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Frank T Norman

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Preceded by
  
Jasper Goodwill

Name
  
Frank Norman

Succeeded by
  
Tom Colten

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Party
  
Democratic Party


Nationality
  
American

Preceded by
  
W.H. "Booty" Scott

Died
  
November 20, 1994

Resting place
  
Minden Cemetery

Frank T. Norman

Born
  
November 21, 1914 Homer, Claiborne Parish, Louisiana (
1914-11-21
)

Spouse(s)
  
Mildred Bryant Norman (married, 1937-his death)

Children
  
Frankie Norman Thompkins (1939-1975) One grandson

Education
  
Louisiana Tech University

Francis Toadvin Norman, known as Frank T. Norman (November 21, 1914 – November 20, 1994), was from 1958 to 1966 the mayor of the small city of Minden, the seat of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana. From 1952 to 1958, Norman served on the Minden City Council as the then public safety commissioner under the since disbanded city commission form of government. He was also a high official in the Louisiana Masonic lodge.

Contents

Background

Norman was born in Homer in Claiborne Parish, from which Webster Parish was carved in 1871, to the physician Bertram Allen Norman (March 5, 1886 – December 6, 1949), and the former Pearl Toadvin (January 17, 1892 – May 4, 1941). At the time of Pearl Norman's death, the couple was residing in Cotton Valley north of Minden. Dr. Norman was a first lieutenant in the Louisiana Medical Corps in World War I. Norman's maternal uncle, Clyde Toadvin, was a son-in-law of the Minden judge, Lynn Kyle Watkins.

Frank Norman was reared in Minden and graduated in 1931 from Minden High School. He attended Louisiana Tech University in Ruston ln Lincoln Parish but did not graduate. Norman was the first student to register at the new Ringling School of Art, a part of the Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida, where another Minden High School graduate, Ben Earl Looney, was a member of the founding faculty. Norman's enrollment at the Ringling school was mentioned in Time magazine in 1931.

Norman was a first cousin of Minden optometrist Carter B. Norman (July 1, 1922 – August 29, 2009), the son of Frank Norman's uncle, Justin Carter Norman, and the former Lillie Harris. Carter Norman graduated from the Southern College of Optometry in Memphis, Tennessee, and practiced in Minden for forty-five years. A United States Army infantryman, he was part of the World War II occupational forces in Japan. He was also a charter member of the Lakeview United Methodist Church in Minden. Frank Norman had two sisters, Sybil Edwina Norman (1919–1983), an office manager from Shreveport, and Ara Juanita Norman Leach (1917–2011) of Gainesville, Texas, a member of the Cooke County Democratic Executive Committee, who was a delegate to fourteen state Democratic conventions in Texas as well as the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts, which nominated John Kerry to challenge U.S. President George W. Bush.

In 1937, Norman married the former Mildred Bryant (born September 3, 1913), and the couple established permanent residence in 1945 near Victory Park at 901 Park Highway, where Mrs. Norman still resides. They had one child, a daughter named Frankie Norman Tompkins (November 3, 1939 – May 23, 1975), a former teacher from Plain Dealing in northern Bossier Parish. As Frankie matured, her mother resumed her own career as an employee of the Minden Sanitarium. Frankie and her son, Norman Ray Tompkins (1960–1975), perished from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Bunkie in Avoyelles Parish south of Alexandria. Frankie was married to Ennis Ray Tompkins (1934-2016), a son of Cue and Willie Law Tompkins of Vivian and a long-term blueberry farmer in Plain Dealing. Frankie and Ennis Tompkins also had a daughter, later Janet Tompkins "Jan" Burke of Grayson in Gwinnett County in suburban Atlanta, Georgia, who in turn gave birth to the Normans' two great-granddaughters, Katee Robertson of Grayson and Jessie Berndt of Atlanta.

Political life

Norman owned a used-car dealership. A Democrat, he was elected to the city council in 1952 and 1954 and served in the capacity of public safety commissioner under the then commission form of municipal government. In 1956, Norman opposed the council's decision to permit movie theaters in Minden to open on Sunday evenings during the time most churches were having night services. Speaking for the theater owners, attorney R. Harmon Drew, Sr., later a state representative, said that not all churches had evening worship and that businesses had the right to operate at the same time as church meetings.

Early in 1956, Norman made an unsuccessful race for Webster Parish clerk of court against the incumbent Thomas Jenkins "Tom" Campbell (1895–1968) and two other challengers, Parey Branton, later a member of the Louisiana House from Shongaloo, and Clarence D. Wiley (1909–1976), then an employee of the parish sheriff's department. Norman finished last, and Wiley narrowly edged Branton for a runoff slot against Campbell. Wiley then defeated Campbell by ninety-two votes.

Norman's council colleagues included future Mayor Jack Batton (the younger brother of then Sheriff J. D. Batton) as streets and parks commissioner, feed store owner Norman J. Cone, Sr. (1906–1997), at finance, retail grocer Fred Thomas "Tony" Elzen (1922-2012) at utilities, and businessman John McCowen (1927–1985) as sanitation commissioner. In 1958, the interim incumbent Jasper Goodwill (1889–1974), who had followed John T. David, declined to seek a full term. In the then closed Democratic primary held on April 8, 1958, Norman led a four-candidate field with 809 votes (35 percent). He went into the runoff election thereafter with the second-place candidate, businessman and landowner Paul Wallace, a furniture store owner and former council member who initially had received 788 votes (34.5 percent). Wallace was making his third unsuccessful race for mayor. Two other candidates, A. Eugene Frazier, who had lost the mayor's races in 1950 and 1952 to John T. David, and the dentist Dr. E. Roy Sledge, shared the remaining 30.5 percent of the primary votes. In the runoff, Norman defeated Wallace, 1,286 (57 percent) to 975 (43 percent) and led in all ten municipal precincts.

In the primary elections held on April 7, 1962, more than a dozen candidates ran for mayor and council seats. Mayor Norman faced a challenge from John T. David who was seeking to return to the office after an absence of seven years. The two candidates disagreed over whether the office of mayor should be full-time, Norman's position, or remain part-time, the view of David. Both favored the continuation of at-large city council positions with the view that members should represent the city as a whole, rather than individual districts, Norman defeated David, who still continued to serve as the municipal fire chief. a position which ended with the 1978 elections under the mayor-council form of government.

During the Norman administration, Minden approved the purchase of the municipal light and power plant, which it still maintains to provide city residents with electricity. Norman initiated one-way streets running east and west through the downtown. Minden won a "Cleanest City" contest during his tenure too.

In 1959, a citizens' group proposed to rename the residential street Loop Road, located near the site from 1952 to 2013 of the Northwest Louisiana Technical College, as "Norman Road" in honor of the mayor. The change, however, never happened.

In 1962, the Minden City Council adopted a $496,000 budget. The following month, business developers H.O. West, Edward Kennon, and R. Don Hinton, Sr., sought municipal assistance in the installation of water lines to new subdivisions in the amount of $15,000 annually. West, the owner of a regional department store chain, said that such aid would allow a reduction in the price of homes and benefit the city through an increase in the number of homeowners. The council, however, rejected the builders in a three-to-two vote.

Defeat in 1966

Norman's political prospects began to unravel in the spring of 1966. He faced an African- American challenger, J. D. Hampton, Jr. (1935-2015), in the Democratic primary for nomination to a third term. A United States Army veteran and an employee of the former International Paper Company in Springhill in northern Webster Parish, Hampton filed as a plaintiff on behalf of his minor daughter, Beverly, later Beverly McClerklin, in the school desegregation suit against the Webster Parish School Board. He was the first black ever to seek the position of mayor in the 20th century. Hampton called for improved working conditions for city employees, more recreational facilities, and a vigorous industrial recruitment effort. As the president of the Louisiana Municipal Association in 1964, Norman cited his own experience in government which extended back for a dozen years. Norman handily defeated Hampton, 2,729 (70 percent) to 1,166 (30 percent). According to the official Webster Parish historian, John Agan, Hampton's showing was considered significant because four years earlier, prior to passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, fewer than two hundred black voters had been registered in Minden. In the summer of 1965, Norman had met with James Farmer, a native of Marshall, Texas, and a co-founder of the Congress of Racial Equality, who came to Minden to lead a march. Farmer's interest in Minden had been spurred by a dispute with the city and its sanitation workers.

Then, Norman faced a strong Republican opponent in Tom Colten, the former publisher of the Minden Press and the Minden Herald, which consolidated in 1966 into the combined daily, the Minden Press-Herald. The paper, however, endorsed neither candidate, and partisanship was not emphasized. Colten had sold the newspapers in 1965 and had been executive director of the Chamber of Commerce until he launched his active campaign for mayor. Colten and Norman appeared at a forum hosted by the Minden Jaycees, at which Colten questioned the existence of "idle funds" not being invested by the City of Minden. Norman said that the funds in question were being invested but that there had been delays caused by the resignation of the municipal clerk. No other Republicans were listed on the Minden ballot in the November 8 general election, as all five Democratic city council nominees, including later Mayor Jack Batton, were elected without opposition. At the time Colten and Jack Breaux of Zachary in East Baton Rouge Parish were the only Republican mayors in the entire state.

Colten ran a "reform" campaign, claiming that he wanted to get Minden "moving," implying that Norman was too inactive in the position. Colten never used the "R" label. In fact, the Press-Herald on the day after the general election referred to Colten merely as "the challenger," with no mention of party. Colten received 2,044 votes (55.8 percent) to Norman's 1,622 (44.2 percent).

The 1970 challenge

In 1967, Colten obtained a sales tax increase to finance public improvements, including a new municipal building and extensive street paving. Norman ran again in 1970, but Colten had the advantage because the community leadership lined up solidly behind the incumbent. A Minden contractor was overheard telling Colten that he could not imagine anyone even running against him, considering how well he had performed as mayor. Yet, Colten seemed unsure as to whether he could win again and took nothing for granted. He had first considered running as an Independent in the general election but chose in the end to remain a Republican. In their 1970 rematch, Colten defeated Norman 2,381 votes (58.9 percent) to 1,661 ballots (41.1 percent).

Norman did not again seek office but remained active in the lodge and as deacon of the large First Baptist Church of Minden.

Norman died a day before his eightieth birthday. He is interred in Section G of the Minden Cemetery.

References

Frank T. Norman Wikipedia