/ Stars that died in 2023: Claude R. Kirk, Jr., American politician, Governor of Florida (1967–1971), died he was 85.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Claude R. Kirk, Jr., American politician, Governor of Florida (1967–1971), died he was 85.


Claude Roy Kirk, Jr.  was the 36th Governor of the U.S. state of Florida (1967–1971). He was the first Republican Governor of Florida since Reconstruction.[1]

(January 7, 1926 – September 28, 2011)

Early life

Claude Kirk was born in San Bernardino, California. He lived in Chicago, Illinois, and Montgomery, Alabama, where he attended Sidney Lanier High School. After graduating at age seventeen, he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps reserve and rose to the rank of second lieutenant, having served stateside during World War II. He briefly attended Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia before he transferred to Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree. Kirk was accepted at the University of Alabama School of Law in Tuscaloosa and graduated in 1949. He was recalled to the Marines for the Korean War and was initially assigned to the 1st Marine Division. He later served aboard the battleship USS New Jersey and was discharged as a first lieutenant in 1952.[2]

Business

Kirk worked as an insurance salesman and sold building supplies before partnering with W. Ashley Verlander in 1956 to start the American Heritage Life Insurance Company in Jacksonville, Florida. He had no money of his own, so he recruited investors and his brother-in-law to bankroll the venture. The firm catered to the wealthy and quickly became one of the most successful in the industry, earning Kirk a fortune. Six years later, he left American Heritage Life and purchased a partnership in the New York securities firm, Hayden Stone, selling investments to Floridians.[3] Between 1965 and 1966, Kirk traveled to Brazil for an unsuccessful business venture, but met Erika Mattfeld, a beautiful model and actress.[3]

Politics 1960 and 1964

In 1960, Kirk switched his party affiliation from Democrat to Republican and headed the "Floridians for Nixon" campaign, which helped the GOP to win the state's then ten electoral votes for the third consecutive time.
In 1964, Kirk ran as a Republican against veteran Democratic U.S. Senator Spessard Holland, a former governor and epitome of the Florida Democratic establishment. He was considered a placeholder on the ballot, with Barry M. Goldwater losing Florida to U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson, but the energetic Kirk campaigned enthusiastically and polled 36.1 percent of the vote.
Thereafter, Kirk became embroiled in an intraparty squabble with U.S. Representative William C. Cramer of St. Petersburg. Cramer recalled Kirk having "begged me" to allow him to address meetings held during the 1964 delegate and national committeeman races. In this manner, Kirk became acquainted with Republican party activists who could be helpful to him his later career.[4]

Governor Kirk


Governor Kirk official painting
In 1966, Kirk scored a huge upset to become governor, having defeated the Democrat Robert King High, the mayor of Miami, 55-45 percent. High had unseated incumbent Governor Haydon Burns, a conservative, in the Democratic primary. In the general election, Kirk won majorities in fifty-six of the sixty-seven counties.[5]
Burns's refusal to support High was a major factor in Kirk's decisive victory in the general election. Upon taking the oath of office on January 3, 1967, he became the state's first Republican governor in ninety years. During his single four-year term in office, a new Florida Constitution went into effect in 1968. The governor was often at odds with both Democrats and his Republican colleagues in the legislature on issues such as growth and taxes. He earned the nickname Claudius Maximus because of his brash, ascerbic style of leadership and opinionated, colorful personality.[1] A significant event of his tenure was a controversial statewide teachers' strike in 1968.
One of the major themes of Kirk's campaign was his strong support for the death penalty, in contrast to Collins', Bryant's and Burns' opposition to capital punishment. Kirk promised to resume executions—the last had taken place in Florida in 1964—but no executions occurred during his administration, mostly because of an informal nationwide moratorium. Kirk made headlines when, during the campaign, he visited Florida State Prison and, after shaking hands with several death row inmates, said, "If I'm elected, I may have to sign your death warrants".[6]
Kirk was allied with anti-busing. In 1970, as he geared for a reelection bid, he tried to halt a desegregation plan in Manatee County. He quipped that the pro-busing judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, based in New Orleans, were "drinking in the French Quarter and reading dirty books."[7]
Kirk's management style was described as flamboyant and confrontational.[8] He especially opposed court-ordered mandatory busing.[9] Although he had a Democratic-controlled legislature, Democrats did not have a veto-proof majority during Kirk's term of office.[10]
After the publication of John Filo's photograph showing Mary Ann Vecchio of Florida kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller at the Kent State University shootings on May 4, 1970, then Governor Kirk publicly labeled Vecchio a dissident "communist".[11]

The long-lasting schism with Bill Cramer

The schism between William Cramer and Claude Kirk accelerated in 1966 to the point that in a 1988 interview, Kirk said that he could not recall Cramer having rendered him any assistance at all in either the 1964 or 1966 campaigns: "Cramer never helped me do anything. At all times he was a total combatant."[12]
Kirk claimed that Cramer wanted the 1966 gubernatorial nomination himself after Burns, the primary loser, refused to endorse Mayor High, an ally of U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy of New York. Kirk said that Cramer's legislative assistant, Jack P. Inscoe, a Tampa developer, could verify that Cramer had asked Kirk to bow out of the race with High. Kirk claimed that the three met "in a car ... probably in Palm Beach County". Inscoe said: "This never happened. Kirk is not known for telling too much truth."[12] Though Cramer said that he had no ambition to be governor, Kirk retorted, "How could I have brought this up if it didn't happen?"[12]
Cramer said that he subsequently urged Kirk to merge his own organization into the regular party structure in Cramer's home county of Pinellas. However, Kirk maintained a separate entity in hope of maximizing crossover support from Democrats unhappy with the nomination of Mayor High. Cramer recalled this disagreement over strategy as the "first indication that Kirk intended to do his own thing and attempt to form his own organization within the Republican Party in Florida. I didn't get the signal at the time, but it became very obvious later, particularly when he attempted to defeat me as national committeeman in 1968."[12]
Kirk asked then U.S. Representative and later Senator Edward Gurney of Winter Park serve as chairman of the 1967 gubernatorial inauguration although Gurney had not been involved in the Kirk campaign. By contrast, Cramer was not even asked to serve on the inaugural committee. In 1968, Governor Kirk dispatched his staff to the Republican state convention in Orlando to push for Cramer's ouster as national committeeman. Kirk justified his move against Cramer: "I wanted my own man. After all, I was the leader of the party. If Cramer had been the leader of the party, he would have wanted his own man too."[13] Cramer said that Kirk was attempting to be "not only the governor but the king of the party, and I was about the only person at the time who stood in his way from taking total control."[13]
Despite Kirk's opposition, Cramer attributed his retention in 1968 as national committeeman to the loyalty of organizational Republicans: "I had proved myself an effective congressman. I was on the House leadership as vice chairman of the Republican Conference and was ranking member on the then named House Public Works Committee."[14] l
In 1988, Cramer recalled a visit twenty-one years earlier to Kirk's office at which time a former state legislator was denied an appointment with the governor even though the man was a stalwart Republican. According to Cramer, "Kirk made it very clear that he got a great deal of joy in making sure that this guy didn't get an appointment. ... He just loved to kick people in the teeth to show how much power he had."[13] Despite observing this incident, Cramer said that party unity led him to avoid public criticism of Kirk. Cramer viewed Kirk as "his own worst enemy." [13] Kirk claimed that he had never had a "serious discussion" on any topic with Cramer.[13] Walter Wurfel, a Floridian who was later U.S. President Jimmy Carter's deputy press secretary, termed Kirk's election in 1966 as "the worst thing that could have happened to the Republicans. He wasn't interested in the Republican Party; party was a matter of convenience for him."[15]
Cramer said he believed that Kirk may have become vice president or even U.S. President had he tended to his gubernatorial duties, rather than openly seeking the second position. Eyeing the vice presidency in 1968, Kirk stood alone in the Florida delegation at the 1968 Republican National Convention in Miami Beach by supporting Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, rather than the clear frontrunner, Richard Nixon. Cramer said that Nixon may have selected Kirk, rather than Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland for the second slot had Kirk concentrated on his duties of office. Kirk claimed that it "had been agreed" that he would run with either Rockefeller or Nixon, but Nixon chose Agnew in hopes of enhancing campaign contributions from Greek American businessmen.[16]

Defeat in 1970

In 1970, Kirk struggled through two Republican gubernatorial primaries against drugstore magnate Jack Eckerd of Clearwater and state Senator and later U.S. Representative L. A. "Skip" Bafalis. Eckerd, who would be his party's U.S. Senate nominee in 1974, having lost to Richard Stone, and the gubernatorial standard-bearer in 1978, defeated by Bob Graham, said that though he had supported Kirk in 1966, he became disappointed and embarrassed with Kirk: "I was offended by his public behavior and chagrined that he was a Republican."[17] Despite Kirk's tactics, Eckerd said "time heals all wounds, and now I chuckle about it." He added that his primary runoff defeat in 1970 probably prolonged his life."[18]
After he dispatched Eckerd, Kirk then lost 57-43 percent to the Democrat Reubin O'Donovan Askew, a state senator from Pensacola, who served two consecutive terms in the office. In that same 1970 general election, William Cramer, Kirk's intraparty nemesis, lost to Democrat Lawton Chiles of Lakeland for the U.S. Senate seat that Spessard Holland finally vacated. Cramer had defeated Kirk's preferred Senate choice, Fifth Circuit Court Judge G. Harrold Carswell of Tallahassee.
When Kirk's term of office ended on January 5, 1971, he returned to his business pursuits, though he has campaigned several times for governor, U.S. senator, and Florida commissioner of education under both Democratic (1978) and Republican (1990) labels.

Personal life

Kirk met Sarah Stokes while he was in law school. Her family owned an automobile dealership, and the couple married in 1947. They were divorced in 1950, but remarried in 1951. The union produced four children: two daughters, Sarah and Kitty, and twin sons Frank and Will. They divorced for the final time in 1966.[3] In a 1967 interview, Sarah Stokes commented that Kirk "drinks to excess quite often (and) has indiscreet public associations with other women".[19]
A divorcee when he took office Kirk, then 41, married German-born Erika Mattfeld, 33, on February 18, 1967.[20] From his final marriage he had two daughters and a son.[21]
Kirk's son-in-law, Ander Crenshaw, married to daughter Kitty, represents Florida's 4th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives.[1]
In February 2011, Kirk survived a mild heart attack but died in his sleep on September 28, 2011.[2]

Quotes

I'm a tree-shakin' son of a bitch.[20]

Electoral history

United States Senate election in Florida, 1964[22]:
Florida gubernatorial election, 1966[23]:
  • Claude R. Kirk, Jr. (R) - 821,190 (55.13%)
  • Robert King High (D) - 668,233 (44.86%)
  • Write-in - 238 (0.02%)
1968 New Hampshire Republican Vice Presidential primary[24]:
Florida gubernatorial election, 1970[25]:


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