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Graydon K. Kitchens Jr.

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Succeeded by
  
R. Harmon Drew, Sr.

Role
  
Attorney

Name
  
Graydon Kitchens,


Preceded by
  
John W. "Jack" Montgomery (interim)

Born
  
July 19, 1936 (age 87) Minden, Louisiana, USA (
1936-07-19
)

Political party
  
Democrat / later Republican

Spouse(s)
  
Roberta Carroll Kitchens

Education
  
Minden High School, Louisiana State University

Succeeded by
  
Ford E. Stinson, Jr.

Preceded by
  
Enos C. McClendon, Jr.

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Graydon Kelly Kitchens Jr. (born July 19, 1936), is an attorney and a retired city, ward, and state court judge in Minden, Louisiana.

Contents

Early years

Kitchens' lawyer-father, Graydon Kitchens Sr. (January 28, 1903 – September 12, 1988), was born in Stamps in Lafayette County in southwestern Arkansas, and reared in Trout to the west of Jena in La Salle Parish in North Louisiana. Kitchens Sr. was married to the former Glennie Mae Prothro (1905-1997); the couple is interred at Minden Cemetery.

The father of Graydon Kitchens Sr. was the superintendent of shipping at a sawmill. Kitchens Sr. attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, where he was a roommate of Robert F. Kennon of Minden, who in 1952 was elected governor of Louisiana. The two were assigned by alphabetical order to the same dormitory room. After college, Kitchens Sr. taught school for a year in Summerfield in Claiborne Parish. "I loved teaching - had to tear myself away from the classroom when I decided to enter law school," he said in a 1976 interview with his hometown newspaper, the Minden Press-Herald, on the occasion of Kitchens' fifty years as a practicing attorney.

Political life

The senior Kitchens graduated from Louisiana State University Law Center in 1926. He then joined his friend Robert Kennon, at the time the mayor of Minden for a two-year term, in the Kennon & Kitchens law practice. From 1930 to 1941, Kennon was the district attorney of the 26th Judicial District, which encompasses Bossier and Webster parishes. Kitchens was Kennon's assistant DA. Like Kennon, Kitchens was a Democrat. He became the acting DA from 1941 to 1942, after Kennon unseated Judge Harmon Caldwell Drew for a seat on the Louisiana Second Circuit Court of Appeal, based in Shreveport. Kitchens was defeated for a full term as DA by Arthur M. Wallace and did not thereafter seek public office. However, the senior Kitchens remained a powerful figure in his adopted community. In 1954, Governor Kennon named him to the Louisiana Tax Commission, a position which he held for twenty-seven months that required considerable commuting from Minden to Baton Rouge. Kennon's successor as governor, Earl Kemp Long, however, convinced the state legislature to remove Kitchens from the panel so that Long could make his own appointment. Three years remained in Kitchens' appointment when he was removed.

Background

Graydon Jr. was born in Minden and graduated in 1954 from Minden High School. Like his father, he attended LSU, from which he received his undergraduate degree in 1958 in the French language. At LSU, he was a member of the Louisiana Law Review and the Order of the Coif. From 1958 to 1960, he was a lieutenant in the United States Army infantry. After he obtained his Juris Doctorate from LSU in 1964, he entered with his father into the Kitchens Law Firm in Minden. Thereafter, his brother, Paul Edward Kitchens (born December 11, 1945), joined the firm, as did Graydon "Gray" Kitchens, III (born April 1965).

Judicial life

In 1976, Kitchens Jr. was elected to succeed Cecil C. Lowe in the Minden city and Ward I court upon Lowe's election to the 26th Judicial District Court. Minden attorney John W. "Jack" Montgomery, a former member of the Louisiana State Senate, held the post temporarily prior to Kitchens' election. Kitchens defeated another attorney, his fellow Democrat, Henry Grady Hobbs, 2,740 to 2,237. A widely known community figure who ran unsuccessfully for numerous positions, Hobbs (1923-2012) was the long-term appointed president of the Webster Parish Library Board.

After two years on the city court, the junior Kitchens was elected to the 26th Judicial District Court to succeed Enos McClendon, who retired after eighteen years on the bench. Kitchens also served three six-year terms on the court until his retirement in 1996. He was chief judge of the 26th District from 1988 through 1995. The Louisiana Bar Foundation in 1995 named him "Jurist of the Year". He served on the Louisiana Judiciary Commission from 1988 to 1992 and again from 1994 to 1996; he was the commission chairman from 1991 to 1992.

In 1996, Ktichens was named "Outstanding Jurist" at the annual Bar Foundation banquet in Baton Rouge. He was nominated for the honor by his fellow Judges Harmon Drew, Jr., Cecil P. Campbell, II, Dewey E. Burchett, Jr., and Bruce M. Bolin as well as the then Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, Pascal F. Calogero, Jr. He retired at the end of 1996 to engage in a law practice with his brother and son. Webster Parish Sheriff Larkin T. Riser called Kitchens "one of the finest and fairest judges that we've had. I know that he certainly will be missed by law enforcement officers in this area."

After retirement, Kitchens returned to his law practice, which he specializes in estate planning, family law, personal injury, wills and probates, and real estate. He is also an assistant district attorney for the Bossier-Webster district and in that capacity attends most meetings of the Webster Parish Police Jury. Kitchens is a former member of the Webster Parish Democratic Executive Committee. However, the office of Louisiana Secretary of State Tom Schedler lists Kitchens in 2013 as a Republican. Schedler also lists Paul Kitchens and Graydon Kitchens, III, who now resides in Bossier City, as Republicans.

One of Kitchens' law partners has been the incoming Republican U. S. Representative Mike Johnson of Louisiana's 4th congressional district, who take the congressional position on January 3, 2017.

On March 21, 2014, Mayor Tommy Davis declared "Judge Kitchens Day" in Minden to honor the retired judge on the occasion of his fiftieth year as a practicing lawyer. Judge Kitchens' father had received the same honor in September 1976.

Personal life

Graydon Kitchens Jr. is or has been affiliated with Lions International, the Junior Chamber, the Chamber of Commerce, and the Boy Scouts of America. He is married to the former Roberta Carroll (born April 1938), originally from Baton Rouge and regionally known as a gospel singer. In 1981, Mrs. Kitchens, who was involved in the writing of some fifty songs and in the production of four television specials, was named "Minden Woman of the Year".

The Kitchenses' son, Graydon, III, is married to the former Kimberly Bennett (born March 1967). The Kitchenses' oldest daughter, Amy Lynn Kitchens Butler (born April 1968), is married to James Bryan Butler (born October 1967); they reside in Bossier City. The Kitchenses' youngest daughter, Allison Lee Copple (born May 1970), is the wife of Eric Blaine Copple (born July 1972); they reside in Shreveport. Graydon and Roberta Kitchens have long been active in the First Baptist Church of Minden. Kitchens was also involved with the Baptist Student Union while at LSU.

In 2003, Judge Kitchens, representing the Minden Family Forum, led the unsuccessful opposition to a referendum to permit the sale of alcoholic beverages in Minden restaurants. The community had been previously dry for many decades.

References

Graydon K. Kitchens Jr. Wikipedia