Difference between revisions of "Champ Baker"

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{{Infobox person
 
{{Infobox person
|name=Champion Lee "Champ Leroy" Baker, Sr.
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|name=Champ Leroy Baker, Sr.
(Civic figure in Alexandria, Louisiana)
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(Civic and political figure<br> in Alexandria, Louisiana)
 +
|image=Champ Leroy Baker.jpg
 
|birth_date=March 9, 1919
 
|birth_date=March 9, 1919
 
|birth_place=Boyce, Rapides Parish<br>[[Louisiana]]
 
|birth_place=Boyce, Rapides Parish<br>[[Louisiana]]
Line 17: Line 18:
 
|religion=[[United Methodist]]
 
|religion=[[United Methodist]]
 
}}
 
}}
'''Champion Lee Baker, Sr.''', known as '''Champ Leroy Baker, Sr.''' (March 9, 1919 &ndash; December 23, 1985),<ref name=bakergeni>{{cite web|url=https://www.geni.com/people/Champ-Baker-Sr/6000000001112314388|title=Champ Leroy Baker, Sr.|publisher=Geni.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref><ref name=alexandriamemorialgardens>{{cite web|url=https://old.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=58012490|title=Capt. Champion Lee "Champ" Baker, Sr.|publisher=Old.findagrave.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> was a civic and political figure in [[Alexandria, Louisiana|Alexandria]], [[Louisiana]].
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'''Champ Leroy Baker, Sr.''' (March 9, 1919 &ndash; December 23, 1985),<ref name=alexandriamemorialgardens>{{cite web|url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58012490/champ-leroy-baker|title=Capt. Champion Lee "Champ" Baker, Sr.|publisher=Findagrave.com|accessdate=October 9, 2020}}</ref> was a civic and political figure from [[Alexandria, Louisiana|Alexandria]], [[Louisiana]].
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
One of eight children of Richard Baker (1876-1936), a painter originally from Holland, [[Michigan]], and the former Maud LaDell Johnson (1884-1981),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.geni.com/people/Richard-Baker/6000000001112075033|title=Richard Baker genealogy|publisher=Geni.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> Baker was born in the small town of Boyce in northern Rapides Parish, where his mother had also been born. His official first name "Champion" was that of his maternal grandfather, Champion Pennington Johnson (1849-1996), a native of Harmony, [[North Carolina]]., whom Baker never knew. He used the name "Champ Leroy Baker"; hence, the "Champ" is derived from "Champion".
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One of eight children of Richard Baker (1876-1936), a painter originally from Holland, [[Michigan]], and the former Maud LaDell Johnson (1884-1981), Baker was, like his mother, born in the small town of Boyce in northern Rapides Parish. His first name "Champ" was derived from that of his maternal grandfather, Champion Pennington Johnson (1849-1896), a native of Harmony, [[North Carolina]], whom Baker never knew.  
  
Baker attended Bolton High School in Alexandria. In 1940, he enlisted for military service and became a captain in the [[United States Army]] during [[World War II]].  He met his wife, the former Astrid Hile (December 17, 1920 &ndash; August 18, 2010), a native of [[Tallinn]], the capital and largest city of the [[Baltic Sea]] state of [[Estonia]]. Mrs. Baker was the younger of two daughters Gustave Hile, originally Hiielje (1888-1954) and the former Pauline Elisabeth Lindstrom, originally Linzmann (1894-1972)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.geni.com/people/Pauline-Hiie-Ije/6000000008849557657|title=Pauline Elisabeth Hile|publisher=Geni.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> She was an Army nurse for the Fourth Service Command at Finney General Hospital in Thomasville, [[Georgia]].<ref name=mrsbaker>{{cite web|url=https://old.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=57345487|title=Astrid Hile Baker|publisher=Old.findagrave.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>Upon his return to civilian life, Baker became a steadfast advocate for veterans' causes. For thirty years, Mrs. Baker was a caseworker for the Louisiana state government. The Bakers had three children, Susanne Carol Nall (born July 21, 1944) and husband Malcolm Howell Nall (born November 4, 1948) of Woodworth, south of Alexandria; Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. (born August 3, 1946), an orthopedic and sports medical doctor in Columbus, Georgia,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.healthgrades.com/physician/dr-champ-baker-x8mw4|title=Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. - Healthgrades|publisher=Healthgrades.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> who is married to the former Sue Anne Owens (born December 30, 1945), and Russell King Baker (born February 19, 1949), and spouse, the former Kathryn "Kathie" Pearce (born June 22, 1959), of Lorena in McLennan County, south of [[Waco, Texas|Waco]], [[Texas]].  One of their ten grandchildren is Dr. Champ (Lee) Baker, III (born January 21, 1976), is a sports doctor affiliated with the Hughston Clinic in Columbus, Georgia.<ref name=mrsbaker/>.
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Baker attended Bolton High School in Alexandria. In 1940, he enlisted for military service and became a captain in the [[United States Army]] during [[World War II]].  He met his wife, the former Astrid Hile (December 17, 1920 &ndash; August 18, 2010), a native of [[Tallinn]], the capital and largest city of the [[Baltic Sea]] state of [[Estonia]]. Mrs. Baker was the younger of two of Gustave Hile, originally Hiielje (1888-1954) and the former Pauline Elisabeth Lindstrom, originally Linzmann (1894-1972) She was an Army nurse for the Fourth Service Command at Finney General Hospital in Thomasville in southern [[Georgia]].<ref name=mrsbaker>{{cite web|url=https://old.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=57345487|title=Astrid Hile Baker|publisher=Old.findagrave.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>
 +
 
 +
Upon his return to civilian life, Baker became a steadfast advocate for veterans' causes. For thirty years, Mrs. Baker was a caseworker for the Louisiana state government. The Bakers had three children, Susanne Carol Nall (born July 21, 1944) and husband Malcolm Howell Nall (born November 4, 1948) of Woodworth, south of Alexandria; Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. (born August 3, 1946), an orthopedic and sports medical doctor in Columbus, Georgia,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.healthgrades.com/physician/dr-champ-baker-x8mw4|title=Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. - Healthgrades|publisher=Healthgrades.com|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> who is married to the former Sue Anne Owens (born December 30, 1945), and Russell King Baker (born February 19, 1949), and spouse, the former Kathryn "Kathie" Pearce (born June 22, 1959), of Lorena in McLennan County, south of [[Waco, Texas|Waco]], [[Texas]].  One of their ten grandchildren, Dr. Champ (Lee) Baker, III (born January 21, 1976), is a sports doctor affiliated with the Hughston Clinic in Columbus, Georgia.<ref name=mrsbaker/>.
  
 
==Career==
 
==Career==
  
Baker was the long-term director of the Kisatchie-Delta Regional Planning & Development District at 3514 Parliament Drive in Alexandria, a quasi-government multi-purpose body which among other functions prepares land-use guidelines and distributes law enforcement grants for eight Central Louisiana parishes.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/214412737/|title=New Federal Aid Explained to Law Enforcement Heads|publisher=The Alexandria Town Talk|date=January 30, 1969|page=6|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>
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Baker was the long-term director of the Kisatchie-Delta Regional Planning & Development District at 3514 Parliament Drive in Alexandria, a quasi-government multi-purpose body which among other functions prepares land-use guidelines and distributes law enforcement grants for eight Central Louisiana parishes.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/214412737/|title="New Federal Aid Explained to Law Enforcement Heads"|publisher=''[[Alexandria Town Talk]]''|date=January 30, 1969|page=6|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> One of the Kisatchie board members, [[Brian Duke]], was a Rapides Parish police juror and former jury president.
  
In 1977, Baker, a [[Democratic Party|Democrat]], ran for [[mayor]] of Alexandria in the first election under the mayor-council charter, which replaced the former commission city government. He ran third, but outgoing Mayor [[John K. Snyder]] ran strongly enough to enter a runoff contest with Carroll Edwin Lanier (1926-2012), who from 1969 to 1973 was the finance and utilities commissioner under the previous government. In this same election cycle, [[W. A. "Dub" Carruth]], a prominent house and apartment developer,  won an at-large seat on the new Alexandria City Council.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/thetowntalk/obituary.aspx?n=w-a-carruth-dub&pid=189576482&fhid=11989|title=W. A. "Dub" Carruth obituary|publisher=''The Alexandria Town Talk''|date=July 13, 2018|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> A native of Ashley County, [[Arkansas]], Lanier defeated Snyder, 68-32 percent. Five years later, Snyder turned the tables on Lanier to gain a second non-consecutive term as mayor in 1982. Then in 1986, Snyder was unseated by long-term mayor Edward Gordon "Ned" Randolph, Jr. (1942-2016). In addition to Baker, other losing candidates in the 1977 race were Dr. Judith Ward-Steinman Karst, the then wife of former Mayor Charles Edward Karst (1931-1992),outgoing Finance and Utilities Commissioner Arnold Jack Rosenthal (1923-2010), and former state Representative Larry Parker.(1922-1996).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thetowntalk.com/article/20121205/NEWS01/212050317/Former-Alexandria-Mayor-Carroll-Lanier-dies-86?|author=Cynthia D. Jardon|title=Former Alexandria Mayor Carroll Lanier dies at 86|publisher=The Alexandria  Town Talk|date=December 5, 2012|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>
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In 1977, Baker, a [[Democratic Party|Democrat]], ran for [[mayor]] of Alexandria in the first election under the mayor-council charter, which replaced the former commission city government. Baker finished third with 2,082 votes, but outgoing Mayor [[John K. Snyder]] ran second and hence entered a runoff contest with [[Carroll Lanier]], who from 1969 to 1973 had been the finance and utilities commissioner under the previous government. In this same election cycle, [[W. A. "Dub" Carruth]], a prominent house and apartment developer,  won an at-large seat on the new Alexandria City Council.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/thetowntalk/obituary.aspx?n=w-a-carruth-dub&pid=189576482&fhid=11989|title=W. A. "Dub" Carruth obituary|publisher=''The Alexandria Town Talk''|date=July 13, 2018|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref> A native of Ashley County, [[Arkansas]], Lanier defeated Snyder, 68-32 percent. Five years later, Snyder turned the tables on Lanier to gain a second non-consecutive term as mayor in 1982. Then in 1986, Snyder was unseated by long-term mayor [[Ned Randolph]]. In addition to Baker, other losing candidates in the 1977 race were [[real estate]] [[business]]man Charles Elbert "Charlie" Hickman (1933-2012); Democrat Judith Ward-Steinman Karst (1941-2020), the daughter of Alexandria attorney and [[radio]] station owner [[Irving Ward-Steinman]], later Judith Karst Campbell of [[rural]] Hiawassee in Towns County in far northeastern [[Georgia]], thereafter in [[North Carolina]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mylife.com/judy-campbell/jkc0019|title=Judith Karst Campbell|publisher=Mylife.com|accessdate=July 30, 2018}}</ref> Judy Karst was then married to former Mayor [[Ed Karst|Charles Edward Karst]]; the two remaining candidates were outgoing Fina,''December 5, 2012.</ref>
  
Baker subsequently joined the second Snyder administration as the utilities director, in which capacity he had warned that the city needed greater sources of energy to power the municipal-owen electric power system. Baker said that he remains "skittish" in regard to the [[coal]]-fired plant near his native Boyce owned by the [[Pineville, Louisiana|Pineville]]-based Central Louisiana Electric Company, which Baker claimed is "unreliable". Snyder announced that the city would by March 1984 have a suitable three-year contract with a company in [[Colorado]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/216161339/|title=Snyder: Cheaper Gas on the Way|publisher=The Alexandria Town Talk|date=January 13, 1984|author=Jim Liggett|page=A2|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>
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Baker subsequently joined the second Snyder administration as the utilities director, in which capacity he had warned that the city needed greater sources of energy to power the municipal-owned electric power system. Baker said that he remains "skittish" in regard to the "unreliable" Rodemacher No. 2 [[coal]]-fired plant near his native Boyce owned by the [[Pineville, Louisiana|Pineville]]-based Central Louisiana Electric Company. Snyder announced that the city would by March 1984 have a suitable three-year contract with a company in [[Colorado]]. When a CLECO spokesman claimed that Baker was "blatantly inaccurate and totally inappropriate" about the Rodemacher plant, Baker replied that he was "blatantly accurate and totally appropriate." While he downplayed getting into a shouting match with CLECO, Baker said, "The corporate power squalls when its skin is pricked. … I have been reticent to discuss details of my negotiation for gas supplies for the city of Alexandria as it would have caused me to divulge the confidences of several suppliers."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/216161339/|title="Snyder: Cheaper Gas on the Way"|publisher=''The Alexandria Town Talk''|date=January 13, 1984|author=Jim Liggett|page=A2|accessdate=July 14, 2018}}</ref>
  
Baker died of a stroke at the age of sixty-six at Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria.<ref name=bakergeni/> He and his wife are interred at Alexandria Memorial Gardens.<ref name=alexandriamemorialgardens/>
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Baker died of a stroke at the age of sixty-six at Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria. He and his wife are interred at Alexandria Memorial Gardens.<ref name=alexandriamemorialgardens/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 16:41, December 5, 2022

Champ Leroy Baker, Sr.

(Civic and political figure
in Alexandria, Louisiana)

Champ Leroy Baker.jpg

Born March 9, 1919
Boyce, Rapides Parish
Louisiana
Died December 23, 1985 (aged 66)
Alexandria, Louisiana

Resting place:
Alexandria Memorial Gardens

Political Party Democrat
Spouse Astrid Hile Baker

Three children:
Dr. Champ Baker, Jr.
Russell King Baker
Susanne Carol Nall
Ten grandchildren

Religion United Methodist

Champ Leroy Baker, Sr. (March 9, 1919 – December 23, 1985),[1] was a civic and political figure from Alexandria, Louisiana.

Background

One of eight children of Richard Baker (1876-1936), a painter originally from Holland, Michigan, and the former Maud LaDell Johnson (1884-1981), Baker was, like his mother, born in the small town of Boyce in northern Rapides Parish. His first name "Champ" was derived from that of his maternal grandfather, Champion Pennington Johnson (1849-1896), a native of Harmony, North Carolina, whom Baker never knew.

Baker attended Bolton High School in Alexandria. In 1940, he enlisted for military service and became a captain in the United States Army during World War II. He met his wife, the former Astrid Hile (December 17, 1920 – August 18, 2010), a native of Tallinn, the capital and largest city of the Baltic Sea state of Estonia. Mrs. Baker was the younger of two of Gustave Hile, originally Hiielje (1888-1954) and the former Pauline Elisabeth Lindstrom, originally Linzmann (1894-1972) She was an Army nurse for the Fourth Service Command at Finney General Hospital in Thomasville in southern Georgia.[2]

Upon his return to civilian life, Baker became a steadfast advocate for veterans' causes. For thirty years, Mrs. Baker was a caseworker for the Louisiana state government. The Bakers had three children, Susanne Carol Nall (born July 21, 1944) and husband Malcolm Howell Nall (born November 4, 1948) of Woodworth, south of Alexandria; Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. (born August 3, 1946), an orthopedic and sports medical doctor in Columbus, Georgia,[3] who is married to the former Sue Anne Owens (born December 30, 1945), and Russell King Baker (born February 19, 1949), and spouse, the former Kathryn "Kathie" Pearce (born June 22, 1959), of Lorena in McLennan County, south of Waco, Texas. One of their ten grandchildren, Dr. Champ (Lee) Baker, III (born January 21, 1976), is a sports doctor affiliated with the Hughston Clinic in Columbus, Georgia.[2].

Career

Baker was the long-term director of the Kisatchie-Delta Regional Planning & Development District at 3514 Parliament Drive in Alexandria, a quasi-government multi-purpose body which among other functions prepares land-use guidelines and distributes law enforcement grants for eight Central Louisiana parishes.[4] One of the Kisatchie board members, Brian Duke, was a Rapides Parish police juror and former jury president.

In 1977, Baker, a Democrat, ran for mayor of Alexandria in the first election under the mayor-council charter, which replaced the former commission city government. Baker finished third with 2,082 votes, but outgoing Mayor John K. Snyder ran second and hence entered a runoff contest with Carroll Lanier, who from 1969 to 1973 had been the finance and utilities commissioner under the previous government. In this same election cycle, W. A. "Dub" Carruth, a prominent house and apartment developer, won an at-large seat on the new Alexandria City Council.[5] A native of Ashley County, Arkansas, Lanier defeated Snyder, 68-32 percent. Five years later, Snyder turned the tables on Lanier to gain a second non-consecutive term as mayor in 1982. Then in 1986, Snyder was unseated by long-term mayor Ned Randolph. In addition to Baker, other losing candidates in the 1977 race were real estate businessman Charles Elbert "Charlie" Hickman (1933-2012); Democrat Judith Ward-Steinman Karst (1941-2020), the daughter of Alexandria attorney and radio station owner Irving Ward-Steinman, later Judith Karst Campbell of rural Hiawassee in Towns County in far northeastern Georgia, thereafter in North Carolina.[6] Judy Karst was then married to former Mayor Charles Edward Karst; the two remaining candidates were outgoing Fina,December 5, 2012.</ref>

Baker subsequently joined the second Snyder administration as the utilities director, in which capacity he had warned that the city needed greater sources of energy to power the municipal-owned electric power system. Baker said that he remains "skittish" in regard to the "unreliable" Rodemacher No. 2 coal-fired plant near his native Boyce owned by the Pineville-based Central Louisiana Electric Company. Snyder announced that the city would by March 1984 have a suitable three-year contract with a company in Colorado. When a CLECO spokesman claimed that Baker was "blatantly inaccurate and totally inappropriate" about the Rodemacher plant, Baker replied that he was "blatantly accurate and totally appropriate." While he downplayed getting into a shouting match with CLECO, Baker said, "The corporate power squalls when its skin is pricked. … I have been reticent to discuss details of my negotiation for gas supplies for the city of Alexandria as it would have caused me to divulge the confidences of several suppliers."[7]

Baker died of a stroke at the age of sixty-six at Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria. He and his wife are interred at Alexandria Memorial Gardens.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Capt. Champion Lee "Champ" Baker, Sr.. Findagrave.com. Retrieved on October 9, 2020.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Astrid Hile Baker. Old.findagrave.com. Retrieved on July 14, 2018.
  3. Dr. Champ Baker, Jr. - Healthgrades. Healthgrades.com. Retrieved on July 14, 2018.
  4. "New Federal Aid Explained to Law Enforcement Heads". Alexandria Town Talk (January 30, 1969). Retrieved on July 14, 2018.
  5. W. A. "Dub" Carruth obituary. The Alexandria Town Talk (July 13, 2018). Retrieved on July 14, 2018.
  6. Judith Karst Campbell. Mylife.com. Retrieved on July 30, 2018.
  7. Jim Liggett (January 13, 1984). "Snyder: Cheaper Gas on the Way". The Alexandria Town Talk. Retrieved on July 14, 2018.