C.E. Byrd

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Clifton Ellis Byrd (December 14, 1859February 26, 1926) was among the most prominent educators in Louisiana in the first quarter of the twentieth century. The nationally recognized C.E. Byrd High School (founded 1925) in Shreveport, the alma mater of many of that city's civic and political leaders, bears his name. C.E. Byrd is Shreveport's oldest public high school.

Byrd was born in Bath County, Virginia (near the West Virginia state line), to John Thomas Byrd and the former Sarah Rebecca McClintic. He was not related to the Virginia Byrd family dynasty. He attended local schools, then Augusta Military Academy (closed 1984) near Staunton, and the University of Virginia at Charlottesville from 18821883. He taught school in Front Royal from 1883–1889, when he accepted a principalship in Monroe, the seat of Ouachita Parish in northeast Louisiana.

He left Monroe in 1892 to become a high school principal in Shreveport in northwest Louisiana. He served in that capacity until 1900, when he became the city superintendent of schools. After six years as superintendent, Byrd accepted the presidency of Louisiana Tech University (then Louisiana Industrial Institute) in Ruston in Lincoln Parish. He served at Tech only for a year. In 1907, he returned to Shreveport to become superintendent of the Caddo Parish public schools. He was still serving as superintendent at the time of his death.

Byrd was a delegate to the Council of Education in Louisiana in 1913 and a member of the Louisiana Teachers Association. In 1894 Byrd married the former Martha Matilda Lockhart "Mattie" McFee of Monroe (December 25, 1868September 27, 1940. They had had two children, Mary Byrd (born 1895) and Clifton Byrd, Jr. (born 1897). Clifton and Mattie Byrd are buried in Forest Park Cemetery in Shreveport.

Byrd was a Democrat at a time when virtually every elected official and most appointed officials as well were members of the state's overwhelmingly majority party. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church, the Masonic lodge, the Elks Club, Rotary Club, and Sigma Nu college fraternity.

[edit] References

  • "Clifton Ellis Byrd", A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. 1 (1988), p. 137
  • New Orleans Times-Picayune, February 27, 1926
  • Henry E. Chambers, A History of Louisiana (1925)
  • http://www.bayou.com/~cebyrd/index2.htm

http://www.plumdigital.com/2_webcards/wc26/wc26_003.html

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