Jacques Gla
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Jacques Gla (1833/4-1894) was an American politician. He was a member of the
Louisiana State Senate The Louisiana State Senate (french: Sénat de Louisiane) is the upper house of the state legislature of Louisiana. All senators serve four-year terms and are assigned to multiple committees. Composition The Louisiana State Senate is compose ...
in 1872 and again from 1874 to 1880. He lived in East Carroll. Gla was born free in New Orleans in 1833/4 to an old Creole family. In 1862, federal troops seized New Orleans as part of the
Anaconda Plan The Anaconda Plan is the name applied to a strategy outlined by the Union Army for suppressing the Confederacy at the beginning of the American Civil War. Proposed by Union General-in-Chief Winfield Scott, the plan emphasized a Union blockade of ...
. Gla subsequently joined the 3rd Louisiana Native Guard as a Captain in Company B. The unit was later renamed the 75th U.S. Colored Infantry. In 1863, under General Nathanial P. Banks, Black officers, including Gla, were purged from service. After the war, Gla moved to
Carroll Parish Carroll Parish is a former parish of Louisiana, formed in 1838 from part of Ouachita Parish. Part of the parish was sectioned off in 1844 to make Morehouse Parish. Carroll Parish was divided in 1877 into East Carroll Parish East Carroll Parish ...
(later divided in 1877 into East Carroll and West Carroll), where he became a planter. In 1872, he was elected to serve in the Louisiana State Senate from a district encompassing Carroll and
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Parishes. In this position he served only for a short time. Following a split in the Carroll Republican Party in 1873, Gla became the leader of the conservative Republican faction that opposed
carpetbagger In the history of the United States, carpetbagger is a largely historical term used by Southerners to describe opportunistic Northerners who came to the Southern states after the American Civil War, who were perceived to be exploiting the lo ...
George C. Benham. Encouraged by leading Democrats to challenge Benham in the state senate race, Gla put together a ticket of disaffected Republicans. The 1874 Louisiana elections served as the showdown between these two factions. On the Parish level, the Gla ticket was handily defeated by the Benham ticket, which retained all local offices as well as both state representatives. In the state senate race, Benham won a sizable majority in Carroll Parish, but Gla won the race due to the votes of Madison Parish. Following the election, members of the Gla ticket challenged the election results in court due to several irregularities. In a jury trial, the 13th District Court voided the election and ordered a new one, but this decision was reversed on appeal to the
Supreme Court of Louisiana The Supreme Court of Louisiana (french: Cour suprême de Louisiane) is the highest court and court of last resort in the U.S. state of Louisiana. The modern Supreme Court, composed of seven justices, meets in the French Quarter of New Orlea ...
. A Congressional investigation of these irregularities concluded that fraud occurred in favor of Benham but not enough to change the result of the election, as Benham had lost.Caldwell, Joe Louis, "A Social, Economic, and Political Study of Blacks in the Louisiana Delta, 1865-1880" Unpub. diss. Tulane University, 1989, pgs 184, 370, 431. In the following year, 1875, the Benham faction, now notably absent of Benham himself, became embroiled in a corruption scandal. An investigation revealed over $50,000 worth of fraudulent claims made since the ascendancy of the Benham faction in 1868. This revelation resulted in the resignation of the entire
Police Jury In the U.S. state of Louisiana, the typical governing body of the parish is called the Police Jury ( French: ''le Jury de Police''). Not every parish is governed by a Police Jury, but 38 of the 64 parishes use this system. The Police Jury is the ...
, the indictment of leading members, and the wholesale collapse of the Benham faction. The Governor,
William P. Kellogg William Pitt Kellogg (December 8, 1830 – August 10, 1918) was an American lawyer and Republican Party politician who served as a United States Senator from 1868 to 1872 and from 1877 to 1883 and as the Governor of Louisiana from 1873 to 1877 du ...
, appointed several members of the investigatory committee, all Democrats, to fill the vacancies. Gla was reelected to the state senate in 1876. However, these elections resulted in Democratic control over the state after the
Compromise of 1877 The Compromise of 1877, also known as the Wormley Agreement or the Bargain of 1877, was an unwritten deal, informally arranged among members of the United States Congress, to settle the intensely disputed 1876 presidential election between Ruth ...
, and the Redeemer legislature divided Carroll Parish into two shortly after convening for the first time. The Gla faction was able to win control over the newly created East Carroll Parish and took a more conservative approach to governance. Despite the conservative nature of their administration, they were not spared from the violence that erupted in the Louisiana Delta in the counterrevolution of 1878. With many Black leaders being forced to flee or killed and the Southern Republican Party in ruins, in November 1878, Gla joined the Democrats and called for other Blacks to join him. While Gla may have hoped this would mollify Democratic bulldozing, only a few months later in April 1879, all three black members of the East Carroll Police Jury were forced to resign at gunpoint and were replaced by white Democrats. Gla served in the state senate until 1880. In 1881, he was appointed
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of Louisiana by President
James Garfield James Abram Garfield (November 19, 1831 – September 19, 1881) was the 20th president of the United States, serving from March 4, 1881 until his death six months latertwo months after he was shot by an assassin. A lawyer and Civil War gene ...
. He died in 1894.


See also

*
African-American officeholders during and following the Reconstruction era More than 1,500 African American officeholders served during the Reconstruction era (1865–1877) after passage of the Reconstruction Acts in 1867 and 1868 as well as in the years after Reconstruction before white supremacy, disenfranchisement, ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Gla, Jacques Louisiana Creole people People from East Carroll Parish, Louisiana 1830s births People of Louisiana in the American Civil War African-American politicians during the Reconstruction Era Republican Party Louisiana state senators Politicians from New Orleans African-American state legislators in Louisiana 1894 deaths People from Louisiana