After military service, Curry became the secretary-treasurer of the Panola Company, a large agricultural operation in St. Joseph. He was a member of the
Chamber of Commerce and a director of the Bank of St. Joseph. He was part of a contingent from Tensas Parish who successfully
lobbied in
Washington, D.C., to block construction of the proposed Eudora Floodway, named for
Eudora,
Arkansas, the origin of
Bayou Macon. The flood would have run near the boundary of
East Carroll and
West Carroll parishes and potentially placed vast Louisiana acreage to the south and east in danger in the event of severe flooding like that which had occurred in
1927. The 1935-1936 state elections, with memory of Huey Long's demise fresh in the minds of voters, proved devastating to many anti-Longites. The
yeoman and
tenant farmers gained the voter majority over the planters and business class. Where planters remained in office they did so through their political flexibility. The particular blot to the planter came with the unseating in 1936 of
U.S. Representative Riley J. Wilson, one of Huey Long's unsuccessful gubernatorial primary opponents in
1928. Curry was married to the former Rita Camors (1901-1944). He was a widower for the last seventeen years of his life. He died some five weeks after the passing of their daughter, Josephine Curry Evans (1935-1961). The Currys, including his parents, are interred at Natchez City Cemetery in
Natchez,
Mississippi. ==See also==