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The ManThomas W. Bryant was one of the most prominent young attorneys of the Florida bar. While a young man in the '30s, he had a widely varied experience, having achieved success in his profession, and has also a record as a soldier in the World war, with active duty in France before the armistice.
Mr. Bryant represents an old family of Florida, and was born in Polk County, March 28, 1890, son of Emory and Nellie (Blocker) Bryant. Thomas W. Bryant is the oldest of six sons, two of whom are now deceased. He acquired a liberal education, graduating from the Lakeland High School, and took both the literary and law courses at the University of Florida. He was graduated in 1915, was admitted to the bar the same year, and at once engaged in practice at Lakeland. He has a thorough knowledge of the law, is an industrious worker in the interest of his clients, and has an extensive general practice. He is attorney for the First National Bank of Lakeland, and in 1922 was nominated for the legislature. He served three successive terms in the Florida Legislature in the 1920s, and three terms on the Board of Control—the predecessor to the Board of Regents—from 1936 to 1949. While in the legislature, Bryant was a champion of the No Fence law and a cattle tick eradication program. He supported construction of Alligator Alley. He was influential in bringing streetlights to downtown Lakeland, passing bond issues for light and water service, the purchase of land near Lake Morton for a library, and the opening of the Lake Mirror complex. The Stadium
On a September night early in the 1940s, some of the same men who started Polk's football tradition as kids in 1907 gathered in Lakeland to open a new era. They were there to dedicate Thomas W. Bryant Stadium, home of the Dreadnaughts. Bryant, who started Lakeland High's program in 1907 and was a 1909 graduate, went on to become a lawyer, serve three terms in the state Legislature and spend another 14 years on the Board of Control, which would later become the Board of Regents overseeing the state university system
This article was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Nancy Rayburn
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