John Keller Griffith, M. D. The early Colonial settlers in America were
undoubtedly men of courage and resourcefulness. Among those who braved the
perils of the sea and the dangers of an unknown land three brothers of the name
of Griffith set sail from their native Wales, and after months of voyaging
reached the country where their descendants still live and prosper, in lives and
character reflecting credit on the name. One Griffith brother settled finally in
Pennsylvania, one in Kentucky, and the third in Mississippi. It is from the
Kentucky branch that Dr. John Keller Griffith, a representative citizen and
leading physician and surgeon of Slidell, Louisiana, and a veteran of the World
war, traces his ancestral line.
Doctor Griffith was born at Port Hudson,
East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, October 16, 1882. His parents were William
P. and Henrietta (Williams) Griffith, and his paternal grandfather was William
Griffith, who was born in 1803 near Paducah, Kentucky, and died at Port Hudson,
Louisiana, March 12, 1888. In 1828 he came from Kentucky to East Feliciana
Parish, removing later to East Baton Rouge Parish, where he became an extensive
farmer. He married Sarah Croft, who was born in 1815 in South Carolina, and died
at Port Hudson in 1894.
William P. Griffith was born in East Feliciana
Parish, Louisiana, September 12, 1845, and died at Port Hudson, March 3, 1910.
He was a veteran of the war between the states, having interrupted his
preparatory school course to become a soldier in the Confederate army, with
which he served throughout the war. During the remainder of his life he was
mainly concerned in the operation of his large estates, although at times the
duties of public office also engaged him. For two terms he was a member of the
Police Jury, representing the Fourth Ward of East Baton Rouge Parish. An ardent
democrat all his life, he possessed considerable influence in local political
circles, was a Royal Arch Mason, and a member of the Baptist Church. He married
Henrietta Williams, who was born November 30, 1860, in Pointe Coupee Parish,
Louisiana, and died November 8, 1908, at Port Hudson. Their children were:
Willie, who died in infancy; John Keller; Eugenia, who died at the age of
thirty-six years, the wife of W. S. McKowen, a merchant and farmer at Lindsay,
Louisiana; Pearl, who is the wife of Hon. Delos R. Johnson, of Franklinton,
Louisiana, a lawyer and member of the State Senate; and Henrietta, who is the
wife of Alec C. McKowen, a farmer and stock raiser near Lindsay.
Doctor
Griffith received his early educational training in both private and public
schools in East Baton Rouge Parish, then attended the Louisiana State
university, through his junior year, when he entered Tulane University, where he
had four years in the medical department, and after two years of practical
experience as ambulance surgeon in the Charity Hospital, New Orleans, was
graduated from Tulane in the class of 1907 with his degree of M, D. During
University life he had taken an interested part in its various activities, of
which the Greek letter fraternities are so prominent a feature, and is a member
of the academic Kappa Sigma, and of the medical 155 Phi Chi. In 1907 he opened
his first office at Slidell, and engaged in medical practice here for fourteen
months, when he was appointed assistant superintendent of the East Louisiana
Hospital for the Insane at Jackson. After an experience of fourteen months he
resigned this office and returned to private practice at Slidell, where he has
remained as one of the town's most valued exponents of medical science.
Answering the call of the Government during the World war for expert medical
service, on March 8, 1918, Doctor Griffith volunteered and was sent to Fort
Sill. Oklahoma, was commissioned lieutenant in the Medical Corps and served on
the medical staff of the base hospital at Fort Sill until he was honorably
discharged April 4, 1919. He is identified with the representative medical
organizations of the country, being a member of the Louisiana State Medical
Society, the American Medical Association, the Southern Medical Association, the
Sixth Congressional Medical Society, and the St. Tammany Parish Medical Society,
of which he is president.
Doctor Griffith was married at Slidell,
Louisiana, December 21, 1912, to Miss Vivian C. Comfort, a lady of many
accomplishments, a graduate of the Moffett McLaurin Institute at Meridian,
Mississippi. She is a daughter of the late Frank and Carrie (Hackett) Comfort,
the former of whom was a railroad man in Mississippi, where his death occurred.
Dr. and Mrs. Griffith have two children: John Keller, born December 14, 1918;
and Carolyn Vivian, born November 3, 1920. Doctor Griffith owns a handsome
residence situated on Teddy Avenue, and his offices are in the Bank of Slidell
Building. He is a Royal Arch Mason, a member of Slidell Lodge No. 311, A. F. and
A. M., and Pontchartrain Chapter No. 68, R. A. M., and belongs also to Bonfouca
Tribe, Improved Order of Red Men, and Rathbone Lodge No. 104, Knights of
Pythias. In political life he is a democrat, and at times has served in
positions of public responsibility, at present being chairman of the New Orleans
Chef Menteur Highway Commission.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, page 155.
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