Lewis John Mayeux, Allen Parish, Louisiana Submitted by Mike Miller ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://usgwarchives.net/la/lafiles.htm ************************************************ Lewis John Mayeux was in France as an American soldier during the World War, and since its close has resumed his profession as a lawyer and is one of the leading attorneys of the Allen Parish bar with home and offices at Oberlin. He was born at Plaucheville, in Avoyelles Parish, November 18, 1893. His father, Pierre Alzide Mayeux was also a native of Avoyelles Parish and has been a farmer and stockraiser. The mother bore the maiden name of Stella Plauche of a pioneer family in Avoyelles Parish. Lewis John Mayeux attended the Convent High School at Plaucheville, graduated in 1909 from St. John's College, and following that became a clerk and stenographer in the law office of his uncle, Thomas C. Plauche, at Lake Charles. In 1915 he was admitted to the bar, and for a time served as deputy clerk of court and law student at Leesville in Vernon Parish. He gave up a promising position as a lawyer in June, 1917, to enter the Officer's Training School, and was commissioned second lieutenant of infantry with the Fourth Company of the Twelfth Provisional Battalion at Fort Root, Arkansas. He was then sent to Camp Pike, Arkansas, attached to the Three Hundred and Forty-fifth United States Infantry, was promoted to first lieutenant, and on August 15, 1918, sailed for France. In France he was given intensive training in the army school at Langres. After his return home he was discharged from Camp Dix, New Jersey, January 23, 1919, and subsequently for four years held the rank of first lieutenant of infantry in the Officer's Reserve Corps. He is a member of the A, P. Griffith Post No. 56 of the American Legion at Oakdale. Mr. Mayeux after the war resumed practice with the firm of Plauche & Mayeux with offices at Lake Charles and Oberlin, and since March, 1923, has been in general practice alone in the latter town. He married at Baton Rouge, August 22, 1923, Miss Katie Morgan, daughter of Daniel T. Morgan, a prosperous planter of Baton Rouge Parish. A History of Louisiana, (vol. 2), p. 276, by Henry E. Chambers. Published by The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, 1925.