Frank A. Critz Source: Rowland, Dunbar, ed. Mississippi: Comprising Sketches of Counties, Towns, Events, Institutions, and Persons, Arranged in Cyclopedic Form. Atlanta: Southern Historical Publishing, 1907 Vol. III, pp. 164-166.. Critz,
Frank A.,
of West Point, Miss., is an able and distinguished lawyer and
has not only contributed materially to the high standard of the
Mississippi bar, but has been a prominent figure in the public
affairs of the State. He was born in Talladega county, Ala.,
June 19, 1846. His father, Archelaus Hughes Critz, a farmer,
was born in Patrick county, Va., in 1806. The mother of Judge
Critz, before her marriage, was Lavinia Stovall Penn and was
born in Patrick county, Va., in 1812. She and her husband lived
in that county until after their marriage. Haman Critz, the paternal
grandfather of Judge Critz, was a colonel in the Colonial service
in the War of the Revolution. He was a native of Germany, and
his wife, whose maiden name was Nancy Dalton, was born in Rockingham
county, N. C., about 1763. She died in Patrick county, Va., at
the age of ninety-six years. She was a daughter of Samuel Dalton,
who was a son of Samuel Dalton, who accumulated a magnificent
landed estate in Rockingham county, N. C., and lived thereon
to the patriarchal age of 106 years. He was born about 1700.
The Daltons were of English ancestry and representatives of the
family are said to have accompanied William the Conqueror from
Normandy to England. The original name was De Alton. The maternal
grandfather of Judge Critz was James Penn, of Patrick county,
Va., and his maternal grandmother was Miss Leath. James Penn
was a son of Col. Abram Penn, who commanded a regiment in the
Revolutionary war. James Penn's mother, before her marriage,
was Ruth Stovall, daughter of Thomas Stovall. Col. Abram Penn
and Col. Haman Critz were both in the battle of Yorktown and
witnessed the surrender of Lord Cornwallis. Colonel Penn was
born in Amherst county, Va., whence he removed to Patrick county,
where he made his home for the balance of his life. He was a
son of Moses Penn, who was a brother of John Penn, one of the
signers of the Declaration of Independence, and they were related
to William Penn, the Quaker. The wife of Moses Penn, before her
marriage, was Katherine Taylor, who was the sister of Pres. Zachary
Taylor's father, and hence Col. Abram Penn was second cousin
of President Taylor. Archelaus Hughes Critz, the father of Judge
Critz, removed with his wife and two children from Virginia to
Alabama in 1832 and there settled upon the plantation where the
subject of this sketch was born. In 1853, when Judge Critz was
seven years old, his father, with his family, moved from Talladega
county, Ala., to Oktibbeha county, Miss., and settled on a farm
four miles west of Starkville, where he continued his occupation
as a farmer, and he and his wife made their home in that county
up to their deaths. The Critz family has been notable for longevity
and for impregnable integrity. Its representatives in the various
generations have played well their parts in life as thrifty,
upright and useful citizens. And the same can be said of the
Daltons and the Penns, except that the Penns were not so long-lived.
It is worthy of special mention that Judge Critz is the seventh
son of a family of twelve children and that the same fact is
true concerning his father and his maternal grandfather. Judge
Critz was reared on the homestead plantation in Oktibbeha county,
Miss., and by assiduous study at home he prepared himself for
admission to the junior class of the University of Mississippi,
in 1867, having labored upon the farm for the means with which
to pay his way. He was graduated in that institution in 1869,
with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. In 1869-70 he was engaged
in school teaching at the Starkville male academy. At the same
time he studied law, without preceptor or instructor of any kind.
His power of absorption and assimilation enabled him to make
rapid progress in the accumulation of legal lore, and in 1870
he was licensed at Starkville to practice law. He entered the
university in his twenty-second year, after the full experience
and training of a Confederate soldier. He first enlisted when
sixteen years of age. In 1863 he became a private in Company
I, Sixth Mississippi cavalry, Mabry's brigade, and served under
Gen. Wirt Adams until not long before the battle of Harrisburg,
when he, with his brigade, were transferred to the army of General
Forrest and took part in that battle. The battle of Harrisburg
was fought near Tupelo, in Lee county, and is designated by the
Federals as the battle of Tupelo. From that time until the close
of the war, Judge Critz served under Forrest and received his
parole as a member of that command. Soon after his enlistment
he was appointed third sergeant. When but eighteen years old
he was tendered the position of first lieutenant as a reward
for meritorious service. That promotion was prevented by the
termination of service in the surrender of Forrest at Livingston,
Ala., soon thereafter. After his admission to the bar, Judge
Critz engaged in the practice of his profession, first at Starkville,
then at Lagrange, in Choctaw county, whence he removed to West
Point, in November, 1872. In that place he has since continued
in the active practice of his profession, in which he has attained
prestige and success. He has had several partnership associations
in his professional work and is now senior member of the firm
of Critz & Kimbrough; his present partner being T. C. Kimbrough.
For a long time he was partner of Hon. R. C. Beckett, and that
firm became one of the best known in the State. Critz & Beckett
were employed by the State revenue agent to recover back taxes
from various corporations, and the suits prosecuted by them resulted
in securing judgments in favor of the State for more than $1,500,000,
all of which was collected. Judge Critz is a stalwart and uncompromising
supporter of the Democratic party and has done much effective
service in its cause. He was chancellor of the Sixth judicial
district of Mississippi, 1880-1888; was a member of the State
senate, 1894-1896 inclusive, and was a member of the lower house
of the legislature, 1896-1900. In 1903 he made the race for governor
of the State against Hon. Jas. K. Vardaman and Hon. E. F. Noel.
Noel having been defeated in the first primary, the second primary
was between Critz and Vardaman. During that entire campaign Judge
Critz made a spirited and notably clean and legitimate campaign,
securing a strong representative support that clung to him to
the last, but the final result was his defeat by about 6,000
votes. Still, as a result of his canvass, several important measures,
advocated by him alone, have been since enacted into laws and
become a part of the policy of the State. And his interpretation
of the limitation of the Constitution of the United States upon
the power of the State to discriminate against the negro in school
privileges has been followed by the legislature. After the end
of that campaign he returned to his practice at West Point. He
and his wife are zealous and valued members of the Methodist
Episcopal church, South, and he is steward and trustee of the
church in West Point, as well as teacher in the Sunday school.
He is also a member of the general board of missions of the Southern
Methodist church. He is affiliated with the local lodge, chapter,
council and commandery of the Masonic fraternity, and with the
Mystic Shrine, and also with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows,
the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and United Confederate
Veterans. On Dec. 7, 1876, was solemnized the marriage of Judge
Critz to Miss Lizzie B. Barker, of Macon, Miss. Mrs. Barker was
a Cockrell and was a descendant of the Harrisons, a family prominent
both in England and America. She was a second cousin of Gen.
William Henry Harrison, who was President of the United States,
and she was closely related to Benjamin Harrison, signer of the
Declaration of Independence. Judge and Mrs. Critz became the
parents of seven children, of whom three died in infancyAnnie
Beauchamp, Florrie Pugh and Louise Bates. Josie Evans, the eldest
living child, is the wife of Prof. Richard Henry Watkins, superintendent
of city schools of Bristol, Tenn. Bessie Beall Critz and Frank
A. Critz, Jr., are still at the paternal home. Walter Barker
Critz, the second son, a young man of exceptional promise, died
Sept. 13, 1906, just twenty-one years old. Capt. Walter B. Barker,
distinguished for civil and military service, as Confederate
soldier, consul and soldier in the regular army of the United
States, was Mrs. Critz' only brother. |
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