Claude Kirkpatrick

Claude Kirkpatrick (June 17, 1917—January 14, 1997) was a diversified businessman who served two terms in the Louisiana House of Representatives (1952—1960), worked to establish Toledo Bend Reservoir through his directorship of the state Department of Public Works (1960—1964), and was the administrator and then president of Baton Rouge General Medical Center (1967—1982). Kirkpatrick ran unsuccessfully for governor in the 1963 Democratic primary. In his later years, he built three shopping centers in Baton Rouge. He was also active in various state and national organizations of the Southern Baptist Convention.

Early years, education, family

Kirkpatrick (who had no middle name) was born in Glenmora in south Rapides Parish, Louisiana, to Eugene Kirkpatrick (died 1956) and the former Arlie Gill (died 1981). The senior Kirkpatrick operated a sawmill in Glenmora and then, when Claude was six years of age, relocated to Lake Charles, the seat of Calcasieu Parish in southwestern Louisiana. He was a tie inspector servicing the Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas area for Southern Pacific Railroad. Claude attended public schools there and graduated in 1934 from Lake Charles High School.

He then enrolled at Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville and in 1938 received a bachelor of arts degree in history. There, Kirkpatrick met his future wife, the former Edith Aurelia Killgore (born November 14, 1918) of Lisbon in Claiborne Parish in north Louisiana. They married in 1938 after both graduated from college.

Prior to and during World War II, Kirkpatrick worked in petroleum production in Sulphur in Calcasieu Parish. He twice volunteered for military service but was told to remain in an essential war-related industry. In 1945, the couple moved to Jennings, the seat of Jeff Davis Parish. There, they operated four businesses: a DeSoto-Plymouth automobile dealership, a lumber company, a trucking firm, and a sporting goods store. The Kirkpatricks had four children: Claude Kent Kirkpatrick (1942-1945), Thomas Killgore Kirkpatrick (born 1944), Edith Kay Kirkpatrick (born 1946), and Charles Kris Kirkpatrick (born 1948). The three surviving children are attorneys in Baton Rouge.

Political activities

In 1952, Kirkpatrick unseated Sate Representative Marion Vallee (1910-1997) of Jeff Davis Parish in the Democratic primary. He served his first term during the administration of Governor Robert F. Kennon, who in 1963 would be a gubernatorial opponent of Kirkpatrick. In 1956, he again defeated Vallee, who attempted a failed comeback bid. Kirkpatrick did not run for a third legislative term in 1960 and was succeeded by Norman L. Ordoneaux.

In the gubernatorial primaries held between December 1959 and January 1960, the Kirkpatricks worked actively in southwest Louisiana for former Governor Jimmie Davis, who defeated the mayor of New Orleans, deLesseps Story Morrison, Sr., in a hotly-contested party runoff election. Davis asked Kirkpatrick to serve as his Director of Public Works to succeed Lorris M. Wimberly of Arcadia, the seat of Bienville Parish in north Louisiana, who had once been Speaker of the Louisiana House. As head of DPW, Kirkpatrick was also chairman of the Red River Authority and the Sabine River Authority. He worked with the State of Texas and without federal funds to establish the popular Toledo Bend Reservoir, a popular destination for fishing and boating on the Louisiana-Texas boundary. The project, which emphasizes conservation and stewardship of natural resources, was completed in 1966, two years after Kirkpatrick had left DPW.

In the summer of 1960, Kirkpatrick was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, which nominated the Kennedy-Johnson ticket, an easy winner of the ten electoral votes in Louisiana. Kirkpatrick was Democrat for the rest of his life even as his state developed a two-party system. Political records show that he donated in 1979 to the last campaign of U.S. Senator Russell B. Long of Louisiana.

In 1963, Kirkpatrick ran for governor but polled only 28,578 votes (3.2 percent), having finished seventh in a 10-candidate field. To head DPW, the new governor, John McKeithen, formerly a member of the Louisiana Public Service Commission, named Leon J. Gary, Sr., a former mayor of Houma, the seat of Terrebonne Parish

Later years and legacy

Kirkpatrick left the political arena and became associated with Allied Chemical and Superior Oil companies. On August 14, 1967, the trustees of Baptist-affiliated Baton Rouge General Hospital named Kirkpatrick as hospital administrator. He was elevated to president of the hospital in 1970 and served in that capacity until 1981. Dr. Charles Prosser, a fellow hospital director and friend of Kirkpatrick's, recalled him as "a man of many talents and a most affable fellow who got things done by impressing people with their importance and worth. He . . . did a splendid job . . . and that says a lot about him as a person." Similarly, Tom Sawyer, later the chief executive officer of the hospital, described Krkpatrick as "very compassionate [with] a great empathy for people, and he really loved hispital work. . . . He viewed his job as more of a ministry than a job. That was the kind of outlook he had on things."

After leaving the hospital position, Kirkpatrick established three shopping centers in Baton Rouge: Delmont, Highland Road, and Drusilla. Over the years, Kirkpatrick was Southwest Louisiana vice president of the Calcasieu Area Boy Scouts. He was active in the United Way charitable fund, the Kiwanis Club, and the American Heart Association. He was a deacon in several Baptist churches for fifty-eight years, his last membership having been at First Baptist in Baton Rouge. He and Mrs. Kirkpatrick were active in all aspects of Baptist church governance and outreach. He was a past chairman and member of the Louisiana College board of directors. He served on the Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Board. In Baton Rouge, he was the first president of the Federation of Churches and Synagogues as well as a charter member there of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick studied for a time at the Juilliard School in New York City and much later obtained a master of arts degree in music from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. At times, she taught voice music at both LSU and McNeese State University in Lake Charles. At the invitation of Governor Edwin Washington Edwards, she served from 1977-1989 on the Louisiana Board of Regents, a panel created by the Louisiana State Constitution of 1974 to govern public higher education institutions.

During the 1963 gubernatorial campaign, Mrs. Kirkpatrick published a 38-page song book entitled Louisiana Let's Sing, a collection of favorite songs ranging from The Star-Spangled Banner to Jingle Bells compiled especially for her husband.

Kirkpatrick died in the Baton Rouge General Hospital that he had once managed, having earlier underwent five heart bypasses. He is interred in Green Oaks Memorial Park in Baton Rouge. In addition to his wife and three living children, Kirkpatrick was survived by a brother, G. Truett Kirkpatrick (1921-2007) of Lake Charles, and five grandchildren. Another brother, Augustus C. Kirkpatrick (1914-1996) of Lake Charles was the former Calcasieu Parish assessor. After Kirkpatrick's death, Mrs. Kirkpatrick deposited her husband's papers on request at McNeese State University. {{-}}