Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
ward, agrarian state. He spoke out for greater spending on public schools
and oversaw a more orderly organization of the state’s public school system,
although his proposal to provide free textbooks failed to pass the legislature.
Before the turn of the century, private schools played a large role in pro-
viding college-level education. Stetson University had been established in
DeLand in 1883, and Rollins College, in Winter Park, was founded in 1885.
In 1904, Mary McLeod Bethune established the Daytona Training School
proof
for Negro Girls that would later develop into Bethune-Cookman College.
The leading state-sponsored college was the Florida Agricultural College in
Lake City, established in 1870, but the state also gave meager support to a
handful of other institutions, including the State Normal School for Negroes
in Tal ahassee that had been organized in 1887. Funding for all of these in-
stitutions fell far short of the requirements of true colleges, and enrollments
were meager.
Broward’s most notable achievement in education came with passage of
the Buckman Act in 1905, which established the basis for orderly support of
higher education in the state. The Buckman Act provided for the creation
of a state board to oversee all state-sponsored colleges, with the intention
that over time the state would develop a system of higher education. The
Normal School for black students in Tal ahassee became Florida Agricul-
tural and Mechanical College, and, also in Tal ahassee, the Florida Female
College became Florida State College for Women, and, after World War II,
with the admission of male students, Florida State University. The location
of the other school, Florida Agricultural College, which enrolled only white
men, became a major controversy. Gainesville managed to lure the college
away from Lake City, partly because the city offered to furnish the college
The First Developers · 291
with free water from the municipal system. It was renamed the University
of Florida.
In step with the ideas current among progressives nationwide, Broward
saw to the passage of a law prohibiting child labor in factories, mines, and
saloons, as wel as a pure food law to create state inspection of meat and
vegetables. Broward also advocated the building of modern, hard-surface
roads around the state for the use of automobiles and trucks. A “good roads”
movement had started back in the 1890s before automobiles entered the pic-
ture, but once cars began to appear in Florida, the demand for better roads
increased dramatical y. Every major county had its organization to promote
road improvement. The state passed its first laws regulating automobiles and
required that autos be registered at a cost of two dol ars, with the money
going to build roads. In 1908, 733 cars were recorded.
The movement to prohibit alcoholic drinks had been gaining momentum
across the country during the final decades of the nineteenth century. Re-
ligious leaders and progressive reformers who saw alcoholism as a serious
social problem joined hands to support local and state laws limiting the
consumption of alcoholic beverages. By 1908, Gainesville, Tal ahassee, and
Live Oak had adopted “local option” laws prohibiting alcoholic beverages
within their boundaries.
proof
In the 1916 Democratic primary election, state comptrol er Wil iam V.
Knott, a mainstream party leader, faced four other opponents, including
outsider Sidney J. Catts, who had recently moved to DeFuniak Springs in
the Panhandle from Alabama. An impressive man with red hair who had
lost one eye in a childhood accident, Catts had been a Baptist minister, but
went into the business of selling life insurance. His career had given him a
strong sense of how the common people in backwoods areas viewed life.
Catts realized that he needed an issue that would separate him from the
other candidates, and he found it in anti-Catholicism.
Religion had never played a major role in state politics since the popula-
tion was overwhelmingly Protestant Christian. The two Stephen R. Mal-
lorys, father and son, had been elected to the U.S. Senate, in widely sepa-
rate eras, without their Catholic religion being a hindrance. However, Catts
found that it did not seem to matter that the Catholic population of Florida
was smal ; in rural areas, fears of an unseen threat lurking just over the
horizon could be amplified and exploited. The Democratic Party’s execu-
tive committee inadvertently added fuel to this fear by passing a provision
known as the Sturkie Resolution declaring that voters should not be in-
fluenced by religion in their choice of candidates and should not belong
292 · Thomas Graham
to any secret society advocating religious discrimination. The motion was
prompted by the rise of an organization cal ed the Guardians of Liberty,
dedicated to protecting native-born Americans against immigrant Catho-
lics. Catts seized upon the Sturkie Resolution as evidence that the leaders
of the state’s Democratic Party sympathized with Catholics and opposed
anyone who stood up for the rights of Protestants.
Lacking campaign money and newspaper support, Catts toured the
state’s rural areas declaring that he was the only candidate who cared about
the welfare of small-town people and farm families. When the primary bal-
lots were counted, Catts seemed to have won. However, the second-place
finisher, Knott, appealed to the state Supreme Court, which recounted the
ballots and declared Knott the victor by 270 votes. Claiming that the Demo-
cratic Party had stolen the nomination from him, Catts ran in the fall gen-
eral election as the candidate of the Prohibition Party. Adding a modern
touch to his campaign, Catts purchased a Model T Ford that allowed him
to reach even remote areas where the railroads did not go. Catts often bran-
dished two six-shooters, saying that he carried them for protection. He won
the general election by a good margin.
Catts rode to his inauguration in a procession of automobiles, including
his Model T, rather than the traditional carriages. Once in office, Catts ad-
proof
opted a moderate course. In most respects, the legislature continued to enact
laws that contributed to making Florida a modern state. Catts did push for
ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment outlawing alcoholic drinks, and
it was passed in December 1918. However, even in this case, Catts did not act
outside the mainstream of public opinion since most of the state’s counties
had already passed laws prohibiting alcoholic drinks, and the whole United
States went dry following ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919.
In other ways, Catts advanced the progressive agenda. He supported a
law that required youngsters between the ages of seven and fourteen to at-
tend school. He advocated two acts passed by the legislature in 1917 and 1919
that ended the leasing of state prisoners, although convict leasing continued
on the county level. Henceforth the state would use prisoners to maintain
the state’s developing road system.
In 1915, the legislature created a state road department. In October of that
year, the “Dixie Highway Motorcade” arrived in Jacksonville, having driven
in cars down from Chicago. Communities along the east coast of Florida
joined the movement and built roads that would be designated part of the
Dixie Highway. Florida’s future love affair with tourists in their automobiles
was already blossoming.
The First Developers · 293
The United States went to war against Germany just four months af-
ter Catts took office. In December 1917, at the start of the tourist season,
President Wilson took possession of all the railroads in the United States.
This, and the general disruptions of the war, caused the number of Florida
tourists to decrease during the 1918 season. In addition, overseas exports of
phosphate and lumber declined since European markets were closed during
the fighting.
However, the Florida economy boomed during the war. Railroad traffic
actual y increased as the movement of soldiers and building supplies for
military bases were added to the usual civilian traffic in lumber, winter veg-
etables, citrus, and tourists. Shipyards in Jacksonville and Tampa increased
production of ships for civilian owners. Lumber went to neighboring states
to build army camps. A labor shortage developed during the fighting. One
factor that added to the shortage was the increased migration of black Flo-
ridians to the North in search of better employment opportunities and
greater freedom.
Florida’s most significant contribution to the military came from avia-
tion training bases established in the state. With year-round good weather,
Florida made an ideal place to train aviators. The U.S. Navy had already
established Pensacola Naval Air Station 1914 as its primary base for training
proof
pilots. Miami received two fields: Curtiss and Chapman, while Arcadia was
home to Carlstrom and Dorr Fields.
Key West became noted as a base for submarines and as the U.S. Navy’s
home port for the Caribbean basin. A south Jacksonville location served as
the U.S. Army’s Camp Joseph E. Johnston (today’s Jacksonvil e Naval Air
Station).
The war imposed few hardships on civilians. Floridians voluntarily ra-
tioned their consumption of meat and planted more land in corn and po-
tatoes to increase the available food supply. Some farmers earned enough
money to replace their mules with tractors. However, prices for food,
clothing, and rent went up rapidly due to increased demand. During the
war, 42,000 Floridians served in the military. Approximately 1,100 died in
combat.
Just as the war was being won in Europe in the fall of 1918, an influenza
pandemic engulfed the world. The flu first appeared in Florida in the port
cities of Key West and Pensacola. Across the state, people wore squares of
gauze over their mouths and noses. Schools, movie theaters, churches, and
other places of public gatherings closed. Jacksonville recorded 234 deaths,
by far the most, and statewide probably more than 1,000 died.
294 · Thomas Graham
On November 5, 1915, Lieutenant Commander Henry C. Mustin flew the first aircraft
launched from a ship by catapult. He flew a Curtiss AB-2 flying boat off the stern of
proof
the USS
North
Carolina
anchored in Pensacola Bay. Before he began designing aircraft,
Glenn Curtiss had set a world speed record for motorcycles on Daytona Beach. Cour-
tesy of the State Archives of Florida,
Florida Memory
, http://floridamemory.com/items/
show/6943.
Fol owing the war, the United States was engulfed in labor disputes.
Wages had not kept up with inflation in the prices of consumer goods.
Strikes broke out in Florida cities with large numbers of unionized workers.
Tampa and Jacksonvil e had the largest strikes, but strikes also occurred
in other cities. Even some policemen and firemen went on strike. Racial
tensions rose as employers brought in black men to replace striking white
workers. Black men, who had been forced out of many skil ed trades in
previous decades, saw this as a chance to improve their employment status.
Fortunately, the strikes were settled without the kind of major violence that
happened in some northern cities.
Soon good times returned, and Sunny Florida stood poised to lead
America into the Roaring Twenties.
The First Developers · 295
Notes
1. Akin,
Flagler
, 117.
2. Braden,
Architecture
of
Leisure
, 221.
3. Colburn,
Government
in
the
Sunshine
, 12.
4. Stronge,
Sunshine
Economy
, 13.
5. Ibid., 34–35.
6. Davis,
Paradise
Lost
, 243–51.
7. Proctor,
Broward
, 190.
Bibliography
Akin, Edward N.
Flagler:
Rockefel er
Partner
and
Florida
Baron
. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1988.