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Napoleon Bonaparte Broward - Florida's Fighting Democrat (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Loot Price: R759
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Napoleon Bonaparte Broward - Florida's Fighting Democrat (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Series: Florida Sand Dollar Books
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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From reviews of the first edition: "The impact of [Broward's]
career upon the Florida political scene is told by Samuel Proctor
with a skill that combines suspense and accuracy. . . . A great
contribution in the field of Florida history."--Miami Daily News
"The first full-dress biography of [a] colorful Florida politician.
. . . His name is perpetuated in the county created at the height
of the drainage boom for which he was chiefly responsible. But to
many Floridians the name of Broward means a daring filibusterer who
smuggled guns and guerrillas to Cuba's revolutionaries. That
melodramatic chapter of Broward's life is not overlooked by
biographer Proctor."-- Miami Herald Now in a new paperback edition,
Samuel Proctor's popular biography was first described as "a lusty
narrative of a lusty age." Revealing the politics and intrigues of
frontier Florida in the period still known as the "Broward Era,"
Proctor describes the life and liberal administration of Napoleon
Bonaparte Broward (1857-1910), elected governor of Florida in 1904.
Hailed as chief of the "wool hat" faction in Florida and as a
leader of the populist movement in the South and throughout the
country, Broward identified with laborers, farmers, and tradesmen
and fought bitterly against the railroad magnates, lumber barons,
and land pirates who dominated Florida politics after the Civil
War. Under his leadership the legislature passed the progressive
Buckman Act, which consolidated seven state colleges into two
universities at Gainesville and Tallahassee and unified them under
a Board of Control, and enacted tax reforms, child labor
restrictions, and regulations to prevent the sale of cigarettes to
minors. In an effort to turn acres of rich muck into productive
farmland, Broward initiated the Everglades drainage project (with
the now infamous slogan "Water will run downhill"). Through his
life passed such figures as Theodore Roosevelt, inspecting newly
rebuilt Jacksonville after the 1901 fire; Carry Nation, waving her
Prohibition banner; Gentleman Jim Corbett, defending his
heavyweight boxing title in Jacksonville; and Cuban patriots
boarding Broward's famous river steamer, The Three Friends. For
this work Proctor examined newspaper files and letters and
documents held by the Broward family and interviewed several of the
governor's political associates and his immediate family, including
children, a sister, and his widow (who received the first copy of
the book off the press in 1952). Samuel Proctor is distinguished
service professor of history at the University of Florida and
editor of the Bicentennial Floridiana Facsimile Series (UPF). He is
the author of Gator History: A Pictorial History of the University
of Florida, Jews of the South: Selected Essays, and Florida a
Hundred Years Ago and coeditor of Tacachale: Essays on the Indians
of Florida and Southeastern Georgia during the Historic Period. He
is also the longtime editor of the Florida Historical Quarterly.
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