Alfred D. St. Amant, student, scholar, business man, is the managing owner of
one of the leading general insurance firms of Baton Rouge. As an insurance man
his success has been phenomenal, for within five years of its beginning his
office has secured its full share of the insurance on Private property of the
city and virtually all of the desirable publicly owned property including the
entire Louisiana State University, Southern University, State School for the
Deaf, and State School for the Blind, besides other minor institutions.
Such success as is above recorded is not surprising when one knows the stock
from which the subject of this sketch sprung. On his mother's side he is a
direct descendant of pioneer stock of Virginia and Alabama, his great-
grandfather, Col. Isaac Parker, having been one of the founders of the Republic
of Texas and one of the makers of its constitution. His mother, who was Lucy
Halle, of Texas, not only bears all the marks of refinement to which a long line
of cultured ancestry entitle her, but is a writer of verse of more than ordinary
poetic quality.
On his father's side there is not so much of the poet or
statesman as of the trail maker and warrior. One of the earliest records in the
old St. Louis Cathedral in New Orleans is that of the marriage on April 13,
l722, of Jean Francois Daspit de Saint Amant and Marie Françoise Du Buisson,
Jean Francois having left France after informing his parents, Jean Daspit (de
Saint Amant) and Dominique Daspit, nee Bougilliere, that he refused to follow
the time honored custom of the oldest son of each branch of that family becoming
a priest. From this early identification with the history of Louisiana in its
very early Colonial days the family has occupied, through one branch or another,
a leading place in private enterprise and public service, all the while
characterizing itself with a quiet, modest attitude of practically never seeking
public office or favor, though always standing ready to serve.
This
attitude is exemplified by Pierre Daspit de St. Amant (born 1723), son of the
above referred to couple, whose services and distinction are a matter of record
and of his son, Major Alexis Alexandre St. Amant (born 1761), who with others of
Colonial military experience organized and trained the young state militia, and
as major brought his troops through the battle of New Orleans after they had
been mustered into the United States Army for that purpose, retiring to private
life on March 9, 1815, after that service was completed.
It is
interesting to note that Major Alexandré St. Amant's son, Venance, the
grandfather of Alfred D. St. Amant, was one of the pioneer physicians of
Ascension Parish and that Alfred D. St. Amant's father, Francois Alfred St.
Amant, was one of the pioneer Mississippi River pilots and captains, his later
years being spent in charge of the ferry boats operating at Baton Rouge.
Alfred D. St. Amant was born November 3, 1882, in Lovelady, Texas, though he was
reared and educated in Baton Rouge, his parents having moved to Louisiana in
1884. Besides a public school education he holds the degree of Bachelor of
Science as well as Master of Arts from the Louisiana State University.
His early work was the result of the desire to serve, so characteristic of his
ancestors, i.e., school teaching. As a public school teacher he was principal of
several leading high schools of the state, though in his early career he was
called to the State Normal School, where for six years he was in charge of the
social science department. The last position he occupied was that of professor
of history and economics in the University of Florida at Gainesville.
It
was in his early days as an educator, while teaching at the North Carolina
Agricultural and Mechanical College in Raleigh, that he married Miss Lucy
Clifton Andrews, direct descendent of Sir John and Sir Richard Hawkins (see
Ency. Brit.), and of Gov. William Hawkins (N. C., 1811-1814) and Gov. Daniel F.
Fowle (N. C., 1889-91), her grandfather. Besides these she numbers among her
close cousins such figures as Gov. Robert B. Glenn (N. C., 1905-09) and John
Sharpe Williams.
To this union there were six children born, namely:
Augusta Ford, Alfred D., Jr., Margaret Lucy, Thomas Harris, Philemon Andrews and
Francis Chester. In fact the opportunity for better providing for and training
these future citizens proved the deciding factor in causing the subject of this
sketch to enter commercial fields.
During the great war Mr. St. Amant,
not perfectly qualified in age and physique for military service, was selected
by the United States War Department as director of war aims courses and assigned
to the University of Florida to instruct the soldiers in training there. It was
at the signing of the armistice in 1918 that he was engaged as professor of
history and economics by that institution.
While to a stranger Alfred D.
St. Amant may seem an unusually quiet and unobtrusive person, those who know him
best say that he possesses a fund of knowledge equaled by few with whom he comes
in contact, an ability at conversation which immediately gives him the floor
when he cares to speak, a style of writing which is unusually easy to read, and
fighting qualities which would cause an opponent to consider long before forcing
an issue.
Besides several bulletins and pamphlets on various public
questions (see "Popular Control," 1914) Mr. St. Amant has written a number of
poems, though the latter were never offered to the public except in a few cases
and then not signed by the author.
In addition to two brothers, Chester
Phillips St. Amant, of Baton Rouge, and Samuel Edgar St. Amant, of New York, and
one sister, Mrs. G. Thomas McQuillen, of Long Beach, California, Mr. St. Amant
has many relatives in Louisiana, particularly in Ascension Parish at Gonzales,
St. Amant and Donaldsonville. All of these are noted for their leadership in
public service, though in only One case has any of them sought public office.
Suffice it to say that in this case, that of Albert Sidney St. Amant, assessor
of Ascension, he has not only been repeatedly successful but usually is
unopposed for the office.
Mr. St. Amant is a member of De Soto Lodge
Independent Order of Odd Fellows, St. James Lodge No. 47, Free and Accepted
Masons, and Washington Chapter No. 57, Royal Arch Masons, while he and Mrs. St.
Amant are members of Naomi Chapter No. 38, Order Eastern Star. At the time of
the writing of this sketch their eldest daughter, Auguste Ford St. Amant,
occupies the office of worthy advisor in Assembly No. 3, Order of the Rainbow.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 241-242.
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