- L. B. Henry
Infobox Officeholder
name=Louie Brannon "L.B." Henry
nationality=American
office=Member ofRapides Parish ,Louisiana , Police Jury (County Commission )
party=Democratic
term_start=1956
term_end=1960
term_start2=1968
term_end2=1992
succeeded2=Stephen P. Bordelon
date of birth=birth date|1920|11|28
date of death=death date and age|2008|4|13|1920|11|28
place of birth=Rapides Parish, Louisiana, USA
place of death=Pineville, Rapides Parish, Louisiana
occupation=Businessman ;Plumber
spouse= Addie Mae Henry
children= Luther Manuel Henry (born ca. 1944) of PinevilleMartha Ann Henry Peters (born ca. 1948) of Homer
Louie Rodney Henry (born ca. 1950) of Pineville
footnotes=(1) Despite a missing forearm, Henry adapted by using the remaining limb like a hand, possible in his work as aplumber andwater well driller.(2) Despite his
blue collar background, Henry was a high official in the Louisiana Police Jury Association and the National Association of Council of Counties.(3) Henry had a reputation of trying to be of assistance to anyone who asked for help, even having at times placed
gravel on private property until compelled to stop doing so.Louie Brannon Henry, known as L. B. Henry (
November 28 ,1920 –April 13 ,2008 ), [ [http://www.funeralquestions.com/obits/hixson/memorial.asp?listing_id=105267 OBITUARIES - Hixson Brothers Funeral Homes ] ] was an American figure inLouisiana parishgovernment between 1956 and 1992. Abusinessman in Pineville, Henry served on theRapides Parish Police Jury (equivalent tocounty commission in other states) from, first, 1956-1960, and, again, from 1968-1992. He was defeated for a seventh term in thejungle primary held onOctober 19 1991 . Henry was the jury president for thirteen years, having been elected annually by his colleagues. From 1979-1987, while he still served on the police jury, he also held the administrative post of "parish manager". In 1982, the versatile Henry, was president of the Louisiana Police Jury Association, based in Baton Rouge. [Sunny McCreary, Communications Director, Louisiana Police Jury Association, Baton Rouge: sunny@lpgov.org]Henry's police jury tenure largely corresponded with the thirty-two years that Geraldine Small "Gerri" Gerami (1924-2008) served as the police jury secretary-treasurer. She died five weeks after Henry's death. [ [http://www.funeralquestions.com/obits/hixson/memorial.asp?listing_id=107966 OBITUARIES - Hixson Brothers Funeral Homes ] ] One of Henry's jury colleagues,
Charles W. DeWitt, Jr. , was the jury vice-president from 1976-1978 and became a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives in 1980 and ultimately served as Speaker from 2000-2004. Henry was a member too of the Pineville City Council from 1954-1956, when he stepped down in the middle of his term to join the police jury. [http://www.thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080415/NEWS01/804150333 L.B. Henry was known for helping other people | thetowntalk.com | The Town Talk ] ]Henry was born in Rapides Parish to Louie Manuel Henry and the former Annie Ethal Hooter. [http://www.thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080415/OBITUARIES/80414029/1023 L.B. Henry | thetowntalk.com | The Town Talk ] ] He was disabled at birth because the
umbilical cord wrapped around an arm. He adapted to a missing forearm by using the half-remaining limb like a hand, which proved possible in his business as aplumber . Like Henry, another Rapides Parishpolitician , Frederick H. Baden, Sr., who served asmayor of Pineville from 1970-1998, was also a plumber, and the two were friends for many years. Baden said that he worked with Henry to upgrade theinfrastructure and procuresewerage service to the outlying Wardville and Lee Heights areas. Baden worked with Henry to establish ananimal shelter for Pineville and Rapides Parish. "He loved people. He always tried to help the underprivileged," Baden said of Henry.In addition to his presidency of the state association, Henry served on the police jury executive board for seven years. He served for four years on the Transportation Steering Committee of the
National Association of Counties .On
October 24 1987 , in his final election to the single-member District B seat on the police jury, Henry, a Democrat, defeated the Republican Gerard Guillory (born ca. 1940) of Pineville, 2,701 votes (58.5 percent) to 1,977 (41.5 percent). [ [http://www400.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcpr&rqsdta=10248740 Louisiana Secretary of State-Parish Elections Inquiry ] ] He was defeated for a seventh term on the jury in 1991 by fellow Democrat Stephen P. "Steve" Bordelon (born ca. 1939) of Pineville, 2,894 votes (55.47 percent) to 2,323 ballots (44.5 percent). The long tenure suddenly ended. Bordelon held the seat for four terms and did not seek reelection in the 2007 primary. [ [http://www400.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcpr&rqsdta=10199140 Louisiana Secretary of State-Parish Elections Inquiry ] ]Henry was a former president of the
trade association , the Alexandria-Pineville Master Plumbers Association. He was a past president of the PinevilleKiwanis Club and a member of theMasonic lodge andShriners . For ten years, he provided use of his L. B. HenryRodeo Arena for the annual Kiwanis rodeo. Henry also dugwater wells and operated his L.B. Henry Mobile Home Park on the Marksville Highway in Pineville. [ [http://www.hikercentral.com/campgrounds/105380.html L B Henry Mobile Home Park, Louisiana ] ] He was acattleman and ownedhorse s too.Henry in perspective
At times, Henry came under scrutiny for authorizing at public expense the paving of portions of private driveways in outyling areas. Henry said that he was compelled to stop the assistance because "it is against the law to put it on private property." But he said that he thought he was doing the right thing: "My theory on it was those are poor people, and they couldn't afford to buy gravel. All I was doing was trying to help those poor people."
Jack Bennett DeWitt (born ca. 1940) of Boyce served as Rapides Parish highway superintendent and general superintendent in a career which largely paralleled the years that Henry also served. In an interview with the "Alexandria Daily Town", the major newspaper of
Central Louisiana , DeWitt recalled how Henry would "help you, he would do it in a minute. I remember him as a leader, someone capable of working with other elected officials to get things done."DeWitt was an honorarypallbearer at Henry's funeral, along with former Pineville City Council member Robert F. Cespiva.Lyn Rollins, who as a broadcast journalist covered the Rapides Parish Police Jury in the 1970s, described Henry as "a
populist at heart. A littleEdwin Edwards , a little Gillis Long, a little Tillie Snyder. . . . he was a very likable local politician. He was always accessible. He never dodged a question. . . . It's hard to call him progressive, but in some ways he did some progressive things."Henry was also influential in establishing one of the first parish programs to use state
prison labor for localpublic works projects.Death
Henry died in 2008 in a
nursing home in Pineville from the effects ofAlzheimer's disease ; he was 87. Survivors included his wife, Addie Mae Henry; two sons from Pineville, Luther Manuel Henry (born ca. 1944) and wife, Bonnie, and Louie Rodney Henry (born ca. 1950); daughter, Martha Ann Henry Peters and husband, John R. Peters (both born ca. 1948) of Homer, the seat ofClaiborne Parish in north Louisiana; sisters, Louise Henry Graef Herbert and Lorraine Deville; nine grandchildren, and fourteen great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Elliott L. Henry (1925-2000). [ [http://ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi Social Security Death Index Interactive Search ] ] Sevices were held three days later at the chapel of Hixson Brothers in Pineville. Burial was in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Ball, located north of Pineville.References
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