Charley Eugene Johns

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Charley Eugene Johns
Charley Eugene Johns 1963.jpg
32nd Governor of Florida
In office
September 28, 1953 – January 4, 1955
Preceded by Daniel T. McCarty
Succeeded by LeRoy Collins
Personal details
Born February 27, 1905
Starke, Florida
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Gainesville, Florida
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Thelma Brinson
Profession insurance agent, railroad conductor
Religion Baptist

Charley Eugene Johns (February 27, 1905 – January 23, 1990) was an American politician. Johns, a Baptist, served as the 32nd Governor of Florida from 1953 to 1955.

Johns was born in Starke, Florida. He worked as a railroad conductor and insurance agent before being elected to the State Senate as a Democrat in 1947 to 1966. Johns became the Senate President in April 1953, a position Markley Johns, his brother, had been elected to. Johns was a member of the "Pork Chop Gang", a group of 20 conservative legislators from North Florida who favored racial segregation and consolidated political power and money in the northern, more rural parts of the state. One of the Johns most remembered initiatives during his early state Senate years was to build a new, portable electric chair to be transported by truck with an electric generator and set up in a jail or a courthouse where the convicted was sentenced.[1]

After the death of Governor Dan McCarty on September 28, 1953, Johns became the Acting Governor under the provisions of the state constitution at that time, which provided for the state Senate President to become the Acting Governor upon the death, incapacitation, or resignation of the Governor. During his term as Acting Governor, Johns promoted highway construction, eliminating tolls on the Overseas Highway between Miami and Key West. He was also an advocate for prison reform. In 1954, Johns ran for reelection to a term as governor in his own right, but was defeated by LeRoy Collins. After leaving office on January 4, 1955, he returned to the Florida Senate, serving until 1966.

Johns is most remembered for his support and chairmanship of the infamous Florida Legislative Investigation Committee, nicknamed the "Johns Committee" because of Johns' chairmanship. This committee participated in the Red Scare and Lavender scare by investigating communists, homosexuals, and civil rights advocates among the students and faculty of Florida's university system. They were responsible for revoking teachers' certificates and firing university professors. By 1963, the committee had forced the dismissal or resignation of over 100 professors and deans at the University of Florida, Florida State University and the University of South Florida.[citation needed] One professor, Sigismond Diettrich, chair of the geography department of the University of Florida, attempted suicide after being investigated by the committee. The state legislature ended funding for the committee in 1964 after it released a report called Homosexuality and Citizenship in Florida, which infamously became known as the "Purple Pamphlet".[2] Its many photographs depicting homosexual acts outraged legislators and reportedly copies of the report were being sold as pornography in New York City.

In 2005, UF Today, an alumni publication of the University of Florida, included Johns in a list of 81 "outstanding" UF alumni. Johns attended UF only for a few months and did not graduate. The editor apologized for the error, and the alumni association said that including him was a mistake.

In the Afterword of his 2012 novel, "The Sin Warriors," inspired by the events in Florida in the early 1960s, Julian E. Farris states that "by the time the investigations ended {in 1964}, 300 administrators, teachers and students had been removed from public institutions, and 30,000 pages of transcripts, along with scores of recorded interrogations, were sealed and kept from public scrutiny, not to be opened for 72 years. A public-records challenge resulted in their release in 1993, but . . . the history of the Florida inquisition was largely forgotten."

References

  • Beutke, Allyson A. Behind Closed Doors: The Dark Legacy of the Johns Committee. Documentary, 2000.
  • Schnur, James Anthony. Cold warriors in the hot sunshine : the Johns Committee's assault on civil liberties in Florida, 1956–1965. Master's thesis, University of South Florida, 1995.
  • Stark, Bonnie. McCarthyism in Florida : Charley Johns and the Florida legislative investigation committee July. Master's thesis, University of South Florida, 1985.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Florida
September 28, 1953 – January 4, 1955
Succeeded by
LeRoy Collins