James A. Nelson
Submitted by Mike Miller
James H.
Nelson president of the Webster Parish police jury, is a Louisiana
citizen of unusual talent and accomplishments, one who has
successfully combined the prosecution of large business affairs with
public services that have meant much to his community and parish.Mr.
Nelson was born in Drew County, Arkansas, in 1881, but since infancy
has lived in Louisiana. His father, T. D. Nelson, was for many years
engaged in railroad contracting, and had contracts for building the
grade of the Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railway into North
Louisiana.
During the progress of this work the family lived at Arcadia,
afterwards at Ruston, Monroe and Dubach. In all these localities
James Harvey Nelson spent some portion of his childhood. He attended
school at Little Rock, and since 1911 has been a resident and
business man of Minden. He built and for ten years
operated a
large stave mill at Sibley, this business being carried on under the
name of the Delta Stave Company. Mr. Nelson for many years has
figured prominently in the state industry of the state. He sold the
plant of the Delta Stave Company in January, 1924, but still
operates a country stave mill near Athens in Claiborne Parish.
Early in 1924 he acquired a partnership interest in the Webb Hardware & Furniture Company of Minden, and is vice president and general manager of what is one of the most successful business enterprises of the city. He is also president of the Benton Lumber Company, operating a lumber mill at Benton in Bossier Parish, and is a director of the Bank of Minden, the city's oldest and strongest bank.
Intermingled with these business activities have been many
positions of trust in public affairs and civic and church movements.
He is an elder in the First Presbyterian Church, is chairman of the
laymen's organization of the Presbytery and chairman of the Sunday
School committee of the Presbytery, and served one year as president
of the Louisiana State Sunday School Association. He is president of
the
Retail Merchants' Association at Minden, and was elected a
member of the police jury of Webster Parish in 1920, and since 1922
has been president of that body, which has the general fiscal
control of
affairs in the parish. Mr. Nelson is a thirty-second
degree Scottish Rite Mason, a Knight Templar and a Shriner.He
married Miss Olive Brown, of Fordyce, Arkansas. Her father, Rev. J.
M. Brown, was a prominent minister of the Presbyterian Church in
Arkansas. The five children of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson are: Helen,
James, Marian, Robert and Susan.
A History of Louisiana, (vol. 2), p. 181, by Henry E. Chambers.
Published by The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and
New York, 1925.