Born in
Union Springs, Alabama, Blount served in the
United States Army Air Forces during
World War II, having trained as a
B-29 pilot. However, the war ended before his training was completed. Blount's first name was spelled with a "y" on his birth certificate, but he used Winton as an adult in his business dealings to avoid having to explain the unusual spelling. In 1946, Blount and his brother William Houston Blount started a building contractor company, Blount Brothers. The company worked on such construction projects as the First Avenue Viaduct in
Birmingham, the
Louisiana Superdome in
New Orleans, and
Cape Canaveral's Complex 39A which launched
Apollo 11 in
Florida. In 1952, Blount was appointed the Alabama Chairman of
Citizens for Eisenhower, then in 1960 Southeastern Campaign Chairman for
Richard M. Nixon's unsuccessful presidential campaign against
John F. Kennedy. In 1961, Blount was elected President of the Alabama Chamber of Commerce; in 1968, President of the
United States Chamber of Commerce. In 1964, Blount was appointed by
U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson to the National Citizens Committee for Community Relations to advise the White House on the enforcement of the new
Civil Rights Act of 1964 even though Blount had expressed doubts about the new law. In 1969, Blount was appointed as the Postmaster General by U.S. President Richard Nixon, and he supervised the transition in 1971 of the
U.S. Post Office Department from a Cabinet-level department of the U.S. government to a special independent executive agency. He was thus the last Cabinet-level Postmaster General, and he served as the first director of the new U.S. Postal Service. Blount's assistant Postmaster General was
James M. Henderson. In 1971, Blount's profile was depicted alongside that of
Benjamin Franklin's on the face of a silver proof coin commemorating the inauguration of the new Postal Service. The commemorative coin was offered in a carrier with one stamp bearing a
Philadelphia postmark from the old Post Office, and another from
Washington D.C., placed by the new Postal Service. ==U.S. Senate campaign, 1972==