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・ William Coblentz (attorney)
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・ William Cochran (physicist)
・ William Clark (judge)
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William Clark Hughes
・ William Clark Noble
・ William Clark O'Kelley
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・ William Clark, Baron Clark of Kempston
・ William Clark, Jr.
・ William Clark, Jr. (1798–1871)
・ William Clark, Jr. (diplomat)
・ William Clarke
・ William Clarke & Son
・ William Clarke (antiquary)
・ William Clarke (apothecary)
・ William Clarke (Australian politician)
・ William Clarke (cricketer)
・ William Clarke (cricketer, born 1846)


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William Clark Hughes : ウィキペディア英語版
William Clark Hughes

William Clark Hughes (January 31, 1868 – August 29, 1930) was a Louisiana Democrat who served from 1926 to 1928 as the Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives. He represented Bossier Parish in the lower house of the legislature from 1904 until his accidental death in 1930.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Membership of the Louisiana House of Representatives, 1812-2012 )

Hughes was born in the Rocky Mount community of Bossier Parish〔 to William Josiah Hughes (1837-1921), a captain in the Confederate Army, and the former Mary Ann Clark (1843-1923). His home in Rocky Mount remained in the family until 1972, when it was donated to the Bossier Restoration Foundation.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Louisiana Confederate Monuments and Markers )〕 In 1995, the house was relocated to Benton, the seat of Bossier Parish government. There the Hughes House sets in Benton Square near the Bossier Parish School Board office.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Hughes House - Benton, Louisiana )
Hughes and his first wife, Lula Dubois Hughes (1869-1899), had three daughters: Mary Virginia (born and died 1894), Martha "Mattie" L. Hughes Dowdell (1895-1970), and Margery Hughes O'Kelley (1896-1973). Hughes later married Annie Oliver, who was born 1882 in Giles County, Tennessee. They had one daughter, Annie Elizabeth Hughes Hale Tucker, who was born in 1906 in Shreveport, Louisiana.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=William Clark Hughes )

Hughes' legislative service traversed the administrations of seven governors from Newton C. Blanchard to Huey Pierce Long, Jr. He was Speaker of the House under Long's short-term predecessor, Oramel H. Simpson; in Louisiana despite the presumed separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches, the governor handpicks the Speaker. Long chose his lieutenant, John B. Fournet, a freshman member from Jeff Davis Parish in southwestern Louisiana, who later became the long-term Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court.

Hughes operated the Kingston Plantation in the Bossier Parish community known as Hughes Spur, presumably named for Hughes' father.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Kay McMahan, "Bossier Parish, LA, Towns" )〕 In 1930, at the age of sixty-two and still serving in the legislature, he was struck dead by touching a metal cistern which had been electrically charged in a lightning storm. He had intended to use the cistern to fight a lightning-induced fire on his farm.

Hughes is interred at the Rocky Mount Cemetery.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Rocky Mount Cemetery )
==References==





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