Cracker Messiah
Auteur : Wayne Flynt
Date de publication : 2026-06-01
Ăditeur : University of Alabama Press
Nombre de pages : 376
Résumé du livre
The definitive biography of Sidney J. CattsâFloridaâs fiery governor who fused pulpit rhetoric with populist politics in the early twentieth century.
Cracker Messiah by Wayne Flynt is a riveting portrait of Sidney J. Catts, one of the most controversial figures in Southern political history. Catts rose from Baptist pulpits and Chautauqua stages to Floridaâs governorâs mansion in 1916, riding a wave of rural populism, prohibition fervor, and anti-Catholic rhetoric. His fiery oratory and outsider persona electrified âFlorida crackersâ at a time when industrial and urban forces were reshaping the South. Yet Catts was more than a demagogue. His administration championed progressive reformsâgood roads, penal improvements, vocational education, and even womenâs political participationâwhile his career oscillated between idealism and opportunism.
Wayne Flyntâs meticulously documented biography illuminates this complicated politician, tracing Cattsâs battles with the Democratic establishment, his failed Senate bid, and his later flirtations with gambling and real estate during Floridaâs boom years. Drawing on interviews, archival sources, and legislative records, Cracker Messiah illuminates the tensions between nativism and reform, faith and hypocrisy, populism and progressivism in the early twentieth-century South. This new edition will appeal to readers of Southern history, political biography, and Progressive Era studies, as well as anyone interested in the roots of American populism and the enduring complexities of cultural and political identity in the Deep South.