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Political
Pomp: Political Storytelling in Louisiana
By C. Renée Harvison
Christian
"They take their politics
seriously here in Louisiana. I think Louisiana is where politics
was born in the United States of America. I think we have the
best politics in the world." --Max Greig, Cajun, St. Martinville
To know the hearts and minds
of Louisianians is to know politics--a topic which has provided
more grist for the state's storytelling mill and which has unified
its various peoples like no other. Whether Creole or Cajun, Isleño
or Italian, Anglo or African American, a Louisianian has either
heard or told a political story.
 Politics is an important concern in Louisiana and the cultural landscape reflects this before an election. Political signs in Eunice, Louisiana, October 1990.
It is no wonder that we tell
so many of these stories, considering the central role that politics
has played in the development of Louisiana's culture. Together,
the people of Louisiana have sampled and survived various types
of politics under the dominions of France, Spain, Great Britain,
and the United States. Many hands have stirred the state's political
pot, following no single recipe. But the ingredients have included
dictatorial authority, complicated bureaucracy, carpetbag rule,
laws based on the Code Napoleon, parishes as the governmental
unit instead of the typical county, the establishment of a much-disputed
lottery in 1868 and again in 1991, many governmental factions
and scandals, and an assassination of its most ambitious governor.
After nearly three centuries of brewing, the result is a political
system which continues to be colorful, controversial, and confusing.
Louisianians cope with the confusion through a sense of humor,
which is evident in their numerous political stories.
From its political start,
Louisiana has been a land of scandal. In the early eighteenth
century, Scottish gambler John Law devised a scheme which cheated
thousands of men and women of their money as they crossed the
Atlantic from Europe to a Louisiana which Law had falsely described
as a land full of waiting wealth. The Marquis de Vaudreuil, governor
in the 1740s, introduced the area to more corruption when he
started practicing political kickbacks. As the area fell into
the various hands of the Spanish, of the French, of the Americans
with the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, of the Federals during the
Civil War, and into those in charge of Reconstruction after the
war years, an environment was being created in which political
shenanigans thrived.
This backdrop ultimately
was the setting for an era in Louisiana history which remains
unrivaled both in the effect it had on the people of the state
and in the number of stories it spawned. From 1928 to 1935, Louisiana
was the hotbed of governmental dispute. Huey Pierce Long was
at the helm of a powerful, political machine and became the unstated
dictator of the state. Until his assassination in Baton Rouge
in 1935, in the very capitol building he had had constructed,
Long ran Louisiana with a domination unaccustomed to American
politics. First as governor and then as a member of the United
States Senate, he was either the demigod of his followers or
the antagonist of his opposers. There was no in between.
Often, devotion to Huey caused
severe splits, among townspeople, friends, and even families.
Dorothy Peroyea, an Anglo resident of Greensburg, experienced
this in her own family:
"Well, my grandfather
thought Huey Long was the worst person in the world. Just thought
he was terrible. What he said was, "I can see through him.
He's a politician, and he's saying all the things that people
want to hear. But he's not a good man." Then, my daddy (Thomas
Holland) went to the Senate, and Daddy soon saw that if you were
not with Huey Long, you may as well go home. So Daddy tried to
be friendly with him.
"My daddy's brother
and family sided with my grandfather. It almost caused bad relations
between my father and his family, who had always been so close."
Louisiana folklore has manifested
legends of heroes in various regional characters, such as Benjamin
Vernon Lily, the strongman of Morehouse Parish, and Jean Lafitte,
who patrolled the coast of South Louisiana. But none have taken
on such heroic proportions as Huey Long, following a long line
of epic champions like King Arthur, Saint George, and Robin Hood,
who despite incredible odds and obstacles defeated evil forces
and became the heroes of the common man. Long also follows in
the tradition of such American heroes as Davy Crockett and Jim
Bowie, everyday men who died defending the Alamo and what they
believed in. Although Long was neither of royal lineage nor a
lionhearted frontiersman, he was like them in that his life and
deeds follow a heroic pattern. He came forward in a time of economic
crisis for Louisiana, gained stature with the common folk, and
in the years following his assassination, became almost venerable.
Consequently, he has become a hero whose deeds continue to be
retold in the oral tradition.
Like many American heroes,
Huey Long was of humble beginnings. He was the product of poverty
stricken but outspoken Winn Parish. Just prior to Louisiana's
decision to join the Civil War, the parish, unwilling to join
the fight to save other men's slaves, declared itself "The
Free State of Winn." After the war, much of Winn Parish
became Populist, a part of the people whose goal was to wipe
out the rule of the wealthy. In the early twentieth century,
many in Winn declared themselves Socialist believe rs in better
chances for the common man. Winn Parish was also staunchly Protestant,
led by Bible-thumping, gospel-thundering preachers.
All of these environmental
and historical influences were to have a profound effect on Huey,
in his political philosophy of "Every Man a King" and
in his evangelical method of using dramatic tones and personal
parables to win others over to that philosophy. Joseph Aaron,
a Cajun resident of Iowa, Calcasieu Parish, captured the spirit
of Huey's drama when he recalled the time the then-future governor
campaigned at Iowa High School:
"I can still see Huey
Long up there waving his hands, talking. I can still see it like
today. And he made a talk there on something I'll never forget
. . . .
"Huey Long said, 'Now,
listen folks, y'all stick with me.' He said, 'The other day,
I went fishing with this friend of mine. He fell out of the boat.'
He said, 'I reached over the boat to pick him up, and his hand
came off. So I threw his hand in the boat. I reached over and
caught him by the leg and his leg came off!' He said, 'I looked
down at my friend and I said, 'How in the hell can I save you
if you don't stick together?' Y'all stick with me, and I'll save
all of y'all!'
"I'll never forget that
for as long as I live."
Long died a hero's death,
shot down at the height of his career and power. His assassination
in 1935 is as steeped in controversial stories as his political
career. The official account is that he was killed by Dr. Carl
Weiss of Baton Rouge. Other stories insist that it was Long's
bodyguards, while others believe that Al Capone's men killed
Huey because he had stopped their rum-running business on the
Mississippi River. One rumor still circulating is that President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, threatened by Huey's rising power (his
platform to make every man a king had won masses of followers)
and aspirations toward the White House, was responsible for the
Louisiana governor's assassination.
After Long's death, his political
machine eventually fell apart. But Louisianians throughout the
state still tell stories about the rule of Huey Long like it
was yesterday. Perhaps it is because we continue to be amazed
at his genius. John T. Campbell, a resident of Minden in Webster
Parish, summed Huey up this way:
"Huey was the most outstanding
individual I've ever known. He's the most brilliant man I've
ever known. He was, in every field, brilliant . . . . He could
be a statesman among statesmen. He could get down with the lowest
people in the world. Or he could be an s.o.b. among s.o.b.'s.
He got along with everybody and he was always out front."
Louisiana's people can assume
that they will never again be swayed into such a political regime,
yet we continue to marvel at the man and his methods. We understand
his politically ambitious motives, but the stories still circulating
about Huey Long have created a hero.
Other politicians are the
subjects of anecdotes, such as Sam Jones, the governor who brought
reform to the state in the early 1940s, and Earl Long, who had
his own intense political career, distinctly different from his
older brother's. Many expected him to carry the strength of the
Long political torch, but Earl was not Huey. He lacked his genius,
his strategy, and his appeal. He shared, however, Huey's love
of politics, the necessary tenacity to achieve office, and like
Huey, Earl's strongest support came from the poor in the state.
Earl managed to keep the
Long name alive in Louisiana politics a while longer by serving
as lieutenant governor from 1937 to 1939, and then as governor
from 1939-40 (after the resignation of Governor Richard Leche),
1948-1952, and 1956-1960. When he died, he had created as many
enemies as his brother. The Honorable Hiram J. Wright, a retired
judge and resident of the Longs' hometown, Winnfield, related
the following two stories about the deaths of the two brothers,
both of which demonstrate the intensity the public once felt
toward the Longs:
"At Earl Long Park here,
on the east side of town, they'd buried Earl right there and
put a lot of concrete over his grave to hold up the statue of
Earl that's on top of his grave.
"The cement man had
poured all that cement there and was out there one day finishing
the cement, smoothing it. A local Presbyterian pastor walked
by. Saw all that cement on top of that grave and said, 'You know,
I don't believe I'd want all that cement on top of my grave come
Judgment Day.'
"The old cement finisher
didn't even look up. He just spit that tobacco juice out there
on the grave, said, 'Don't worry about that, Preacher, he ain't
goin' that way.'
"Another story that
was related to me, Squire Kidd was his name. When Huey Long was
shot, of course all the country people supported Huey Long, practically.
In every parish in North Louisiana, they gathered up in towns.
"Here, they gathered
up at the courthouse to get rides to Baton Rouge. They were running
school buses down there. Anybody that had a car and was going
down to Baton Rouge would stop at the courthouse to pick up some
people to go if they didn't have a ride. Highways weren't the
same then. It wasn't easy to get to Baton Rouge from Winnfield
or anywhere else in North Louisiana. The roads are now much better
because of what Huey had done.
"But anyway, Squire
showed up that morning. Brand new linen suit. New shirt, new
tie, new shoes, new straw hat, lookin' great. Everybody was amazed
at how good Squire looked. One of 'em said, 'Squire, you goin'
to the funeral?'
"He said, "Hell,
no, but I approve of it.'"
With the gubernatorial election
of 1960, Louisiana temporarily entered a new and quieter era
of politics. Jimmie H. Davis, who had served from 1944 to 1948
as governor, was again elected. Not many stories are told about
this time in the state's political history. A quiet man with
a drawling voice, the easy-going Davis was the opposite from
the Longs' flamboyant personalities. An uncontroversial figure
whose time in office created little dispute, Davis did not provide
much fodder for tales about him. However, like Huey, who was
noted for his silver-tongue, Davis could and still can entertain
people with a story. Even though Davis is no longer in political
office, his oratory skills remain sharp and he can still tell
a "windie" without so much as blinking an eye. He recently
related this tale involving another controversial Louisiana politician,
a former governor, Edwin Edwards.
"I live right next door
to the (Governor's) Mansion. There's a lake there. The lake separates,
you go across the lake and there is the capitol. And my wife
and I were out in the backyard one morning. Knocked down a wasp's
nest, dirt dobbers, killing snakes, lizards, everything else
running around there. And she said, 'Well, Edwards!'
"Governor Edwards was
coming down, going walking toward the water. She said, 'I believe
he's gonna walk on the water!'
"I said, 'No, I don't
think he can walk the water!'
"But I was wrong! He
took off, went across there, just prancing like Edwards does,
you know! Prancing. Got about halfway, down he went! Sunk. I
ran out there, picked him up, and walked him on across!
"And that's the truth!"
Even though the election
of Jimmie H. Davis saw the demise of the Long political machine,
those thirty years of the combined rule of Huey and Earl so greatly
affected the course of Louisiana politics that we still talk
about it some thirty, even fifty, years later. Louisiana continues
to produce controversial politics and politicians. It is through
these stories about politics that the people of Louisiana cope
with and explain such a confusing part of their culture.
This article first appeared
in the 1991 Louisiana Folklife Festival book. C. Renée
Harvison Christian is currently in market research for Sprint
in Overland Park, Kansas.
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