Reddix worked at the
Farm Security Administration, a
New Deal agency, where he focused his work on agricultural cooperatives. He became the first president of Mississippi Negro Training School (now Jackson State University) after the school became a state-supported public institution, ending the school's many years of leadership by the
American Baptist Home Mission Society of New York. The school was renamed Jackson College for Negro Teachers in 1944, and Jackson State College in 1956. In 1961, during the
Tougaloo Nine protest on campus, Reddix was alleged to have assaulted two demonstrators and threatened to expel all of the students involved in protesting. He was succeeded by
John A. Peoples Jr. in 1967. In 1972, the school named its new student union building in his honor. Reddix died on May 9, 1973, in Jackson, Mississippi. == Publications ==