Hon. Richard Flournoy Walker. For many years before the public in various public
offices of importance, Hon. Richard Flournoy Walker, speaker of the Louisiana
House of Representatives, is likewise one of the leaders of the bar of Baton
Rouge, and has established an enviable private and public record throughout the
state.
Mr. Walker was born February 16, 1868, in Chickasaw County,
Mississippi, a son of Andrew Jackson and Elizabeth (Pound) Walker, and a member
of a family which was founded in this country by his great-great-grandfather,
who came from England. His grandfather, James F. (Rock) Walker, was born in
Alabama, and when a young man migrated to Chickasaw County, Mississippi. There
he accumulated large land holdings and many slaves, and operated extensively as
a planter and stock raiser until his death in 1880, when he was over seventy
years of age. He was likewise prominent in public life, and for many years was a
member of the Mississippi State Senate, representing what was then known as
Chickasaw territory. "Rock" Walker married a Miss Cooper, who was born in
Alabama and died in Chickasaw County.
Andrew Jackson Walker was born in
Chickasaw County, Mississippi, where he was reared, educated and married, and as
a young man entered the ministry of the Baptist Church. He occupied pulpits in
various parts of Northeast Mississippi, and was one of the well known and
greatly beloved men of his cloth. About 1902 he retired from his ministerial
labors and moved to Texas, where his death occurred in 1908. In politics he was
a democrat. During the war between the states he saw active service throughout
the struggle under the flag of the Confederacy. Reverend Walker married
Elizabeth Pound, who was born in Chickasaw County, Mississippi, and died in
Oktibbeha County, that state, in 1890. They becaine the parents of the following
children: W. Pierce, a farmer, who died in Webster County, Mississippi; Bayless
V., who is engaged in agricultural pursuits in Arizona; James L., a farmer of
Webster County, Mississippi; Richard Flournoy; Andrew J., an employe of the
Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, now residing at Baton Rouge; Dodie, the widow
of the late Jesse Jones, a farmer of Dallas, Texas, where she makes her home;
Dita, the wife of James Spencer, a farmer of Texas; and Dalma, who died at the
age of nineteen years.
Richard Flournoy Walker was educated in the public
and private schools of Mississippi, and in 1891 was graduated from the
Mississippi State Normal College with the degree of Bachelor of Science. In the
following year he moved to Greensburg, St. Helena Parish, Louisiana, where he
was elected president of Norvilla College, and retained this post for three
years. In 1896 he took up his residence at Clinton, where he began reading law
under the preceptorship of the late Judge W. F. Kernan, subsequently entering
Tulane University, from the law department of which institution he was graduated
in the class of 1897, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Laws. He was admitted
to the bar in May of the same year and since that time has enjoyed a constantly
increasing reputation and clientele in the field of general civil and criminal
law. His offices in Clinton were situated on Courthouse Square.
On the
1st of November, 1924, Mr. Walker removed to Baton Rouge, where he has residence
at 629 North Street, and office in the Triad Building.
A democrat in
politics, Mr. Walker was a member of the Town Council of Clinton, Louisiana, for
two terms, from 1898 until 1902, and in 1904 was elected a member of the
Louisiana House of Representatives, where he remained for one term. He then
again took up his law practice, to which he gave his undivided attention until
1913, in which year he was elected to the constitutional convention. As
representative of East Feliciana Parish, he was elected to the House of
Representatives in 1920, and was chosen as speaker, which position he holds at
this time. He was a member of the constitutional convention of 1921, which gave
the state its present Constitution, and for the past four years has been a
member of the Sixth Congressional Committee of the democratic party. His
religious connection is with the Baptist Church, and as a fraternalist he holds
membership in Olive Lodge No. 52, F. and A. M., Clinton; Baton Rouge Lodge No.
490, B. P. O. E.; and Clinton Camp, W. 0. W. During the World war Mr. Walker
endeavored to enlist, but was not called into active service.
On June 15,
1898, at Clinton, Louisiana, Mr. Walker was united in marriage with Miss
Gertrude Knox, a graduate of Silliman College, Clinton, and a daughter of James
P. and Gertrude (Allspaugh) Knox, both deceased, Mr. Knox having been a merchant
at Clinton. Two children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Walker: Elise and James
Knox. The former is the wife of Benjamin F. Appleby, a farmer and stockman of
Slaughter, this state. James Knox Walker is a student in the law department of
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, and an employe of the Standard Oil
Company of Louisiana. During the World war he enlisted in the United States
Navy, and was in the service two years, subsequently being held in reserve until
1923.
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 239-240.
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