Clyde V. Ratcliff Explained

Clyde Vernon Ratcliff, Sr.
Birth Date:26 July 1879
Birth Place:Liberty, Mississippi
Death Place:Newellton, Tensas Parish, Louisiana
Office:Member of the Louisiana Senate
Term Start:1944
Term End:1948
Preceded:Andrew L. Sevier
Succeeded:Brenham C. Crothers
Alma Mater:Jefferson Military Academy
Occupation:Cotton planter
Party:Democrat
Spouse:Carrie Lou Muir
Children:4

Clyde Vernon Ratcliff, Sr. (July 26, 1879  - October 2, 1952), was an American cotton planter and politician from Newellton, Louisiana, who served as a Democrat from 1944 to 1948 in the Louisiana State Senate. He represented the delta parishes: Tensas, Madison, East Carroll, and Concordia,[1] a rich farming region along the Mississippi River in eastern Louisiana ranging from Vidalia to Lake Providence. The four parishes elected two senators at the time, and Ratcliff's seat-mate was Andrew L. Sevier of Tallulah in Madison Parish.

Early life and education

Ratcliff was born in Liberty, Mississippi and raised in Adams County. He was educated at Jefferson Military Academy in Washington near Natchez in Adams County.

Career

He owned the Elkridge Plantation near Newellton in northern Tensas Parish and also engaged in the management of plantation properties of the Davis family, descendants of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States of America.

His older brother by four years, A. Bonds Ratcliff, also a graduate of Jefferson Military Academy, was a plantation manager and a deputy to Tensas Parish Sheriff John Hughes. In 1930, Bonds Ratcliff succeeded William Mackenzie Davidson as the mayor of the parish seat of St. Joseph, a position which he held until 1932.[2] Bonds Ratcliff was thereafter the Tensas Parish clerk of court.[3]

Prior to his single-term election to the state Senate, which corresponded with the administration of Governor Jimmie Davis, who coincidentally owned farmland in Tensas Parish, Clyde Ratcliff served on the Fifth District Levee Board and as president of the Tensas Parish Police Jury, the parish governing body. He was a charter member of Newellton Rotary International and a Methodist.[4]

Personal life

Both Clyde and Bonds Ratcliff married daughters of the wealthy planter Douglass Muir, who died in August 1918. Clyde and the former Carrie Lou Muir (1883–1958), had four children, Mrs. G. E. Thomas, Douglass Horton "Buddy" Ratcliff (1906–1984), Clyde Ratcliff, Jr. (1910–1977), and Virginia Ratcliff Wilkerson (1908–1974), the wife of James Clifton Wilkerson, I (1902–1955), and herself a 19-year member of the Tensas Parish School Board.

Ratcliff died at home; after services at Newellton Union Church, he was interred at Legion Memorial Cemetery.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Membership in the Louisiana State Senate, 1880–2012. legis.state.la.us. July 15, 2013. August 2, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200802231524/http://senate.la.gov/Documents/Membership/Documents/SenateMembership1880ForwardRevisedMar2011.pdf. dead.
  2. Web site: List of mayors of St. Joseph, Louisiana. usgwarchives.net. August 2, 2013.
  3. Book: Matthew Reonas, Once Proud Princes: Planters and Plantation Culture in Louisiana's Northeast Delta, From the First World War Through the Great Depression. Baton Rouge

    Louisiana State University Ph.D. dissertation, December 2006, pp. 267–268

    . August 2, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130921054752/http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-11082006-162523/unrestricted/jmreonasdiss.pdf. September 21, 2013. dead.
  4. Obituary of Clyde V. Ratcliff, Sr., Tensas Gazette, October 8, 1952.
  5. Web site: Interments at Legion Memorial Cemetery in Newellton. files.usgwarchives. August 2, 2013.