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Henry Middleton Britt, III (June 9, 1919 – February 17, 1995), was a Hot Springs lawyer and a pioneer in the revitalization of the Republican Party in the heavily Democraticstate of Arkansas, primarily during the 1960s and 1970s. He was the Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1960, having been decisively defeated by Orval Eugene Faubus. In 1966, he was elected judge of the 18th Judicial Circuit of Arkansas, having served from 1967 to 1983. Britt was also a peripheral figure in the granting of repeated draft deferments in the late 1960s to future Governor of Arkansas and US PresidentBill Clinton, which made not have to join the US Army.
Early years, family, education
Britt was born in the village of Olmsted in Pulaski County in southernmost Illinois to H.M. Britt, Jr. (February 27, 1895—March 31, 1982), and the former Sarah Theodosia Roach (August 25, 1896—January 10, 1987). Britt procured both his Bachelor of Arts and Juris Doctor degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1941 and 1947, respectively. He was admitted to the practice of law in Illinois in 1947. A year later, the Britts relocated to Hot Springs, a resort city in central Arkansas. At that time Britt was admitted to the Arkansas bar.
On October 29, 1942, Britt married the former Barbara Jean Holmes (March 17, 1922—February 13, 1987). The couple had three daughters: Nancy, Sarah, and Melissa.
Britt was a distant cousin of former Republican Lieutenant GovernorMaurice L. Britt, who served from 1967 to 1971. The two were born twenty days apart, died in the same year, and had the same paternal great-grandfather.
Britt secured the support of businessman Winthrop Rockefeller, a former New Yorker, in the campaign against Faubus, and the Searcy attorney, Odell Pollard, who served as state GOP chairman from 1966-1970. Rockefeller sponsored the "Party for Two Parties" at Winrock Farms near Morrilton. He brought the Tennessee Republican entertainer Tex Ritter, the father of actor John Ritter, and the ventriloquistEdgar Bergen, the father of Candice Bergen, to entertain 850 guests who paid $50 each. Funds collected went to Britt's campaign and to a "bipartisan political education fund".
Britt spent considerable time promoting the presidential candidacy of then Vice PresidentRichard Nixon in Arkansas. Nixon responded while he was speaking in Memphis. He crossed the Mississippi River as a gesture to the Arkansans in West Memphis and was warmly greeted by state party leaders.
He urged conservatives not to support the National States' Rights Party because such action would divide anti-Kennedy voters and therefore boost the Democrats. Faubus issued a "lukewarm" endorsement of Kennedy and dispatched one of his aides, Dan Stephens, of Clinton, to manage the national presidential campaign in Arkansas. Other Arkansans for Kennedy were entrenched SenarorsJohn Little McClellan and James William Fulbright. State Supreme Court Justice James Douglas Johnson, a conservative Democrat, criticized the Kennedy-Johnson platform but stopped short of actually endorsing Nixon, whom Johnson considered too liberal for the South.
Britt polled 129,921 votes (30.8 percent) to Faubus' 292,064 (69.2 percent). He ran far behind Nixon in Arkansas, who received 185,489 votes (43 percent), to Kennedy's 216,529 ballots (50.2 percent), and the States Rights Party's 29,057 votes (6.8 percent). Whereas Nixon won majorities in 23 of the 75 counties, Britt did not carry a single county, even in the frequently Republican northwestern quadrant of the state, where Faubus was still popular.
In 1962, Britt became general counsel of the Arkansas Republican Party, having served under chairman William L. Spicer of Fort Smith, whom Britt had first challenged for the chairmanship itself.
Garland County circuit judge
Six years after his failed campaign for governor, Britt was elected circuit judge in Garland County, which includes Hot Springs. He was the only Republican to have been elected as a circuit judge in Arkansas on November 8, 1966, the same day that Winthrop Rockefeller defeated Jim Johnson to become the state's first GOP governor since Reconstruction.
Judge Britt, with support from Governor Rockefeller, was credited with having ousted gambling from Hot Springs. Britt ordered the Garland County Sheriff's Office to investigate so-called "bust-out joints", or gambling operations established to draw a quick profit and then move elsewhere. Britt said that his crackdown ended the previous "Las Vegas atmosphere" of Hot Springs, often called the "Spa City". Throughout the 1970s, Judge Britt kept a grand jury on call to prevent gambling operations from reappearing. He also fought against the potential reemergence of a political machine in Hot Springs.
Paul Bosson, a Garland County prosecuting attorney, in an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette at the time of Britt's death, described the judge as "pretty tough".... He ran what I would call a strict courtroom." Britt was reelected as circuit judge in 1970, 1974, and 1978. He was defeated for a fifth term by the Democrat Walter G. Wright (born ca. 1932) in 1982, the year that Bill Clinton returned to the governorship after a two-year hiatus. Britt's initial election was attributed to Rockefeller's strength in Garland County. Q. Byrum Hurst, a former Democratic member of the Arkansas State Senate and a prominent attorney in Hot Springs who made his own failed gubernatorial bid in 1972, described Judge Britt this way: "Although we were not of the same political persuasion, Britt was OK."
In 1978, Judge Britt became embroiled in a dispute with the press when he banned Arkansas Gazette reporter Ginger Shiras from a hearing in his chambers on whether to admit a police officer's testimony in a murder trial. When the Gazette appealed, the Arkansas Supreme Court declared that Britt erred in excluding Shiras from the hearing.
Little was heard of Britt after he left the judgeship. In 1992, he told the Los Angeles Times that he had assisted in the effort to keep Bill Clinton out of the Vietnam War. According to Britt, he was friends with the future president's uncle, Raymond Clinton of Hot Springs, who had "one goal in my judgement–to delay, delay, delay" the chances of Clinton being drafted in the US Army.
Britt's legacy
The Britts were lifelong Republicans, not converts from the Democratic Party, as have been most southern Republicans of the second half of the 20th century. Eldest daughter Nancy Britt Marsh said that her father "was interested throughout his life in establishing a two-party system in the state. And I think he did. He continually stayed active in the party." Britt was general counsel to the Arkansas GOP from 1962–1964, the same years that he chaired the Garland County party apparatus.
Britt had a heart attack in 1976 but lived nearly two more decades until he succumbed to numerous health complications at the age of seventy-five. He lived eight years longer than his mother and his wife, who died within five weeks of each other.
The Britts are interred in Block C of Greenwood Cemetery in Hot Springs.
Orval Eugene Faubus was an American politician who served as the 36th Governor of Arkansas from 1955 to 1967. In 1957, he refused to comply with a unanimous decision of the United States Supreme Court in the 1954 case Brown v. Board of Education, and ordered the Arkansas National Guard to prevent black students from attending Little Rock Central High School. This event became known as the Little Rock Crisis.
Winthrop Rockefeller was an American politician and philanthropist, who served as the first Republican governor of Arkansas since Reconstruction. He was a third-generation member of the Rockefeller family.
The Arkansas gubernatorial election of November 8, 1966 was the first time since Reconstruction that a member of the Republican Party was elected governor.
Garnett Thomas Eisele,, better known as G. Thomas Eisele, was a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
Danny Lee Patrick was an educator and farmer from rural Delaney in Madison County, Arkansas, who served from 1967 to 1970 as a Republican member of the Arkansas House of Representatives for Madison and neighboring Carroll counties in the northwestern corner of his state. His legislative service coincided exactly with the administration of Winthrop Rockefeller, Arkansas' first GOP governor since Reconstruction.
James Ray Caldwell, known as Jim R. Caldwell, is a retired Church of Christ minister in Tulsa, Oklahoma, who was a Republican member of the Arkansas State Senate from 1969 to 1978, the first member of his party to sit in the legislative upper chamber in the 20th century. His first two years as a senator corresponded with the second two-year term of Winthrop Rockefeller, the first Republican governor of Arkansas since Reconstruction. Caldwell was closely allied with Rockefeller during the 1969-1970 legislative sessions.
William Leach Spicer was a businessman from Fort Smith, Arkansas, who from 1962 to 1964 was the embattled state chairman of the Arkansas Republican Party.
James Lee Sheets, known as Jim Sheets, is a retired businessman from Bella Vista, Arkansas who is a Republican former member of the Arkansas House of Representatives. From 1967 to 1968, Sheets represented Benton County for a single term in the lower legislative chamber.
Marion Harland Crank was a Democratic politician from Foreman in Little River County in the U.S. state of Arkansas. He served in the Arkansas House of Representatives from 1951 to 1968. He was the Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives from 1963 to 1964 and his party's gubernatorial nominee in 1968, but he was narrowly defeated by the incumbent Republican Winthrop Rockefeller.
References
Suzi Parker, "Henry Middleton Britt: GOP stalwart opposed Faubus, was in limelight four decades," Arkansas Democrat Gazette, February 18, 1995
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