Benjamin Pavy

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Benjamin Henry Pavy (October 16, 1874 -- April 1943) was a state district judge in St. Landry and Evangeline parishes, Louisiana, who was gerrymandered out of office through the intervention of his political rival, the powerful Huey Pierce Long, Jr. One of Pavy's sons-in-law, Carl Austin Weiss, M.D., was the alleged assassin of Long though the Pavy and Weiss families have long disputed that assertion.

Pavy (pronounced PAH VEE) was born in Coulee Croche in St. Landry Parish to Alfred Henry Pavy (died 1908) and the former Laperle Guidry. He was educated in the schools of Opelousas, the seat of St. Landry Parish. He had a brother, Felix Octave Pavy, Sr. (died 1962), an Opelousas physician who was a member of the St. Landry Parish Police Jury (county commission in most states) and thereafter the Louisiana House of Representatives, having served from 1932-1936, during the time of the Long assassination.

On November 4, 1896, Pavy wed the former Ida Veazie of Opelousas. Their children included three sons, Alfred Veazie Pavy (1899-1979) and the twins Albert Lionel Pavy (1902-1986) and Alfred Dudley Pavy (1902-1930), and four daughters, Yvonne Louise Pavy Weiss Bourgeois (1908-1963), Marie Aline Pavy (1911-1998), Evelyn Laperle Pavy (1904-1974), and Ida Catherine Pavy Boudreaux (born April 22, 1922).

Pavy was employed at the age of seventeen in the parish clerk of court's office. He worked there again when his father was elected as the St. Landry Parish clerk of court. He began his law practice in Opelousas in 1901, after having read law in the office of his future father-in-law, Edward P. Veazie. Pavy was elected as as Democrat to the Sixteenth District judgeship in 1910 -- at the time there were no Republicans competitive in Louisiana -- and served until a change in the district lines caused him not to run again.

Huey Long repeated to news reporters an old claim that Edward Veazie had an African American mistress and allegedly warned Judge Pavy that if Pavy continued to oppose him, Long would announce that Pavy's family was tainted with "coffee blood".

Long also moved to have Marie Pavy dismissed from a teaching job. Marie lived for more than a year with her widowed sister Yvonne Weiss before a change in school administration permitted her to return to her teaching duties.

Both Judge and Mrs. Pavy died of cancer. The Pavys are buried in the St. Landry Catholic Church Cemetery in Opelousas.

[edit] References

"Benjamin Henry Pavy", A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. 2 (1988), p. 635


Henry E. Chambers, A History of Louisiana, Vol. 2, p. 377, American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, 1925.

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAweissC.htm

http://www.crimelibrary.com/notorious_murders/famous/huey_long/16.html

http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/la/stlandry/bios/pavybh.txt

List of Members of the Louisiana House of Representatives since 1812 (Baton Rouge: Secretary of State)