Florida over more populated central and south Florida,[9] and eliminated mandatory school segregation. However, it took a new state constitution to get them out.[10]

Professor Judith Poucher called the Johns Committee "Florida's version ofMcCarthyism".[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Weitz, Seth (March 16, 2007).Bourbon, Pork Chops, and Red Peppers: Political Immorality in Florida, 1945–1968. Ph.D. dissertation,Florida State University.Archived from the original on June 6, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2021.
  2. ^"The final nail in the 'Pork Chop Gang' coffin".Tampa Tribune. September 1, 2013. Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2015. RetrievedJuly 14, 2015.
  3. ^Miller, James Nathan (July 1971). "How Florida threw out the pork chop gang".National Civic Review.60 (7):366–380.doi:10.1002/ncr.4100600704.
  4. ^abThe Aucilla River Hideaway of Florida's 'Pork Chop Gang',Florida Memory, July 2, 2014,archived from the original on July 15, 2015, retrievedJuly 14, 2015
  5. ^"'Pork Chop' Leader Dies".Tampa Bay Times.St. Petersburg, Florida. January 6, 1972. p. 36. RetrievedJune 28, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  6. ^Group portrait of the Pork Chop Gang during the 1956 special session of the Senate,Florida Memory, 1956,archived from the original on July 15, 2015, retrievedJuly 14, 2015
  7. ^Dare, Stephen (July 31, 2010)."Rise of The Pork Chop Gang. Conservative Racist Control from the 30s to the 60s".Metro Jacksonville.Archived from the original on March 22, 2021. RetrievedJune 2, 2016.
  8. ^Howard, John (1997).Carryin' on in the Lesbian and Gay South. NYU Press. p. 132.ISBN 978-0-8147-3560-2.
  9. ^Price, H. D. (1973) [1957]. "The Negro and the Legislature".The Negro and Southern Politics. A Chapter of Florida History.Westport, Connecticut:Greenwood Press. pp. 103–106.ISBN 0837168244.
  10. ^ABC Television News (March 16, 2015)."The Last Standing Porkchopper". Archived fromthe original on July 16, 2015. RetrievedJuly 14, 2015.
  11. ^Poucher, Judith G. (2014).Challenging the Johns Committee's Assault on Civil Liberties. University Press of Florida.ISBN 9780813049939.JSTOR j.ctvx075bh.

Further reading

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