Remove Ads

Sidney Johnston Catts Sr.

Photo added byWilliam Bjornstad

Adding photos to this memorial is not allowed.

Photo requests are not allowed for this cemetery.

Sidney Johnston Catts Sr.Famous memorial

Birth
Pleasant Hill, Dallas County, Alabama, USA
Death
9 Mar 1936 (aged 72)
DeFuniak Springs, Walton County, Florida, USA
Burial
DeFuniak Springs,Walton County,Florida,USAGPS-Latitude: 30.7268028, Longitude: -86.0985336
Memorial ID
6813114View Source

Adding photos to this memorial is not allowed.

Photo requests are not allowed for this cemetery.

Florida Governor. Sidney Johnston Catts was born on the old Catts Plantation in the village Pleasant Hill near Selma, Alabama to parents, Adeline Rebecca Smyly and Samuel Walker Catts, a wealthy landowner. While being watched by his nanny as a toddler, Catts lost sight in his right eye when the point of a pair of scissors punctured the eye; hence all photos show the left profile of his face. He studied at Auburn and Howard University in Alabama, but earned a law degree from Cumberland University in Tennessee in 1882. He married Alice May Campbell on November 18, 1886 in Collirene, Alabama and eight children were born to this union. Early on, he ran for a local political office but lost the election along with his interest in law. In 1886 Catts was ordained as Baptist minister then in 1911 relocated to Florida to take a church assignment. It was soon after that Catts resigned his vocation of insurance for the soul to selling fraternal life insurance door to door, thus meeting the "little people" and spreading his political ideas to others. A political unknown in Florida, he campaigned for the office of governor by walking miles and miles covering Florida with a Bible in one hand and carrying a loaded revolver in the other. Catts was a colorful candidate standing 6-foot tall, weighting over 200 pounds and a mass of fiery red hair. He often flamboyantly stood on a stump preaching a political sermon to his supporters while wiping sweat from his ruddy red face with a large handkerchief or cooling himself with a palmetto fan. It is said that he based his political truths on "Religion, Race, and Rum", and often compared to colorful political figure Huey Long of Louisiana. He won the Democratic ticket; but the Florida Supreme court was not satisfied with the ballot count, thus ordered a recount, which he lost by just a few votes. At this point, he received the nomination of the Prohibition Party. On Election Day in 1916, Sidney Catts became the 22nd Governor of Florida with 43% of the votes and the remaining candidates dividing the rest. He was the one of two candidates from the Prohibition Party to ever obtain such a high position in government; the other was Charles Hiram Randall of California, who served in Congress 1915 to 1921. Catts was always a true Democrat. It is well documented that Catts had a deep prejudice against the Roman Catholic Church and the black race, and he publicly verbalized his beliefs as the truth to anyone that would listen. In 1919, he supported the lynching of two black men then followed with remarks that Florida's white women needed protection from black men. Florida had 13 lynching of black men without lawful trials by 1920. His administration was a turbulent one since many of the state's political leaders opposed his reasoning on these matters. Catts did have some positive accomplishments: Federal aide for road improvements, aide to dependent children, improvement of state mental health facilities, change in election laws, draining of Everglades, increased pensions for old soldiers, Seminole Reservation, labor laws, and created the program of "The Friend of the Convicts". At the dismay of the Roman Catholic Church, he passed taxation of church property with the exception of the church and pastor's home and same required license for public, private and denominational schoolteachers including nuns. Endorsing suffrage for women, he appointed a woman to his staff, and a statewide Prohibition Act was passed at his prodding. During the 19 months that the United States was in World War I, Catts lead the state with more than 40,000 Floridians serving in the military including the governor's son Rozier, several military training bases started in Florida, and Floridians purchased millions of dollars in Liberty Bonds. Florida farmers grew tons of food for the Allied war effort, and to promote this, Governor Catts proclaimed May 6, 1917 as National Crisis Day to urge Florida farmers to produce more food, and to encourage food conservation throughout the state On the other hand, he shocked many of his followers by supporting legalized gambling and, late in his term, his administration was attacked with charges of peonage and counterfeiting. Catts was ineligible to run for reelection in 1920, but he ran for the U. S. Senate as a Democrat, but captured less than 30% of the vote as Floridians had enough of his style of politics. The York Times ran a detailed article about his colorful life on Sunday, May 29, 1921, and reported that he was arrested for peonage. More articles in the same newspaper, in addition to the Washington Post, the Florida Times Union and other national newspapers, stated Catts had accepted money to pardon criminals, one being a man serving life sentence for a murder at the center of a bootlegging ring. Catts was arrested for forcing labor on two former black convicts at his DeFuniak Springs farm. Although Catts was acquitted in 1922 of all charges, people still remembered these incidents. After a move to Atlanta, Catts established his short-lived business of making patent medicines, such as Catts' Hog Tonic. Catts ran for Florida Governor in 1924 and 1928, losing both times. Catts was one of the Democrats who worked against 1928 Presidential nominee Al Smith due to his religion, which was Roman Catholic. Catts held membership in the Freemasonry, Guardian of Liberty, Knights of Pythias and Woodmen of the World. Governor Sidney Catts' biography was published in 1977, "Cracker Messiah," by Wayne Flint and published by Louisiana State University Press.
Florida Governor. Sidney Johnston Catts was born on the old Catts Plantation in the village Pleasant Hill near Selma, Alabama to parents, Adeline Rebecca Smyly and Samuel Walker Catts, a wealthy landowner. While being watched by his nanny as a toddler, Catts lost sight in his right eye when the point of a pair of scissors punctured the eye; hence all photos show the left profile of his face. He studied at Auburn and Howard University in Alabama, but earned a law degree from Cumberland University in Tennessee in 1882. He married Alice May Campbell on November 18, 1886 in Collirene, Alabama and eight children were born to this union. Early on, he ran for a local political office but lost the election along with his interest in law. In 1886 Catts was ordained as Baptist minister then in 1911 relocated to Florida to take a church assignment. It was soon after that Catts resigned his vocation of insurance for the soul to selling fraternal life insurance door to door, thus meeting the "little people" and spreading his political ideas to others. A political unknown in Florida, he campaigned for the office of governor by walking miles and miles covering Florida with a Bible in one hand and carrying a loaded revolver in the other. Catts was a colorful candidate standing 6-foot tall, weighting over 200 pounds and a mass of fiery red hair. He often flamboyantly stood on a stump preaching a political sermon to his supporters while wiping sweat from his ruddy red face with a large handkerchief or cooling himself with a palmetto fan. It is said that he based his political truths on "Religion, Race, and Rum", and often compared to colorful political figure Huey Long of Louisiana. He won the Democratic ticket; but the Florida Supreme court was not satisfied with the ballot count, thus ordered a recount, which he lost by just a few votes. At this point, he received the nomination of the Prohibition Party. On Election Day in 1916, Sidney Catts became the 22nd Governor of Florida with 43% of the votes and the remaining candidates dividing the rest. He was the one of two candidates from the Prohibition Party to ever obtain such a high position in government; the other was Charles Hiram Randall of California, who served in Congress 1915 to 1921. Catts was always a true Democrat. It is well documented that Catts had a deep prejudice against the Roman Catholic Church and the black race, and he publicly verbalized his beliefs as the truth to anyone that would listen. In 1919, he supported the lynching of two black men then followed with remarks that Florida's white women needed protection from black men. Florida had 13 lynching of black men without lawful trials by 1920. His administration was a turbulent one since many of the state's political leaders opposed his reasoning on these matters. Catts did have some positive accomplishments: Federal aide for road improvements, aide to dependent children, improvement of state mental health facilities, change in election laws, draining of Everglades, increased pensions for old soldiers, Seminole Reservation, labor laws, and created the program of "The Friend of the Convicts". At the dismay of the Roman Catholic Church, he passed taxation of church property with the exception of the church and pastor's home and same required license for public, private and denominational schoolteachers including nuns. Endorsing suffrage for women, he appointed a woman to his staff, and a statewide Prohibition Act was passed at his prodding. During the 19 months that the United States was in World War I, Catts lead the state with more than 40,000 Floridians serving in the military including the governor's son Rozier, several military training bases started in Florida, and Floridians purchased millions of dollars in Liberty Bonds. Florida farmers grew tons of food for the Allied war effort, and to promote this, Governor Catts proclaimed May 6, 1917 as National Crisis Day to urge Florida farmers to produce more food, and to encourage food conservation throughout the state On the other hand, he shocked many of his followers by supporting legalized gambling and, late in his term, his administration was attacked with charges of peonage and counterfeiting. Catts was ineligible to run for reelection in 1920, but he ran for the U. S. Senate as a Democrat, but captured less than 30% of the vote as Floridians had enough of his style of politics. The York Times ran a detailed article about his colorful life on Sunday, May 29, 1921, and reported that he was arrested for peonage. More articles in the same newspaper, in addition to the Washington Post, the Florida Times Union and other national newspapers, stated Catts had accepted money to pardon criminals, one being a man serving life sentence for a murder at the center of a bootlegging ring. Catts was arrested for forcing labor on two former black convicts at his DeFuniak Springs farm. Although Catts was acquitted in 1922 of all charges, people still remembered these incidents. After a move to Atlanta, Catts established his short-lived business of making patent medicines, such as Catts' Hog Tonic. Catts ran for Florida Governor in 1924 and 1928, losing both times. Catts was one of the Democrats who worked against 1928 Presidential nominee Al Smith due to his religion, which was Roman Catholic. Catts held membership in the Freemasonry, Guardian of Liberty, Knights of Pythias and Woodmen of the World. Governor Sidney Catts' biography was published in 1977, "Cracker Messiah," by Wayne Flint and published by Louisiana State University Press.

Bio by:Linda Davis


Inscription

Governor 1917-1921



How famous was Sidney Johnston Catts Sr.?

What was Sidney Johnston famous for?

Current rating:3.21212 out of 5 stars

33 votes

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by:Mark Pawelczak
  • Added: Sep 30, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6813114/sidney_johnston-catts: accessed), memorial page for Sidney Johnston Catts Sr. (31 Jul 1863–9 Mar 1936), Find a Grave Memorial ID6813114, citing Magnolia Cemetery, DeFuniak Springs,Walton County,Florida,USA;Maintained by Find a Grave.

Add Photos for Sidney Johnston Catts Sr.

Fulfill Photo Request for Sidney Johnston Catts Sr.

Photo Request Fulfilled

Thank you for fulfilling this photo request. An email has been sent to the person who requested the photo informing them that you have fulfilled their request

There is an open photo request for this memorial

Are you adding a grave photo that will fulfill this request?

Drag images here or select from
your computer forSidney Johnston Catts Sr. memorial.

Oops, some error occurred while uploading your photo(s).
  • Oops, something didn't work. Close this window, and upload the photo(s) again.
  • Make sure that the file is a photo. Photos larger than 8 MB will be reduced. Photos larger than 20 MB will not be accepted.
All photos uploaded successfully, click on the <b>Done button</b> to see the photos in the gallery.
General photo guidelines:
  • Photos larger than8.0 MB will be optimized and reduced.
  • Photos larger than20 MB will not be accepted.
  • Each contributor can upload a maximum of5 photos for a memorial.
  • A memorial can have a maximum of20 photos from all contributors.
  • The sponsor of a memorial may add an additional10 photos (for a total of30 on the memorial).
  • Include gps location with grave photos where possible.
  • No animated GIFs, photos with additional graphics (borders, embellishments.)
  • No post-mortem photos.

Read full guidelines

File Name
File Name

Request Grave Photo

Photo request failed. Try again later.

This memorial already has a grave photo. Please indicate why you think it needs another.
There is no plot information for this memorial. Your photo request is more likely to be fulfilled if you contact the cemetery to get the plot information and include it with your request.

The note field is required.

Leave a Flower

Clear
    Loading...

    Your Scrapbook is currently empty.Add to your scrapbook

    NaN characters remaining
    Flower left by

    You are only allowed to leave one flower per day for any given memorial.

    Memorial Photos

    This is a carousel with slides. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate, or jump to a slide with the slide dots. Use Escape keyboard button or the Close button to close the carousel.

    Now Showing1 of5
    Larger memorial image loading...
    Loading...

    Added by: William Bjornstad on 09 Jan 2017

    Photo Updated
    Photo Failed to Update
    Cover Photo Change Saved.

    Photo type: Person

    Now Showing2 of5
    Larger memorial image loading...
    Loading...

    Added by: Zach Anderson on 03 Sep 2016

    Photo Updated
    Photo Failed to Update
    Cover Photo Change Saved.

    Photo type: Grave

    Now Showing3 of5
    Larger memorial image loading...
    Loading...

    Added by: Zach Anderson on 03 Sep 2016

    Photo Updated
    Photo Failed to Update
    Cover Photo Change Saved.

    Photo type: Grave

    Now Showing4 of5
    Larger memorial image loading...
    Loading...

    Added by: Dorothy Jo Sunday on 14 Jun 2009

    Photo Updated
    Photo Failed to Update
    Cover Photo Change Saved.

    Photo type: Grave

    Now Showing5 of5
    Larger memorial image loading...
    Loading...

    Added by: Dorothy Jo Sunday on 14 Jun 2009

    Photo Updated
    Photo Failed to Update
    Cover Photo Change Saved.

    Photo type: Grave

    Share

    Oops, we were unable to send the email.

    Oops, we were unable to send the email.Try again

    • The email does not appear to be a valid email address. Verify and try again.

    Message:
    I thought you might like to see a memorial forSidney Johnston Catts Sr. I found on Findagrave.com.

    Check out this Find a Grave memorial

    Sending...

    Save To

    This memorial has been copied to your clipboard.
    Failed to copy

    Your Virtual Cemeteries

    Report Abuse

    Are you sure that you want to report this flower to administrators as offensive or abusive?

    This flower has been reported and will not be visible while under review.

    Failed to report flower. Try again later.

    Delete Flower

    Are you sure that you want to delete this flower?

    Failed to delete flower. Try again later.

    Delete Memorial

    Are you sure that you want to delete this memorial?

    Failed to delete memorial. Try again later.

    This memorial cannot be deleted. You cancontact support with questions.

    Reported Problems

    Problem #index#:

    Details:

    Reported By:

    Reported On:

    There was an error deleting this problem. Try again later.


    Report a problem

    Please select a problem

    Recently Deceased

    Report a Duplicate Memorial

    Which memorial do you think is a duplicate ofSidney Johnston Catts(6813114)?

    We will review the memorials and decide if they should be merged.Learn more about merges.

    Invalid memorial

    Please enter a valid Memorial ID

    You cannot merge a memorial into itself

    Memorial has already been merged

    Memorial has already been removed

    Delete Photo

    Are you sure that you want to delete this photo?

    Failed to delete photo. Try again later.

    Close

    Welcome to a Find a Grave Memorial Page

    Learn about how to make the most of a memorial.

    or don't show this again—I am good at figuring things out

    Cover photo and vital information

    Quickly see who the memorial is for and when they lived and died and where they are buried.

    Show Map

    If the memorial includes GPS coordinates, simply click 'Show Map' to view the gravesite location within the cemetery. If no GPS coordinates are available, you can contribute by adding them if you know the precise location.

    Photos

    For memorials with more than one photo, additional photos will appear here or on the photos tab.

    Photos Tab

    All photos appear on this tab and here you can update the sort order of photos on memorials you manage. To view a photo in more detail or edit captions for photos you added, click the photo to open the photo viewer.

    Flowers

    Flowers added to the memorial appear on the bottom of the memorial or here on the Flowers tab. To add a flower, click theLeave a Flower button.

    Family Members

    Family members linked to this person will appear here.

    Related searches

    Use the links underSee more… to quickly search for other people with the same last name in the same cemetery, city, county, etc.

    Sponsor This Memorial

    Remove advertising from a memorial by sponsoring it for <strong>just $10</strong>. Previously sponsored memorials or famous memorials will not have this option.

    Share

    Share this memorial using social media sites or email.

    Save to

    Save to an Ancestry Tree, a virtual cemetery, your clipboard for pasting or Print.

    Edit or Suggest Edit

    Edit a memorial you manage or suggest changes to the memorial manager.

    Have Feedback

    Thanks for using Find a Grave, if you have any feedback we would love to hear from you.

    Leave feedback