Jefferson B. Snyder,
Madison Parish, Louisiana Submitted by Dr.
Wayne G. Elliott
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Madison Coordinator's note: Although this article does not
completely qualify as a "biography", it comes close and, until
something better comes along, is the best available. Judge Snyder died October
18, 1951 and is buried in Silver Cross Cemetery in Tallulah. RPS
Jefferson B. Snyder
From an April 1938
issue of the New Orleans Times Picayune
Tallulah, La. April
15, 1938. With a healed leg as his reward for months of patient invalidism and
a constitutional amendment as a tribute for decades of public service, Jeff B.
Snyder went to his beloved camp on Lake Bruin this week to enjoy his leisure
and remember many notable good times he had at the camp.
The healing of the
leg fracture permits Judge Snyder to get about again. The amendment to the
state constitution adopted last fall by the people of Louisiana might well he
entitled "An amendment for the Retirement of Jeff B. Snyder,"
although it does not mention him by name, Act 290 of 1938 adding section 59.1
to article 7 of the constitution reads: "All district attorneys, presently
or hereafter, may retire on reaching the age of (80) eighty years if they have
served continuously for 30 years immediately preceding their retirement and
shall hereafter receive full pay for life.
Judge Snyder's 80th
birthday on January 19 made that description fit him perfectly so he retired
and now that his leg is well again he is back in his favorite camp.
Practically
Unchallenged
For many years Judge
Snyder was the virtual political boss of Madison, Tensas and East Carroll parishes.
His leadership went practically unchallenged.
Born in St. Joseph,
La., two years before the War Between the States, he witnessed in his early
boyhood the chaos of reconstruction. When it came time for little Jeff to start
to school, the family funds had dwindled appreciably. For five days out of the
week he attended the local free school and on Friday afternoons and Saturdays
he helped in his uncle's store. What little money there was left was spent on
Bob, an older brother, who was given a college education. (He later became an
outstanding lawyer and served for some time as lieutenant-governor of
Louisiana).
Young Jeff was not
satisfied with what the country schools had taught him, so he started studying
law on his own hook. His progress was retarded a great deal by his outside
work. At one time he held the job of toll keeper on a bridge, at another, clerk
in a country store and, after white people had regained control of Louisiana,
he was appointed deputy to a Democratic sheriff at St. Joseph. This was in
1879, when Jesse James and his gang appeared in Mississippi robbing the store
of Grover and Whitcomb at Washington, in Adams County.
Shortly after the
first robbery, the bandits descended upon Fayette, Miss., which is about 15
miles south of St. Joseph, and plundered the Johnson store there, taking $2000
in cash. Pursuit got too hot, so they crossed the river into Louisiana and took
possession of some deserted cabins on the Kemp Plantation just below St.
Joseph. These cabins had been left outside the levee when it had been moved
back farther, from the encroaching river. They furnished an excellent
rendezvous for the bandits and their tired horses. As soon as this hiding place
was discovered, a posse assembled, young Deputy Snyder included, and started on
its dangerous mission. They failed to capture the entire gang of robbers, but
did manage to kill two of them. Judge Snyder loves to tell this story and with
his wonderful capacity for embellishment, he makes a real "thriller"
of it.
Moved to New Orleans
In 1893, Congressman
Charles Boatner secured Jeff an appointment in the customhouse of New Orleans
as naval officer so he, his mother and sister whom, he was supporting, moved to
the city. This gave him the opportunities of completing his law course at
Tulane where he passed his bar examination. After filling the four-year term as
naval officer, he left New Orleans and made his home in Tallulah. Within a few
years, he became district attorney and remained in that capacity until his
recent retirement.
Diversified contacts,
varied experiences and a shrewd sense of humor made Jeff Snyder one of the best
yarn spinners who ever lived. After office hours, he loved to gather his
friends about him for long sessions of storytelling. For this reason he maintained
his fishing lodge about 30 miles south of Tallulah where everyone was welcome.
Here came the governor of Louisiana, the United States senator, the hunter, the
fisherman and the bootlegger. There were no invitations. Everyone just came.
The neighborhood farmer would drive up with a load of vegetables as his
contribution; the hunter, perhaps, would arrive with a pouch full of squirrels;
the fisherman with a string of perch and the bootlegger with a jug of well-aged
corn. Some brought this and some brought that and some came offering a
priceless story. It was here that one of the most famous house parties ever
staged in the South took place.
Just before the World
war, a friend of Judge Snyder invited a group of prominent New York business
men down for a week's fishing and hunting. In this group were Bob Davis, the
man Pulitzer endowed to write his daily column, "Bob Davis Recalls,"
the late Ray Long, who was editor in chief of the Cosmopolitan and allied magazines; Dr. Ross McPherson, celebrated
surgeon; Oswald C. Hering, widely-known architect who is now president of the
D. K. E. chapter and edits its quarterly, and Irvin S. Cobb, well-known writer
and humorist. With such distinguished guests to entertain, Jeff Snyder chose
the most notable Louisianians and Mississippians to be present for the
occasion, as he wanted his guests to meet the best the South had to offer. He
also brought Holt Collier, the famous negro bear hunter and his pack of 50 dogs
down from Greenville, Miss., just to add atmosphere. The woods were too dry for
hunting. Jake Smith, a comical negro preacher from St. Joseph, who called
himself the "castin' voter from Tensas parish" in carpetbag
conventions, was imported to furnish more local color. There were about 70
people in camp including hunters and fishermen from the neighborhood and the
negroes.
Talk Like Fireworks
Numerous skiffs were
tied up at the landing pier awaiting the optimistic fisherman but the only
fishing that took place occurred in the verbal form over the fragrant edge of a
mint julep cup.
Conversational
fireworks really popped as the accomplished storytellers got under way. The
less gifted sat back, satisfied to listen; content to open their mouths merely
for an occasional sip from the inevitable julep. The guests included men of
college education and extensive travel, men who had every reason for a
collection of top-notch stories with the whole world as a background.
Nonetheless, their host, Jeff Snyder, a man who had practically educated
himself and whose total wanderings covered only a small portion of the United
States, view with or surpassed the best of them.
The party was a
success in the true sense of the word. Everyone did just what he felt like
doing when he felt like doing it. A poker game progressed from dawn to dawn; a
crap game was no trouble to start; with the mere lift of a finger, the thirsty
could summon a grinning black boy who immediately provided the desired drink.
One small effort in the
way of hunting was made by Bob Davis, the renowned writer and globe trotter. He
had a special gun of which he was exceedingly proud as there were only two in
existence (the other belonging to the king of Sweden). For several days he'd
been talking about hunting and tinkering with his gun. Early in the afternoon
he dressed in complete hunting regalia and called Holt Collier to bring his
dogs. About that time, Irvin Cobb stepped out of his shower wearing only a pair
of loud trunks, looking for all the world like a broiled lobster and decided to
join the party. It was a very warm afternoon and both Bob Davis and Irv Cobb
had had some several toddies. The procession started out in fine style.
Snored Under Tree
They managed to get
as far as the shade of a large oak about 100 yards from the camp where all lay
down and went to sleep. Snoring under the tree lay an accomplished writer, a
famous humorist and a negro hunter surrounded by a pack of 50 hounds of no
particular breed. After their nap they returned to the camp with a wonderful
account of a thrilling hunt in which a mammoth bear played a prominent part; a
bruin so cunning that he eluded the South's best known bear hunter and 50
seasoned bear dogs.
Besides being a man
of action and a veteran prosecutor of crime, Jeff Snyder is a versatile and
industrious reader. He reads philosophy, biography, history and utter trash. On
the same book shelf in his home you will find the best literature of all time
side by side with the worst detective stories ever printed on pulp paper.
"Reading makes
the full man, writing the exact man and speech the ready man." Jeff Snyder
is all of these plus having a marvelous insight into human nature gained
through a long life of intelligent observation.
This is the man Governor Richard W. Leche praised so highly last fall in urging the people of Louisiana to vote for the amendment which would retire him. The people did vote for it, so on January 19 when he reached the age of 80, District Attorney Jeff B. Snyder was retired at full pay for life..