Fred C. McClanahan

Fred Charles McClanahan, Jr. (July 13, 1918 – July 21 2007) was a lieutenant colonel in the United States Air Force, a decorated World War II veteran, an insurance executive, and a former candidate for the United States House of Representatives from Shreveport, Louisiana.

McClanahan was born to Fred McClanahan, Sr., and Elsie B. McClanahan in Little Rock, Arkansas. He grew up in Homer, the seat of Claiborne Parish in north Louisiana. He graduated from Methodist-affiliated Centenary College in Shreveport.

In early 1941, he volunteered for the U.S. Army Air Corps and flew fighter missions in P-38s and P-51s in the European Theater of World War II. McClanahan received the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal with Clusters, and the Purple Heart. He remained in the Air Force Reserve until his retirement.

In 2000, he hosted a reunion of the 364th Fighter Group in Shreveport. Many of the men in attendance came together for one last time. After his military years, McClanahan worked as a general contractor and then in the insurance industry as a Certified Life Underwriter.

In 1960, McClanahan was the Republican nominee for Congress from the Fourth District which then covered seven northwestern Louisiana parishes: Caddo (Shreveport), Bossier (Bossier City), Webster (Minden), Claiborne, De Soto (Mansfield), Bienville (Arcadia), and Red River (Coushatta). McClanahan was the second and last Republican to challenge incumbent Democrat U.S. Representative Overton Brooks, who had served since 1937. Four years earlier, Brooks had defeated Republican Calhoun Allen, later the Democratic mayor of Shreveport. McClanahan fared poorly in his race even though presidential candidate John F. Kennedy failed to win the majority of the vote in the seven parishes. Brooks prevailed with 48,286 votes (74.2 percent) to McClanahan's 16,827 (25.8 percent). McClanahan's strongest parish was Caddo, but he garnered only 29.1 percent of the ballots there. Brooks died a year after the election. In a special election, Democrat Joe D. Waggonner, Jr., won the position.

Through the years, McClanahan was the president and a Melvin Jones Fellow in the South Shreveport Lions Club. He was also active in the Broadmoor United Methodist Church and was a tutor for the Literacy Volunteers of America.

At the time of his death, McClanahan had been married for sixty-four years to the former Mary Simpson (born ca. 1923), a retired teacher from C.E. Byrd High School in Shreveport. He also had a son, Fred McClanahan, III (born ca. 1946), a business consultant in Shreveport, and his wife, Lydia Lee McClanahan; a daughter, Elizabeth M. Waldmann (born ca. 1950) and her husband, attorney Lester J. Waldmann (born ca. 1948), of Kenner near New Orleans. There were eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

Services were held on July 25 2007, at Broadmoor Methodist Church. Interment was in Forest Park West Cemetery in Shreveport. McClanahan's obituary begins "Another member of the 'Great Generation' is gone. "

Links
*http://www.legacy.com/shreveporttimes/Obituaries.asp?PageLifestory&PersonId91314875
*http://la.allpages.com/shreveport/business-services/management-consultants-services/
*http://www.airforcememorial.org/registry/index_results.asp?last_namem&Nav12
*Louisiana Election Statistics, 1960 (Baton Rouge: Secretary of State)
*http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
 
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