Jasper K. Smith

Jasper Keith Smith, Jr.
Louisiana State Representative from Caddo Parish (at-large seat)
In office
1944–1948
Preceded by

At-large membership:
H. H. Huckaby
Wellborn Jack
Turner B. Morgan

Beatrice Hawthorne Moore
Succeeded by

Algie D. Brown
Edwin F. Hunter, Jr.
Wellborn Jack

Keith M. Pyburn
In office
1952–1964
Preceded by

At-large delegation:
Algie D. Brown
Edwin F. Hunter, Jr.
Wellborn Jack

Keith M. Pyburn
Succeeded by

At-large delegation:
Morley A. Hudson
Taylor W. O'Hearn
Algie D. Brown
Frank Fulco

J. Bennett Johnston, Jr.
Personal details
Born (1905-06-20)June 20, 1905
Shreveport, Caddo Parish
Louisiana, USA
Died May 18, 1992(1992-05-18) (aged 86)
Resting place Vivian Cemetery in Vivian, Louisiana
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Lavonya Pullen Smith
Children

Jasper "Jake" Smith, III
John Smith

Suzi Smith
Parents

Jasper K. Smith, Sr.

Julia Hollingsworth Stewart
Residence Vivian, Louisiana
Alma mater

Davidson College

Tulane University Law School
Occupation Lawyer
Religion

Presbyterian

Jasper K Smith in his one-room law office in Vivian on 07-19-1934

Jasper Keith Smith, Jr., sometimes called Jap Smith (June 20, 1905 May 18, 1992), was a lawyer and Democratic politician from Vivian in northern Caddo Parish in the far northwestern corner of the U.S. state of Louisiana.

Background

Smith was born in Shreveport, the sixth of eight children of Jasper Smith, Sr. (1869–1934), and the former Julia Hollingsworth Stewart (1872 – c. 1974), both natives of Georgia.[1] The senior Smith was for thirty years until his death in 1934 the pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Shreveport. He dedicated the new church building on Jordan Street on March 7, 1926.[2] Smith's oldest brother, Jasper Stewart Smith (1893–1981), a veteran of World War I, was an architect who designed many homes of the gentry in Shreveport.[1]

Like his father, Jasper, Jr., graduated from the church-affiliated Davidson College in Davidson in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Smith subsequently studied at Tulane University School of Law in New Orleans but dropped out before graduating after he took the state bar examination on a trial basis and passed with a high score. At the time, a law degree was not required in order to take the examination. He established his law practice in Vivian, where he would be the only attorney in the community, with the expectation of clients from the oil and natural gas industry. Smith had difficulty establishing a law practice in Vivian; in his first month there, he earned only $2.50 for drawing up a deed.[1]

Smith's one-room law office in Vivian had two windows overlooking the street. He had an old wooden desk with a swivel chair, a manual typewriter, two chairs for clients, and two wooden filing cabinets. On the wall hung his certificate of membership in the Louisiana Bar Association and a picture of former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, a fellow Presbyterian. The facility was not physically conducive to lawyer-client privilege, as conversations could be overheard outside the office in the hallway. Vivian called itself "The Heart of the ArkLaTex", referring to the three-state region. Smith's son, Jasper "Jake" Smith, III, compared Vivian to the fictitious Grover's Corner in Thornton Wilder's 1938 play, Our Town. The downtown was six square blocks with three traffic lights. Dixie Drugs on one corner was situated across Main Street from Dixie Mercantile and Trees Mercantile. Among the numerous businesses were a theater, the Caddo Citizen newspaper, and a Western Auto outlet.[1]

Smith, III, wrote that his

neighborhood [in the 1940s and 1950s] was made up of single-family houses on small lots, some brick, most wood-framed. ... The yard was mostly dirt, good for playing marbles - with a few spare patches of scrawny grass. There was a paved sidewalk up that side of the street leading to [our] Presbyterian Church. It was one of the few concrete sidewalks in town; this was where we learned to roller skate. ...

With the dozen or so kids in the neighborhood, we always had plenty to keep up occupied from morning to night. Hide-and-seek, kick the can, steal the flag, marbles, and many other popular games went on from morning to night. ... Saturday was always "Hamburger Day" at the Smith house, and all the kids knew that if they "just happened" to be at our house around noon, they'd be invited to join us. ... Mama [Lavonya Pullen Smith] would make as many hamburgers as needed and proclaim herself "The Hamburger Queen". All our friends heartily agreed. ...[1]

Political life

In 1944, Smith was first elected to the Louisiana House of Representatives,[3] with the incoming administration of Governor Jimmie Davis, a former resident of Shreveport and a former teacher at Dodd College, attended by Smith's wife, the former Lavonya Pullen[1] (1911–1970).[4] Her father, John Pullen, was a prosperous cotton farmer in Arkansas, then the community of Direct in Lamar County, Texas, and, finally, Red River Parish, Louisiana. In his later years, he left the vagaries of farming to become a foreman, based in Bossier City, for the Louisiana Highway Department. Lavonya's mother, the former Helen Starbuck, was descended from a family who had been whalers in New England. She claimed descent from Rebecca Boone, wife of the frontiersman Daniel Boone.[1]

During a four-year legislative hiatus corresponding with the administration of Earl Kemp Long, Smith could focus full-time on his legal duties. A part of the anti-Long faction, Smith returned to the state House in 1952 during the administration of Governor Robert F. Kennon of Minden. There Smith remained during subsequent terms of Governors Long and Davis. In the 1959-1960 election cycle, Smith won a highly-contested Democratic primary by a margin of forty-four votes against David Kent, an advertising executive.[5][6]

On March 3, 1964, however, Smith was unseated in the general election. In a temporary Republican sweep in Caddo Parish, with Charlton Lyons as the GOP gubernatorial nominee, two Republicans, Morley A. Hudson and Taylor W. O'Hearn, both of Shreveport, became the first members of their party to win seats in the Louisiana House since Reconstruction. Their victories ended the careers of Smith and his Democratic colleague, Wellborn Jack, an attorney from Shreveport and at the time a Conservative Democrat.[3]

As a representative, Smith, as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, pushed through a rule requiring a two-thirds vote of the membership before tax increases could take effect, a measure strongly opposed by Earl Long, who returned for a final term as governor in 1956. Smith supported segregated public schools. Smith's son Jake said that his father believed he could not be reelected in 1959, when few African Americans were voting in Louisiana, had he wavered on the issue of segregation, a matter which otherwise made him uncomfortable and which ended in total defeat for the segregationist forces.[1]

Smith also served as city attorney of Vivian. In his law office, for a time he tutored several persons in the study of the law, including Earl Guyton Williamson (1903–1992), the Vivian mayor from 1938 to 1946 and again from 1962 to 1966 and a long-term member of the Caddo Parish Police Jury. Though Williamson, the father of another state legislator, Don W. Williamson, never became a lawyer himself, his legal studies proved invaluable in his long political career.[7]

Death and legacy

Upon Smith's death at the age of eighty-six, The Shreveport Times said: "Every Louisiana taxpayer should bow in reverence to their departed champion: former Representative Jasper K. Smith of Shreveport. The dapper lawyer-lawmaker ... gave state taxpayers their No. 1 means of protection: the so-called super-majority on all tax increases."[1]

In addition to Jasper "Jake" Smith, III (born 1935), the Smiths had two younger children, John "Johnny" Smith, and Suzi Smith. Jake Smith is a graduate of the former Vivian High School (now North Caddo High School), Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, the historically black Howard University in Washington, D.C., and Boston University in Boston, Massachusetts. He is a United States Army veteran, an oilfield worker in his youth, and a former federal employee, farmer, and university professor and administrator.[1]

Jasper and Lavonya Smith are interred at Vivian Cemetery. He outlived his wife by twenty-two years.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Jake Smith, Dinner with Mobutu: A Chronicle of My Life and Times, pp. 13-72. Xlibris Corporation. 2005. pp. 13–72. ISBN 978-1413499438. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  2. "Rev. Jasper K. Smith". findagrave.com. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  3. 1 2 "Membership in the Louisiana House of Representatives, 1812-2016" (PDF). house.louisiana.gov. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  4. "Lavonya Pullen Smith". findagrave.com. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  5. The Shreveport Times, December 6, 1959, p. 16-A
  6. "Smith Winner by 44 Votes", The Shreveport Times, December 11, 1959, p. 1
  7. Billy Hathorn, "The Williamsons of Caddo Parish: A Political 'Mini-Dynasty'", North Louisiana History, Winter 2008, p. 27
  8. "Jasper K. Smith, Jr.". findagrave.com. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
Political offices
Preceded by
At-large delegation:

H. H. Huckaby
Wellborn Jack
Turner B. Morgan
Beatrice Hawthorne Moore

Louisiana State Representative from Caddo Parish

Jasper Keith Smith, Jr.
1944–1948

Succeeded by
At-large delegation:

Algie D. Brown
Edwin F. Hunter, Jr.
Wellborn Jack
Keith M. Pyburn

Preceded by
At-large delegation:

Algie D. Brown
Edwin F. Hunter, Jr.
Wellborn Jack
Keith M. Pyburn

Louisiana State Representative from Caddo Parish

Jasper Keith Smith, Jr.
1952–1964

Succeeded by
At-large delegation:

Morley A. Hudson
Taylor W. O'Hearn
Algie D. Brown
Frank Fulco
J. Bennett Johnston, Jr.

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