Malcolm Paul Cantrell (August 28, 1895 - July 8, 1962) was a Democratic Tennessee politician and state senator.[1] He was known for his political "machine" centered in McMinn County, Tennessee.[2] [3]
Cantrell was born on August 28, 1895, in a small southeastern McMinn County, Tennessee, community that later became Etowah, Tennessee, in 1909.[4] A descendant of Revolutionary War veteran Thomas Cantrell, he came from a large family. After serving as a conductor for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, he managed the Etowah Water, Light, and Power Company. Along with his siblings, he owned and operated a lumber company, a natural gas company, a motor company, and a bank. He also served as a director for Citizen's National Bank in nearby Athens, Tennessee.[5]
Active in the local Democratic Party, Cantrell was elected Sheriff of McMinn County in 1936. He was re-elected in 1938 and 1940. Like his Republican predecessors, he built a local political machine. He was elected to the Tennessee Senate representing McMinn County's district in 1942 and re-elected in 1944. He also served as county judge from 1942–1946. A powerful and influential figure, he served as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1944.[5]
His political power was broken in 1946 in the "Battle of Athens", a rebellion led by war veterans.[6] After the battle, he remained in McMinn County and worked for the Tennessee Natural Gas Company. Cantrell died on July 8, 1962, at the age of 66 in a hospital in Athens, Tennessee.[7]