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Floyd Smith

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Floyd William Smith, Jr.

Mayor of Pineville
Rapides Parish, Louisiana, USA
In office
1966–1970
Preceded by Perry Elmo Futrell, Jr.
Succeeded by Fred Baden

Pineville City Council at-large member
In office
1970–1971

Born September 17, 1932
Winnfield, Louisiana
Died February 11, 2010 (aged 77)
Alexandria, Rapides Parish, Louisiana
Resting place Pleasant Hill Cemetery near Winnfield, Louisiana
Nationality American
Political party Democrat
Spouse(s) (1) Divorced from Helen Jordan

(2) Shirley McLean Bonds Smith (married 1980 – his death)

Children Marilyn S. O'Hare

Patricia S. Hensarling
Robert Ray Smith (deceased)

Alma mater Winnfield Senior High School
Occupation Businessman

Floyd William Smith, Jr. (September 17, 1932 – February 11, 2010), was a businessman from Winnfield, Louisiana, who served from 1966 to 1970 as the Democratic mayor of Pineville in Rapides Parish. He was a maternal second cousin of former U.S. Representative Speedy O. Long of La Salle Parish in north Louisiana and hence related to various members of the Long family.[1]

Long family ties

Smith was born and reared in Winnfield in Winn Parish to Floyd W. Smith, Sr. (March 28, 1902 – January 15, 1969),[2] and the former Carmel Long (died 1994), a daughter of William Morris Long (1887–1967) and the former Fannie Boyd (1893–1955). William Morris Long was an older brother of Felix Franklin Long (1899–1982), the father of Speedy O. Long. Smith's maternal great-grandfather, Charles Felix Long, was a first cousin of Huey Pierce Long, Sr., or Hugh Long, the father of Huey Pierce Long Jr., who as his political power grew became known as the "Louisiana Kingfish".[3]

Floyd Smith's maternal uncle, named "Huey P. Long" (August 30, 1929 – June 14, 2004),[2] was only three years Smith's senior. Smith's paternal grandfather, W. W. Smith, was a cattleman in Rapides Parish who once operated a slaughterhouse.[3]

In 1950, Smith graduated from Winnfield Senior High School in Winnfield. He was the president of both his junior and senior classes. One of his classmates, later State Representative Jimmy D. Long of Natchitoches, was another cousin. Smith said that the two once got into a boxing competition. Smith was a paternal Smith and a maternal Long, and Jimmy Long was a paternal Long and a maternal Smith, whose mother was the former Ruby Smith (1906–1984). Ruby Smith Long was a sister of another former state representative, the late P. K. Smith of Winnfield, and the aunt of State Senator James Michael "Mike" Smith, also of Winnfield.[3]

Political career

After high school, Smith attended the University of Louisiana Monroe, as it was later named, for a semester and worked part-time in a clothing factory. In December 1950, Long enlisted in the United States Air Force and served for eight months at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama.[4][5] Thereafter, he was employed by the large Central Louisiana Electric Company. From 1962 to 1966, he was chairman of the Pineville Municipal Democratic Executive Committee. He was elected mayor in 1966, having unseated the incumbent Perry Elmo Futrell Jr.,[2] by 121 votes. In 1964, in his third year as mayor, Futrell had been named "Mayor of the Year" by the Louisiana Municipal Association.[6]

Smith ran successfully for alderman at-large in 1970,[1] as Fred Baden, a plumber with whom Smith often quarreled, began the first of seven consecutive terms as mayor.[7] In 1971, Smith left the city council and ran for the Louisiana State Senate against the incumbent Cecil Ray Blair of Lecompte in south Rapides Parish. Arnold Jack Rosenthal, an Alexandria businessman and attorney, also entered the race against Blair. Smith ran sufficiently strong to force Blair into a runoff, and the third-place candidate, Rosenthal, thereafter endorsed Smith. Blair still prevailed by some two thousand votes and then ran without Republican opposition in the general election held on February 1, 1972.[1]

Thereafter, Smith was named executive assistant to Rosenthal, who was elected as the last finance and utilities commissioner in the city of Alexandria prior to the adoption of a new city charter that established the mayor-council form of municipal government. Smith remained as the assistant to the commissioner until 1975, when Mayor John K. Snyder and Streets and Parks Commissioner Malcolm Hébert dismissed him from the position in a 2–1 vote, which Rosenthal considered to have been invalid and unfair.[1]

After his Pineville and Alexandria years, Smith lived for a time in Houston, Texas, where he sold automobiles. He returned to Winn Parish where he engaged in the sale of timber and land through his company called TLMS, Inc.[4]

In 1983, Smith ran for governor of Louisiana, having geared his campaign toward drawing attention to the poor condition of many Louisiana highways. He polled only 2,314 votes, as Edwin Edwards handily reclaimed the office from the Republican incumbent David C. Treen.[8] In 1984, Smith polled 4 percent of the vote in a race for the District 5 seat on the Louisiana Public Service Commission. Victory went to the Democrat Donald Lynn "Don" Owen, a former news anchor from station KSLA-] in Shreveport], who succeeded the retiring Ed Kennon.[9] Smith promised if elected to the commission to halt fuel cost adjustments and advocated a single rate for electricity. He vowed to investigate the contracts of fuel companies and urged the refund of overcharges to consumers.[10]

In 1995 and 1999, Smith ran at the local level for Winn Parish sheriff, but he lost both races to incumbent fellow Democrat James E. "Buddy" Jordan. In 2003, Smith waged his final race for office, having contested the Winn Parish seat in the Louisiana of Representatives. He lost to the incumbent Thomas D. "Tommy" Wright of Jena, who then won the general election against Republican Tony Kevin Owens (born 1960), also from Jena.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

Floyd and Helen Smith divorced in the early 1970s; she remarried and resides in Houston. In 1977, he married the former Shirley McLean, a Shreveport native and the former wife of Jay Reeves Bond, Sr., of Pineville.[11] The Smiths resided at 188 Floyd Smith Road outside Winnfield.[12]

Smith died of pneumonia at the age of seventy-seven in Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria.[11] In addition to his wife and daughters, he was survived by a sister, Juanita S. Carter of Bossier City, and two stepsons, Jay Bond, Jr. (born c. 1959) of Doyline and Brad Alan Bond (born c. 1961) of Gonzales, Louisiana, three step-grandchildren, and three step-great-grandchildren. Services were held at the chapel of Southern Funeral Home in Winnfield on February 14, 2010. He is interred at Pleasant Hill Cemetery near Winnfield.[11]


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Bret H. McCormick, "Floyd W. Smith Jr., former mayor of Pineville, dies at 77", The Alexandria Daily Town Talk, accessdate=February 12, 2010
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Social Security Death Index. ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved on February 12, 2010.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Long family genealogy
  4. 4.0 4.1 Statement of Floyd W. Smith Jr., March 2007.
  5. Floyd Smith told an interviewer in 2007 that he was in the United States Air Force for eight months during 1951; however, his obituary says he was a veteran of the United States Army.
  6. Four from Area Get LMA Honors. 'The Monroe News-Star (March 23, 1964). Retrieved on July 5, 2015.
  7. Former Pineville Mayor Fred Baden dies, December 17, 2009. content.usa.today.net. Retrieved on December 18, 2009.
  8. Louisiana Secretary of State, Gubernatorial election returns, October 22, 1983.
  9. "Owen wins PSC post", Minden Press-Herald, October 1, 1984, p. 1.
  10. Minden Press-Herald, September 26, 1984, p. 6A.
  11. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named obit
  12. Net Detective People Search


[[Category:Louisiana People