Edward L. Short. Among the younger high public officials of Franklin Parish
perhaps none have been entrusted with such heavy responsibilities or are more
capable of performing them as Edward J. Short, who was elected to the office of
sheriff of this parish in 1924. He is well and favorably known as a member of an
old, respected and substantial family of this section, while personally,
socially and in business connections he has been held in high esteem here and
elsewhere for years.
Sheriff Short was born on the old family plantation
on Boeuf River, in Franklin Parish, Louisiana, April 29, 1890, son of F. P.
Short, who has born on the same plantation in 1857 and died there in 1902.
During his entire life he had been a planter, resident on his own Property
except during 1896 and in 1898 when he served as a member of the police jury at
Winnsboro. His widow survives and lives at Natchez. There are three daughters
and three sons in the family: Carrie, the wife of V. B. Wheeler, who is in the
transfer business at Natchez; Edward J.; Alice, who is a teacher in the public
schools at Natchez; Florence, who is the wife of P. A. Bartimess, connected with
the United States Revenue department at Shreveport; and Frank P. and Ben C.,
twins, the former of whom is engaged with the Mississippi highway department,
and the latter is a commercial traveler. Both these brothers are veterans of the
World war, the former going to France as first sergeant in an infantry regiment,
where he took part in long continued lighting, and the latter being assigned for
about the same period to chemical work in New York City.
Edward J. Short
received his early educational training in the schools at Winnsboro and
afterward was graduated from the Natchez High School, following which came a
course in the Wilber-Smith Business College, Lexington, Kentucky. For one year
afterward Mr. Short was bookkeeper for the Cumberland Telephone Company at
Lexington, then became connected with a lumber company at Quicksand, near
Jackson, Breathitt County, Kentucky, and then spent another year with the
Cumberland Telephone Company at Louisville. He then returned home to become
accountant and salesman for the firm of L. Lowentritt & Company at Winnsboro,
where he continued for seven years. From the counting room Mr. Short then went
into a political atmosphere when, at this time, he was appointed deputy to
Sheriff J. S. Gilbert, and with so much efficiency performed the duties of the
office during the seven remaining n-months of his chief's life that when the
office was vacated there was no question in Franklin Parish as to Sheriff
Gilbert's successor, and in 1924 Mr. Short was elected by a majority that showed
his former good work had been noticed and appreciated. Although but young in the
office, he has well indicated that he has not only physical but also moral
courage, and that his administration will be one without fear or favor and the
law administered irrespective of wealth and position. This determination of the
young sheriff, with proof that he means what he says, has already had a
discouraging effect upon law breakers.
In November, 1917. Sheriff Short
married Miss Nora Lazarus, daughter of W. H. Lazarus, of Gibsland, Louisiana,
and they have two children, Edward J., Jr., and Gussie. The family belongs to
the Methodist Episcopal Church, in which the sheriff is a steward. He is a Royal
Arch Mason, and in 1917 was master of his Masonic Lodge, and he is a member also
of the Knights of Pythias and the Woodmen.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 389-390.
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