JOHN ALEXANDER
BUCKNER,
Central,
'52, entered Princeton Theological Seminary and
left without graduating on account of ill
health. In 1858 he became a minister in the
Southern Presbyterian Church. In 1861 he entered
the Confederate army as captain of the 8th
Kentucky Infantry and was promoted until he
became colonel and adjutant-general to Gen. John
C. Breckenridge, and adjutant-general and chief
of staff to Gen. S. B. Buckner. After the war he
became a planter at Illawara, La. In 1884 he was
president of the Board of Commissioners of East
Carroll Parish, La., and from 1892 to 1908 was a
member of the 5th District Levee Board. He died
at Illawara in 1908.
Jere Chamberlain
Hutchins,
street railway manager;
born in
Carroll Parish, La., Oct.
13, 1853; son of Anthony W. and Mary B.
(Chamberlain) Hutchins; moved to Lexington, Mo.;
educated in public schools; studied civil
engineering; married, 1881, Anna M. Brooks, of
Waco, Tex. Began railway service in construction
of Missouri, Gulf & Lexington Ry; later
construction engineer on Missouri railroads;
reporter Waco Tex., Examiner, 1876-81; returned
to railroading, serving thirteen years with New
Orleans & Pacific, Missouri, Kansas & Texas,
Louisville, New Orleans & Texas, Illinois
Central Ry. companies; manage Detroit Citizens'
Street Ry., 1894, worked for amalgamation of
lines; now president and general manager Detroit
United Ry., owning, operating and controling
about 500 miles of electrical railway. Member
American Society Civil Engineers; director
Detroit Chamber of Commerce, Detroit Convention
League. Clubs: Detroit, Country, Fellowcraft
(Detroit); Metropolitan (New York); Union
(Cleveland). Office 12 Woodward Av. Residence:
149 McDougall Av.submitted
by Christine Walters
William Jennings
Jefferson, a Representative from
Louisiana; born in Lake Providence, East Carroll
Parish, La., March 14, 1947; G.W. Griffin High
School, Lake Providence, La.; B.A., Southern
University and Agricultural & Mechanical
College, Baton Rouge, La., 1969; J.D., Harvard
University, Cambridge, Mass., 1972; lawyer,
private practice; law clerk for United States
District Judge Alvin B. Rubin, Eastern District
of Louisiana, 1972-1973; legislative assistant
to United States Senator J. Bennett Johnston of
Louisiana, 1973-1975; member of the Louisiana
state senate, 1979-1990; candidate for mayor of
New Orleans in 1982 and 1986; elected as a
Democrat to the One Hundred Second and to the
eight succeeding Congresses (January 3,
1991-present).
James BROWN, (brother of
John Brown of Virginia and Kentucky (1757-1837),
cousin of John Breckinridge, James Breckinridge,
and Francis Preston, uncle of James Brown Clay),
a Senator from Louisiana; born near Staunton,
Va., September 11, 1766; attended Washington
College (now Washington and Lee University),
Lexington, Va., and William and Mary College,
Williamsburg, Va.; studied law; admitted to the
bar and commenced practice in Frankfort, Ky.;
commanded a company of sharpshooters in an
expedition against the Indians in 1789;
secretary to the Governor 1792; soon after the
cession of the Territory of Louisiana moved to
New Orleans and was appointed as secretary of
the Territory in 1804; subsequently became
United States district attorney for the
Territory; elected as a Democratic Republican to
the United States Senate on December 1, 1812, to
fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of
John N. Destrehan, and served from February 5,
1813, to March 3, 1817; unsuccessful candidate
for reelection; again elected to the United
States Senate in 1819, as an Adams-Clay
Republican, and served from March 4, 1819, until
December 10, 1823, when he resigned; chairman,
Committee on Foreign Relations (Sixteenth
Congress); appointed United States Minister to
France 1823-1829; returned to the United States
and settled in Philadelphia, Pa., where he died
on April 7, 1835.
Joseph Eugene Ransdell,
a Representative and a Senator from Louisiana;
born in Alexandria, Rapides Parish, La., October
7, 1858; attended the public schools and
graduated from Union College, Schenectady, N.Y.,
in 1882; studied law; admitted to the bar in
1883 and practiced at Lake Providence, La.,
1883-1889; district attorney for the eighth
judicial district of Louisiana 1884-1896;
interested in cotton planting and pecan groves;
member of the levee board, fifth levee district
1896-1899; member of the State constitutional
convention in 1898; elected as a Democrat to the
Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the vacancy caused
by the death of Samuel T. Baird; reelected to
the Fifty-seventh and to the five succeeding
Congresses and served from August 29, 1899, to
March 3, 1913; was not a candidate for
renomination in 1912, having become a candidate
for the United States Senate; elected as a
Democrat to the United States Senate in 1912,
reelected in 1918 and 1924 and served from March
4, 1913, to March 3, 1931; unsuccessful
candidate for renomination in 1930; chairman,
Committee on Public Health and National
Quarantine (Sixty-third through Sixty-fifth
Congresses), Committee on Mississippi River and
Its Tributaries (Sixty-sixth Congress); in 1920
founded a printing firm in Washington, D.C., and
served as a director until 1931 when he returned
to Lake Providence, La.; engaged in the real
estate business, cotton planting, and pecan
growing; member of the board of supervisors,
Louisiana State University and Agricultural
College at Baton Rouge 1940-1944; died in Lake
Providence, La., July 27, 1954; interment in
Lake Providence Cemetery.
Joseph
Kerr, a Senator from Ohio; born in
Kerrtown (now Chambersburg), Franklin County,
Pa., in 1765; was privately tutored; moved to
Ohio in 1792; employed by contractors furnishing
supplies to troops in the Ohio Valley; surveyor;
justice of the peace at Manchester, Adams
County, Ohio, in 1797; appointed as a judge of
the first quarter session court of Adams County,
Northwest Territory, in 1797; elected clerk of
the board of commissioners of Adams County;
moved to Chillicothe in 1801, and farmed; deputy
surveyor of the Virginia military lands in Ohio;
became a leading industrialist, shipping produce
by a fleet of boats to New Orleans for export;
elected to the Ohio senate in 1804 and 1810, and
to the Ohio house of representatives in 1808,
1816, 1818, and 1819; appointed by President
Thomas Jefferson in 1806 as one of the
commissioners to survey the road from
Cumberland, Md., to the Ohio River; adjutant
general of Ohio 1809-1810; appointed a brigadier
general of Ohio Volunteers during the War of
1812; operated a hotel, slaughter house, salting
establishment, cooperage, boat building works,
and general merchandise business; supplied
provisions to the Army of the Northwest during
the War of 1812; elected to the United States
Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the
resignation of Thomas Worthington and served
from December 10, 1814, to March 3, 1815; was
not a candidate for reelection; returned to
Chillicothe, Ohio, and was proprietor of an inn
1815-1826; lost his extensive farm and was
forced into bankruptcy; in 1826 moved to
Tennessee, where he engaged in agricultural
pursuits near Memphis until 1828, when he moved
to Louisiana and purchased a homestead near Lake
Providence, Carroll (now East Carroll) Parish;
also purchased a plantation near Bunches Bend,
La., and was engaged as a planter until his
death at his homestead near Providence, August
22, 1837; interment in the family burying
ground.
