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Hewitt Bouanchaud

764 bytes added, 23:57, June 22, 2021
{{Infobox officeholder
| name=Hewitt Leonidas Bouanchaud​
| image=Hewitt Bouanchaud of LA.jpg
| birth_date=August 18, 1877​
| birth_place=Poydras Plantation<br>
While lieutenant governor under Governor John Milliken Parker, Sr. (1863-1939), Bouanchaud was also elected as the president of the 1921 state constitutional convention, since updated into the current constitution in 1974. In 1924, rather than seeking reelection as lieutenant governor, Bouanchaud ran unsuccessfully for [[governor]] in the [[primary]] election but was defeated by Henry Luse Fuqua, Sr. (1865-1926) who died two years into his gubernatorial term. In 1929, with his state political career at an end and [[Huey Long|Huey Pierce Long, Jr.]] as governor, Bouanchaud was elected as district attorney for the 18th Judicial District in New Roads upon the death of Jacob Haight Morrison, III (1975-1929), the father of later New Orleans [[Mayor]] [[Chep Morrison]], who had been DA for the preceding two decades. Bouanchaud left the DA's office in 1936, resumed his law practice, and engaged also in [[farming]] and [[cattle]] raising.<ref name=lahist>{{cite web|url=https://www.lahistory.org/resources/dictionary-louisiana-biography/dictionary-louisiana-biography-b/|title=Bouanchaud, Hewitt Leonidas|publisher=''A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography'': Louisiana Historical Association|accessdate=June 10, 2020}}</ref><ref>''A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography'' used the sources for its article on Bouanchaud: Alcée Fortier, ed., ''Louisiana,'' Vol. 3 (1914);Judy Riffel, ed., ''A History of Pointe Coupée Parish and Its Families'' (1983), and Dave H. Brown, ''A History of Who’s Who in Louisiana Politics in 1916'' (1916).</ref>
From his first marriage in 1905 to the former Emma Campbell Kearney (1876-1914), Bouanchaud had three children. After Emma's death, he married in 1916 the former Eustatia Morrison (1891-1976) and had another child.<ref name=lahist/> Bouanchaud is interred beside his second wife at St. Marys Cemetery in New Roads. The first wife is interred in the same cemetery.<ref name=findagrave/>  Because of its natural beauty and location, New Roads has been called "the [[Naples]] of Louisiana" and "the most ideally situated town in the United States."<ref name=naplesofla>"New Roads once likened as the Naples of Louisiana," ''The Pointe Coupee Banner,'' April 10, 1909.</ref>  Mayor Joseph Lamartine Bouanchaud (1872-1951), an older brother of Hewitt Bouanchaud,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/191511293/joseph-lamartine-bouanchaud|title=Joseph Lamartine Bouanchaud|publisher=Findagrave.com|accessdate=June 10, 2020}}</ref> served at the turn of the 20th century and is credited with much of the progress made by New Roads.<ref name=naplesofla/> Many Bouanchaud descendants still live in New Roads. One of those descendants was James Madison Bouanchaud (1931-2020), a great-nephew of Hewitt Bouanchaud, was a civic figure and [[automobile]] dealer in New Roads, who branched out into Zachary in East Baton Rouge Parish and Gonzales in Ascension Parish.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://obits.nola.com/obituaries/nola/obituary.aspx?n=james-madison-bouanchaud&pid=196311253&fhid=5614|title=James Madison Bouanchaud|publisher=''The New Orleans Times-Picayune''|date=June 7, 2020|accessdate=June 10, 2020}}</ref>
==References==
[[Category:Farmers]]
[[Category:Politicians]]
[[Category:State Representatives]]
[[Category:Democrats]]
[[Category:Catholics]]
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