Lula Wardlow

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Lula Ethridge Warlow
Mayor of Montgomery, Grant Parish, Louisiana, USA
In office
1926–1930
Personal details
Born (1876-04-09)April 9, 1876
Grant Parish, Louisiana, United States
Died August 1, 1970(1970-08-01) (aged 94)
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Felix Graves Wardlow (married 1901-his death)
Children No children
Alma mater Moody Bible Institute
Occupation Businesswoman; Clergywoman
Religion United Methodist
One of Wardlow's later successors as mayor was her great-nephew, Stephen L. Gunn, who also served a term in the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992-1996.

Lula Ethridge Wardlow (April 9, 1876August 1, 1970) was a businesswoman, United Methodist minister, and the first woman ever elected mayor of a Louisiana community. She served from 1926-1930 in Montgomery (population 787 in 2000), a village in northern Grant Parish.

Mrs. Wardlow was born in Grant Parish to James Wesley Ethridge and the former Alpha Jane Baker. Both of her parents were from distinguished pioneer families. James Wesley Ethridge was a planter, merchant, and owner of a cotton gin. She was educated in the Montgomery public schools and studied for two years at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. On April 3, 1901, she married Felix Graves Wardlow, a merchant and farmer in Montgomery, located some forty miles north of Alexandria in north central Louisiana and twenty-five miles southeast of Natchitoches.

She became a lay preacher in 1909 and was admitted pending study and internship in the then Methodist Protestant Church in 1912. She was ordained an elder in 1916 and was conference evangelist from 1913-1920. She was the pastor of the Hicks circuit from 1921–1922 and other circuits in north Louisiana thereafter.

She was elected mayor of Montgomery as a Democrat but on a call for "reform" and incorporation of the Montgomery community. She was reelected to a second two-year term in 1928 but resigned in 1930 to devote more time to family and the ministry. Her great-nephew, Stephen Lee "Steve" Gunn, was elected Montgomery mayor some seventy-two years after Mrs. Wardlow vacated the office. Gunn, an Independent was elected in 2002 and again in 2006 with minimal opposition.

Wardlow was featured in Louisiana newspapers in the late 1920s as the state's first woman mayor. She was remembered for gravel-surfacing of the town's dirt streets and securing the first electric, water, and gas systems for the community. There was also strict enforcement of anti-gambling and prohibition laws which worked to clean up the community image. Through the years governors, gubernatorial candidates, and other politicians called upon her when they campaigned in Grant Parish.

After her political stint, Mrs. Wardlow was pastor of the Methodist Church in Colfax (pronounced COLL FAX), the Grant Parish seat of government. In 1939, she attended the historic national conference of Methodism, which officially merged her own Methodist Protestant Church with the Methodist Episcopal churches, both South and North into what became the United Methodist Church. She retired from full-time ministerial duties in 1942 but continued to accept interim assignments in rural north Louisiana for another two decades. In 1952, at the age of seventy-six, she embarked on a short missionary assignment to villages in Cuba. She has been called one of the three most important women in the 150-year history of Louisiana Methodism.

Mrs. Wardlaw died at ninety-four and is interred in the Mt. Zion United Methodist Church Cemetery in Winn Parish, east of Montgomery.

The Louisiana historian Hubert D. Humphreys, whose family roots were in the Methodist Protestant Church, was among those who wrote articles on Wardlow's unique career.

The second woman mayor in Louisiana was Myrtis Lucille Gregory Methvin, who served in Castor in Bienville Parish from 1933-1945.

References

"Lula Wardlow," A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. 2 (1988), pp. 824–825

Mable Fletcher Harrison and Lavinia McGuire McNeely, Grant Parish, Louisiana: A History (1969)

Alexandria Daily Town Talk, July 6, 1929; September 9, 1929; August 2, 1970; a Town Talk article on April 15, 2007, mistakenly refers to Wardlow as having been appointed mayor of Jena in 1920 by then Governor John M. Parker, when Wardlow was from Grant Parish, not La Salle Parish, and she was twice elected mayor.

Shreveport Times, July 16, 1967

Who's Who in Methodism (1952)

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