Charles O. Wieck is one of the leading representatives of real estate enterprise
in his native city of Baton Rouge, and in his various operations has done and is
doing much to advance the civic and material progress of the capital city and of
East Baton Rouge Parish. He is president of the Wieck Realty Company, which owns
the Wieck Building, at the corner of Third and Laurel streets, this being one of
the leading commercial and office buildings of Baton Rouge. Mr. Wieck is the
owner of valuable real estate aside from his interest in this building, and
prominent among his local holdings is his fine home place, at the corner of St.
Philip and America streets. He is distinctly to be designated as one of the most
liberal and progressive citizens of Baton Rouge.
Mr. Wieck was born in
Baton Rouge, on the 9th of August, 1866, and is a son of the late Charles F. W.
Wieck, who was born in Germany, in 1831, and whose death occurred at his home in
Baton Rouge on the 25th of January, 1889.
Charles F. W. Wieck was reared
and educated in his native land and there learned the carpenter's trade. In
1858, when twenty-seven years of age, he came to America and engaged in the work
of his trade in the City of Quebec, Canada, where he remained two years. He
then, in 1860, established his residence in Baton Rouge, where he continued for
three years his operations as a carpenter and builder. He then engaged in the
general merchandise business, and he was for many years one of the leading
merchants of the Louisiana capital city, and he became the owner also of a large
amount of valuable real estate in Baton Rouge, as well as an extensive
plantation estate in East Baton Rouge Parish. By his ability and well ordered
activities he achieved substantial success, and his sterling character and
gracious personality won to him inviolable place in popular confidence and
esteem. He was a staunch supporter of the cause of the democratic party, and his
civic loyalty was shown in a service of several years as a member of the City
Council. He and his wife were zealous members of the First Presbyterian Church,
and he was prominently identified with the Masonic fraternity, in which his
affiliations were with St. James Lodge No. 47, A. F. and A. M., and Washington
Chapter No. 57, R. A. M., in his home city, and with DeMolay Commandery of
Knights Templar in the City of New Orleans. His wife, whose maiden name was
Catherine Wagenblast, was born in Germany, in 1834, and was nearly eighty years
of age at the time of her death, December 29, 1913. She was a daughter of Conrad
Wagenblast, who was born in the year 1802, and who lived retired in the City of
Baton Rouge for a number of years prior to his death, which here occurred in
1876. Upon coming with his family to America, Mr. Wagenblast engaged in farm
enterprise in the State of New York, near Buffalo, and there he remained until
his removal to Louisiana. Mr. and Mrs. Wieck are survived by five children:
Sophia is the wife of Edward Wax, and they maintain their home in Baton Rouge,
Mr. Wax being a large property owner and still actively identified with farm
industry, and being. in 1924, a member of the police jury of East Baton Rouge
Parish; Charles O., of this sketch, was the next in order of birth; John A. is
au accountant by vocation and resides at Baton Rouge; Miss Annie D. still
maintains her home in her native city, as does also Edward F., who is the
youngest of the children and who here holds the position of master of
transportation for the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana.
Charles O.
Wieck attended both private schools and the public schools in Baton Rouge, and
thereafter was for three years a student in the Louisiana State University. Upon
leaving the university, in 1882, he took a position in the contracting
department of the Yazoo & .Mississippi Valley Railroad, and after five years of
service in this connection he was for two years in the employ of the Texas &
Pacific Railroad Company. He then became associated with his father in the
mercantile business, and this alliance continued until the death of his honored
father in 1889, when he assumed control of the large and old established
business, which he successfully continued until 1919, when he made a profitable
disposal of the same. In the meanwhile he had become proprietor of the
well-known hotel designated as the Sumter House, and this likewise he conducted
until 1919. He also identified himself actively with plantation industry in East
Baton Rouge Parish, and after the lapse of almost fifteen years he sold his fine
plantation property in 1915. Since 1919 Mr. Wieck has been one of the leading
exponents of the real estate business at Baton Rouge, and his operations have
been of broad scope and importance, his offices being maintained in the Wieck
Building, of which mention is made in the opening paragraph of this review. He
has been for a bug period of years a member or the democratic executive
committee of the City of Baton Rouge, and has given yeoman service in advancing
the party cause. He is one of the active members and staunch supporters of the
Baton Rouge Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Wieck is affiliated with the
following named Masonic bodies: St. James Lodge No. 47. A. F. and A. M., of
which he is a past master; Washington Chapter No. 57, R. A. M.; Plains
Commandery No. 11, Knights Templar and, in the City of New Orleans, Jerusalem
Temple of the Mystic Shrine.
He is a member also of Capital Lodge No. 29,
Knights of Pythias, and he and his wife are active members of the First
Presbyterian Church.
September 11, 1904, recorded the marriage of Mr.
Wieck and Miss Laura Randolph, daughter of the late Dr. Peter Randolph and
Josephine (Courtney) Randolph, both of whom died in New Orleans, Doctor Randolph
having been a prominent physician and surgeon and having had valuable plantation
interests. Mr. and Mrs. Wieck have no children.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 392-393.
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