Captain Jared Young Sanders, Jr. The bar of Louisiana has its full quota of able
and loyal lawyers of the younger generation, the major number being natives of
the state. Among these successful practitioners a place of relative precedence
is consistently to be ascribed to Jared Y. Sanders, Jr., and he is a scion of
old and honored southern families whose names have been prominent in the annals
of Louisiana. He was in overseas service in the World war, in which connection
he gained the rank of captain.
Captain Sanders was born in Franklin, St.
Mary Parish, Louisiana, April 20, 1892, a son of Jared Young Sanders, Sr., and a
grandson of Jared Young Sanders, who became one of the most extensive and
successful planters in the South and who died on his homestead plantation, near
Morgan City, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana, in the year 1881, his widow, whose
maiden name was Bessie Wofford, being now a resident of the City of New Orleans.
The original American representatives of the Sanders family came from England
and settled in North Carolina in the early Colonial era. The Woffords likewise
came from England and were numbered among the Colonial settlers in Virginia.
Jared Y. Sanders, Sr., who resides at Hammond, Tangipahoa Parish, was born
on his father's plantation near Morgan City, St. Mary Parish, January 29, 1867,
and he was a boy at the time of the family removal to Franklin, where he
attended school until he was fifteen years of age. He then began to aid in the
support of his widowed mother and the other children of the family, and his
career has been one of constructive enterprise and consecutive advancement. He
was for several years engaged in the insurance business, and thereafter became
editor and publisher of the Mary Banner, a weekly paper at Franklin. While thus
engaged he attended the law department of Tulane University, and after receiving
his degree of Bachelor of Laws he was engaged in the practice of his profession
at Franklin until 1908, in which year he was elected governor of Louisiana. In
his term as chief executive of his native commonwealth, Governor Sanders gave a
most careful and progressive administration, the record of which has become an
admirable part of the history of Louisiana government. He had previously served
two terms in the Lower House of the Louisiana Legislature, and he was speaker of
the House of Representatives in the period of 1900-04, under the administration
of Gov. W. W. Heard. Under the regime of Gov. Newton C. Blanchard, Mr. Sanders
served as lieutenant governor from 1904 until 1908, in which latter year
appreciative popular vote elected him governor of the state. Still higher honors
were in store for him, for while he was serving as governor he was elected to
the United States Senate, as successor of the late Douglas C. McEnery. However,
he resigned this office without taking his seat in the National Senate, as he
was actuated by his desire to continue his fight to have the Panama Exposition
held in New Orleans. In this ambition he was frustrated, however, as San
Francisco was selected as the stage of the great exposition. In 1912 Governor
Sanders resumed the practice of law, in the City of New Orleans, and while still
retaining his offices in that city, he removed in 1914 to Bogalusa, Washington
Parish, where he was elected to the United States Congress, as representative of
the Sixth Congressional District of Louisiana, his service in Congress
continuing for two terms and being marked by the same high stewardship that had
characterized all of his previous official service. He was a member of the
Louisiana State Constitutional Convention of 1898, and also that of 1921. The
Governor is a Knight Templar Mason, has received the thirty-second degree of the
Masonic Scottish Rite, and is affiliated also with the Mystic Shrine. He wedded
Miss Ada V. Shaw, of Fouke, Arkansas, and their only child is Jared Y., Jr., the
immediate subject of this review.
The early education of Jared Y.
Sanders, Jr., was acquired in public and private schools of St. Mary Parish, and
continued in Dixon Military Academy, at Covington, this state. In 1908 he
entered the University of Louisiana, and in this institution he was graduated as
a member of the class of 1912 and with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. At the
university he became a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, was a
letter man in the basketball team, and was valedictorian of his class, besides
having been in 1912 the editor of the university annual known as 'The Gumbo.' He
was likewise a member of several of the university debating teams, and thus
participated in inter-collegiate debating contests. In 1910 he was winner of the
Gang Medal for public speaking. After his graduation in the Louisiana University
Mr. Sanders was for one year a student in the law department of historic old
Washington and Lee University, Virginia, and there he became affiliated with the
Phi Delta Phi, the honorary legal fraternity, besides which he was a member of
the inter-collegiate debating team of Washington and Lee. In 1913 he entered the
law department of Tulane University, his graduation therein being as a member of
the class of 1914, and his admission to the bar having been virtually coincident
with his reception of the degree of Bachelor of Laws. In the meanwhile he had
been for one year a student in the law department of the State University of
Louisiana. .
Mr. Sanders was admitted to the bar in June, 1914, and his
professional novitiate was served at Bogalusa, where he continued in practice
until 1913, since which time he has been established in successful general
practice in the City of Baton Rouge, except for the period of his service in the
World war. He is senior member of the law firm of H Sanders & Gottlieb, with
offices in Suite 318-19 New Reymond Building, his partner being Mr. S. J.
Gottlieb, a member of one of the prominent families of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Mr. Sanders is a thoroughgoing adherent of the democratic party, his basic
Masonic affiliation is with St. James Lodge, No. 47, Ancient Free and Accepted
Masons, and in the Louisiana Grand Consistory, Scottish Rite, he has received
the thirty-second degree. Mr. Sanders is an active member of the Baton Rouge
Chamber of Commerce and the East Baton Rouge Parish Bar Association, is attorney
for and a director of the Commercial Securities Company and the Baton Rouge
Building & Loan Association, and is distinctly loyal and progressive in his
civic attitude, with deep interest in all that touches the welfare of his home
city and native state. In the capital city he owns his attractive home property,
at 2332 Wisteria Street.
In May, 1917, the month following that in which
the nation became definitely involved in the World war. Mr. Sanders volunteered
and was sent to the first Officers' Training Camp at Fort Logan H. Roots, in
Arkansas, where he received, in July of that year, his commission as captain. He
was transferred to Camp Pike and there assigned to Company B, Three Hundred and
Forty-sixth Infantry, Eighty-seventh Division. With his command he was ordered
to Camp Dix, New Jersey, to prepare for embarkation, and there he was
transferred to the regimental staff in the capacity of Intelligence and
Operations Officer. With his division he crossed the Atlantic in August, 1918,
and after arriving at Le Havre, France, was sent to a position near Bordeaux,
whence he was billeted to the base sector near St. Nazaire. In October, 1918,
with other officers, he was sent to the Officers Line School at Langres, where
he remained until December, when he rejoined his division, at St. Nazaire.
Captain Sanders returned to the United States in March, 1919, and early in the
following months received his honorable discharge, at Camp Dix.
At Little
Rock, Arkansas, October 5, 1921, occurred the marriage of. Captain Sanders to
Miss Mary Briggs, daughter of Charles H. and Eugenia Briggs, of that city, where
the father is engaged in commercial printing and publishing. Mrs. Sanders
attended Ward-Belmont College, Nashville, Tennessee, and her gracious
personality has given her special popularity in the social circles of Baton
Rouge. They have one daughter, Mary Elizabeth.
Note: The referenced source contains an autographed portrait of the subject.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 6-7.
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