Robert E. Farrell is a veteran of the New Orleans cotton market, though a
comparatively young man in years. He has spent nearly thirty years of his life
with the same firm of cotton brokers at 843 Union Street.
Mr. Farrell was
born at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, July 1, 1878, son of William H. and Mary
(Morris) Farrell, his father a native of Ireland, and his mother of New Orleans,
where she is still living. William H. Farrell was a contractor and builder, and
died when his son Robert E. was six years of age. His widowed mother then
removed to New Orleans where her son attended public schools and the Soulé
Business College. He was only sixteen when he went to work in a railroad office,
and two years later at the age of eighteen became an employe of a cotton firm.
With that firm he learned all the details of the cotton brokerage business and
in a few years had reached the position of a partnership and has since been one
of the active men in this organization. Mr. Farrell has been a popular and
resolute Citizen of New Orleans and for five years was president of the Young
Men's Gymnastic Club.
On September 8, 1897, he married Miss Fannie Newman
Young, who was born in Mississippi. They are the parents of three sons and four
daughters: Miss Frances M., Robert W., William Mason, Charles Fernand, Maud
Dorothy, Mary Elizabeth and Margaret Dixie, the oldest being twenty-three and
the youngest eight years of age. The son, Robert W. is a graduate of the Gulf
Coast Military Academy at Gulfport, Mississippi, and is now associated with his
father in the cotton business. The two other sons, William Mason and Charles F.,
are members of the class of 1925 in the Gulf Coast Military Academy and have
made splendid records in that institution; Charles being captain of Company B,
on the sixth highest offices in the battalion, while his brother is captain of
Company A. Charles was captain of the football team in 1924, and was elected
president of the senior class. Mr. Robert E. Farrell is a director in the Canal
Commercial Bank & Trust Company at New Orleans.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, page 11.
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