Search
Last Name:
First Name:
Log In

Advanced Search Surnames

Most Wanted
What's New
Bookmarks
Statistics

Photos
Histories
Documents
Videos
Recordings
Albums
All Media
Cemeteries
Headstones

Places
Notes
Dates and Anniversaries

Reports
Sources
Repositories
Change Language

Contact Us
Register for a User Account
   
Our Family Genealogy Pages

Histories

» Show All     «Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 42» Next»

Biography of 	Lougue, Hon. Charles St. John the Baptist, then Orleans Parish, Louisiana
Submitted by 	Mike Miller September 2000

*************************************************
Submitted to the LAGenWeb Archives
************************************************
Copyright. All rights reserved.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/copyright.htm

http:/www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/la/lafiles.htm
************************************************  

Hon. Charles Louque, of New Orleans, was admitted to the bar, by the University of Louisiana, 
on the 2nd of April, 1866, and has since then been in continuous active practice. He began the 
study of law on November 20, 1865.

He was born in the Parish of St. John the Baptist, on November 29, 1845.  His father was 
Norbert Louque and his mother was Candide Delhommer, a member of a French family of Louisiana.

Charles Louque, one of the seventeen children born to his father, grew up on his father's 
plantation to the age of twelve, was educated by private tutors and in private schools at 
New Orleans, spent one year in Spring Hill College of Alabama, and three years in old Jefferson 
College, Parish of St. James.  He left college during the war between the states and was in 
active service during 1864-65.

He has the distinction of being the only living graduate of Louisiana University of his class 
of 1863. One of his classmates was the late Chief Justice White of the United States Supreme 
Court, and they were together in the office of Edward Bermudez, late Chief Justice of the 
Supreme Court of Louisiana, during a period of three years.

Mr. Louque has always enjoyed a large and lucrative practice, and his name appears in every 
volume of the reports of the Supreme and other Courts in Louisiana, in connection with cases 
in which he was attorney on one side or the other.  He has also appeared many times before 
the United States, Supreme Court.  He compiled, digested and published in 1878 a digest of 
the decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court.  From 1884 to 1888 he was a member of the City 
Council of New Orleans, during Mayor Fitspatrick's administration, and was chairman of the 
public order committee.

He was elected state senator during five consecutive terms.  He was first elected to the 
State Senate in 1902. and at successive quadrennial elections was re-elected, finally 
retiring alter twenty years of consecutive service in 1922.

The public service for which he will perhaps best be remembered was the initiative beginning 
in 1887 and his long continued efforts to obtain the drainage and reclamation of the lands in 
and around New Orleans, making such lands available not only for agriculture but also for 
residence purposes.

Mr. Louque married, in 1871, Miss Edna Stewart.  Six children were born to said marriage.  
Four girls are still living, one of whom graduated as a lawyer in Tulane University in 1896.

A History of Louisiana, (vol. 2), pp. 13-14, by Henry E. Chambers.  
Published by The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, 1925.

Bio for Charles Louque

Charles Louque was born in 1845, and in 1871 married Miss Edna Stewart, daughter of Samuel Stewart and Marguerite Nisida Giquel.
(taken from Rootsweb)


Owner of originalMike Miller
DateSep 2000
Placehttp:/www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/la/lafiles.htm
File namel-000029.txt
File Size2.99k
Linked toCharles Louque

» Show All     «Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 42» Next»




  

This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding, Copyright © 2001-2006, created by Darrin Lythgoe, Sandy, Utah. All rights reserved.