J. J. THOMPSON, OPELOUSAS. – J. J. Thompson, familiarly known as Jack Thompson,
Treasurer of St. Landry parish, is a native of this parish, born March 10, 1852.
He is the son of Colonel James M. and Celestine (Dupré) Thompson. Colonel James
M. Thompson was born in 1818 on the ocean, under an English flag, while his
parents were on their way as immigrants to America. His parents settled in
Illinois, near Shawneetown, where they lived and died. Life at Shawneetown grew
monotonous to Colonel Thompson, and at an early age he left his paternal roof
and went out to face the world for himself. When the war broke out between the
United States and Mexico it afforded an inviting field of excitement to his
restless disposition. As a consequence of this, he enlisted in the United States
service and served through the whole of the struggle. At its close he came to
Louisiana, studied medicine in New Orleans and became a successful practitioner
in St. Landry parish. At the breaking out of war between the States, in 1861, he
entered the Confederate States service as captain of a company which he had
organized. His company was assigned to the Second Louisiana Regiment. He was
subsequently commissioned major and afterward colonel. He was acting in the
latter capacity at the cessation of hostilities. The hardships of the war at his
age told upon his physical manhood, and as a result of this he did not resume
the duties of his profession after the war. He sold his plantation, located in
Opelousas, opened a drug store and gave his attention to general business. He
conducted a large mercantile business; was interested in a steamboat; and,
subsequently, was appointed sheriff of St. Landry parish, and finally was
elected recorder of the parish, in which latter capacity he served four years.
He died in 1885, after a life full of exciting events and general usefulness.
The mother of our subject was born in this parish of French parentage. She
became the mother of ten children, of which J. J. Thompson is the fourth in the
order of their birth.
J. J. Thompson was educated at the Louisiana State
University, but owing to the delicate state of his health he was unable to
remain at college long enough to complete his course. At an early age he was
employed in the sheriff's office, and was subsequently appointed executive
deputy in the tax collector's office. He was afterward appointed superintendent
of registration for the parish, and in this capacity served two years, at the
end of which time he went to New Orleans and studied law. He was admitted to the
bar and practised [sic] in Opelousas a short period. In 1885 he was married to
Miss Rosa Boagni, the daughter of a wealthy physician of St. Landry parish.
Finding the freedom of a plantation life more congenial to his taste than that
of an attorney's office, Mr. Thompson abandoned the profession of the law, and
he has become one of the thrifty and successful planters and stock raisers of
St. Landry parish. During a part of the time in which he had control of the
plantation he devoted himself to the culture of sugar cane, but for the last
eight years cotton planting and stock raising has been his principal vocation.
His success in the breeding of fine stock has been marked, as is attested by the
fine grade of horses and cattle which he now has on his place. Although not an
aspirant for office, Mr. Thompson was appointed returning officer for St. Landry
parish in 1874 by Governor McEnery, and was retained by Governor Nicholls, and
is the present incumbent of that office. He was elected treasurer of St. Landry
parish in June, 1888, and performs the duties of that office at the present
time. Mr. Thompson's wife was an accomplished lady and highly educated. She
became the mother of two children, Adela and Jennie. In the bloom of womanhood
and just when life had gained its strongest grasp, she was called to eternity on
June 2, 1888.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from Southwest Louisiana Biographical and Historical, edited by William Henry Perrin, published in 1891, Biographical Section, pages 80-82.
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