Wikipedia talk:Deletion review/Log/2007 April 20
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Where did the discussion of Briefsism go? If it was speedy closed, shouldn't it be noted in the log page? --MalcolmGin Talk / Conts 16:30, 20 April 2007 (UTC)
ADD A NEW ENTRY BELOW THIS LINE IN THE FORMAT: ====PAGE_NAME====
UNDELETE_REASON Billy Hathorn 16:32, 21 April 2007 (UTC)
{{subst:Newdelrev/pg=James H. Boyce|reason=UNDELETE_easily qualifies for notability as a STATE party chairman}} Billy Hathorn 16:32, 21 April 2007 (UTC)
The article follows: Mr. Boyce was a state party chairman from 1972-1976, a philanthropist in Baton Rouge. He is cited in the Clifton White book on the "Draft Goldwater Movement" as well as Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report in 1974 when he was chairman. He is quoted in a January 1979 article in the Baton Rouge Morning Advocate as a former party chairman.
A state party chairman is an ELECTED position -- elected by the elected delegates to the party state central committee in Baton Rouge. There are 144 members of each party's central committee, one for each of the 105 state representatives and one for each of the 39 state senators. The chairman's term is normally four years. Mr. Boyce served a full term. Some chairmen have resigned after two years.
While he was chairman, his party gained its first two seats in the U.S. House since Reconstruction. He was unable to find a Senate candidate in the Watergate year of 1974. One of the editors said he "accomplished nothing"!
There are articles on other state party chairmen, including the Democratic chairman Arthur C. Watson, who served at the same time Boyce did.
Billy Hathorn 16:32, 21 April 2007 (UTC)
James Harvey "Jimmy" Boyce, Sr. (October 6, 1922 - May 15, 1990), was a Baton Rouge businessman and a pioneer in the development of the Republican Party in Louisiana. He served as state party chairman from 1972 to 1976. He was also involved in philanthropic endeavors and was a benefactor of the Baton Rouge Area Foundation.
Boyce was born in Carrollton, Missouri, to Clarence George Boyce and the former Nora Clark, both natives of Iowa. Clarence Boyce did levee construction work along the Mississippi River and relocated his family to Baton Rouge. Young Boyce graduated from Baton Rouge High School and Culver Military Academy in Culver, Indiana. He also attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge for a year.
He served as a pilot in the United States Navy from 1942-1943. Boyce married the former June Thibaut (born September 11, 1921), a native of the village of Napoleonville, the seat of Assumption Parish, and a graduate of Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Virginia, where her great-aunt was on the faculty.
Boyce became well-known in Baton Rouge business and professional circles as the city's Caterpillar Company dealer, a position from which he retired in 1984. He sat on many civic boards, including the Baton Rouge Airport Commission, National Bank Board, Junior Achievement, the Better Business Bureau, and the National Alliance of Business, a creation of the administration of U.S. President Richard M. Nixon. Boyce was also involved in philanthropic endeavors and was a benefactor of the Baton Rouge Area Foundation.
Like most Louisiana Republicans, Boyce was originally a Democrat. Voter registrars often advised new registrants to remain within the Democratic fold or be unable to vote in competitive races except for U.S. president, constitutional amendment elections, or tax referenda. Therefore, the Democratic registration as late as 1960 was often in excess of 98 or 99 percent. In 1963, while still a nominal Democrat, Boyce went with a group of mostly Republican conservatives to urge then U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona to seek the presidency in 1964. Goldwater was at first reluctant to take on the challenge but nevertheless declared his candidacy early in 1964, when the Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson had been president for only two months and the favorite for a full term of his own.
Boyce switched parties and became the campaign treasurer for the gubernatorial election of his friend, Charlton Havard Lyons, Sr., of Shreveport. Boyce and his wife attended Republican National Conventions held in San Francisco in 1964 and in Miami Beach in both 1968 and 1972.
Boyce was elected state chairman to succeed the Lafayette businessman Charles C. de Gravelles. With Boyce's guidance, the Louisiana GOP offered Roy C. Strickland as an unsuccessful candidate against the Democrat Gillis William Long in the Eighth Congressional District in 1972. Strickland said that Boyce was "one of the initial sources of funding for my campaign, he was the financial heartbeat for many of the candidates, without him and his seed money, a lot of us would have never gotten off the ground."
Under Boyce's tutelage, the Louisiana GOP participated in the 49-state sweep for Nixon, having lost the presidential vote only in West Feliciana Parish. Moreover, under Boyce the still fledgling party did capture its first two seats in the United States House of Representatives since Reconstruction, with the election in 1972 of David Conner Treen in the New Orleans suburbs and William Henson Moore in a 1975 special election, which was a rerun of the regular November 1974 general election in the Baton Rouge district.
Boyce told the Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report that Louisiana Republicans were "so badly outnumbered that we can't find enough candidates to run in local elections," a problem that still plagued the party early in the 21st Century. Boyce said that his party may have won more legislative seats in the general election held on February 1, 1972, had Republican located more competitive candidates in districts receptive to a two-party message. Boyce said that the party could not find a suitable candidate to challenge U.S. Senator Russell B. Long in 1974, who defeated Insurance Commissioner Sherman A. Bernard of Jefferson Parish in the Democratic primary. He discouraged finding "sacrificial lamb" candidates or "going through the motions of running. The candidate's feelings get hurt. We have to have a good candidate and financing for him." In the fall of 1974, Boyce said that Louisiana Republicans would not be hurt by the Watergate scandal because it had "so little to lose." But Watergate caused missed opportunities for southern Republicans. Therefore, the reelection of Treen to Congress in 1974 and the victory of Moore in 1975 were gratifying to the Louisiana GOP.
Boyce was Episcopalian. There are three Boyce sons: James, Jr. (born 1943), John Clark (born 1945) and Jerry Thibaut (born 1950).
Preceded by Charles C. de Gravelles, Jr., of Lafayette Louisiana Republican State Chairman James Harvey "Jimmy" Boyce, Sr., of Baton Rouge 1972–1976 Succeeded by John Hamilton Cade, Jr., of Alexandria
[edit] References Billy Hathorn, "The Republican Party in Louisiana", (Master's thesis, Northwestern State University at Natchitoches, 1980)
Mrs. June Boyce to Billy Hathorn, March 5, 2007
Baton Rouge Sunday Advocate, January 27, 1980
F. Clifton White with William J. Gill, Suite 3505: The Story of the Draft Goldwater Movement, Arlington House, 1967, p. 39
Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, October 26, 1974, p. 2962
http://www.braf.org/page10243.cfm
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_H._Boyce"