Daniel T. McCarty

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Daniel T. McCarty

In office
January 6, 1953 – September 28, 1953
Preceded by Fuller Warren
Succeeded by Charley E. Johns

Born January 18, 1912 (1912-01-18)
Fort Pierce, Florida
Died September 28, 1953 (aged 41)
Tallahassee, Florida
Political party Democratic

Daniel Thomas McCarty (January 18, 1912 - September 28, 1953) was the thirty-first governor of Florida.

[edit] Early life

Dan McCarty was born in Fort Pierce, Florida, the son of a prominent local family, and grew up in a large house on Indian River Drive just south of the present courthouse in downtown Fort Pierce. He attended local public schools and in 1934 graduated from the University of Florida. After finishing his education, McCarty became a cattleman and citrus grower in Fort Pierce. He married Oliie Brown with whom he had three children. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army, was promoted to the rank of Colonel, and was decorated with the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Legion of Merit, and the French Croix de Guerre.

[edit] Political career

He began his political career when in 1937, he was elected to the Florida House of Representatives where he served until 1941. During the 1941 session, he served as speaker of the house. In 1948 he was the runner up for the Democratic nomination for governor. Four years later in 1952, he ran for governor again, and this time was successful in winning the office. During his tenure, he reformed purchasing and hiring practices by the state government, boosted teachers' salaries and created scholarships for teacher training, opposed oil exploration in the Everglades, and instituted aid programs for the disabled. On February 25, 1953, shortly after assuming the governorship, he suffered a debilitating heart attack and died on September 28, 1953 in Tallahassee. After a large funeral at his life-long parish church, the old Carpenter Gothic St. Andrew's Episcopal Church across the street from his boyhood home in Fort Pierce, he was buried in the Palms Cemetery three miles south on Indian River Drive in Ankona. It is said that the beginning of the bumper-to-bumper funeral procession reached the small cemetery before the last cars had left the church area.

[edit] External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Fuller Warren
Governor of Florida
1952–1953
Succeeded by
Charley E. Johns
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