Richard Cleveland Drew

Richard Cleveland Drew, Sr. (April 17, 1848 - December 21, 1919), also known as R. C. Drew, was a judge of the state district and circuit courts, based in Minden in northwestern Louisiana. The Drew family was among the original 19th-century settlers of the future Webster Parish, of which Minden is the parish seat. The first Drew arrived in 1818 in the Overton community on Dorcheat Bayou.
Background
Drew was born in rural Webster Parish to the former Sarah Jessie Cleveland (1828-80) and Richard Maxwell Drew, an attorney, district judge, delegate to the Louisiana state constitutional convention of 1845, and state representative from 1848 until his death two years later, at the age of barely twenty-eight.
Richard Maxwell Drew is interred at an abandoned cemetery in Overton. His epitaph on his tombstone, which was damaged several years ago by a dozer operating in the area, reads: "His public and private virtues have survived his death and will endure when this dumb marble shall have faded."
R. C. Drew was educated at the former Homer College in Homer in Claiborne Parish. He read law under A. B. George and was admitted to the bar in 1872 at Monroe, Louisiana. He was a member of the Masonic lodge.
Family
In 1880, R. C. Drew married the former Katie Roberta Caldwell (October 15, 1859 - December 5, 1936), a native of Plain Dealing in northern Bossier Parish and the daughter of Colonel and Mrs. Thomas J. Caldwell, who were originally from South Carolina. Katie Caldwell was educated at a female seminary in Paris in northeastern Texas.
Thomas Caldwell Drew, a soldier in World War I, was seriously injured by German poison gas and never fully recovered. Mary, the youngest of the Drew children, had Down's syndrome. Neither of the two Drew daughters married.
Judicial tenure
R. C. Drew's youngest son, A. S. "Skeet" Drew, was the first judge of the Minden City Court, having assumed the position in the late 1920s. R. C. Drew, Jr., also a judge, died two months after the passing of his brother, Harmon Caldwell Drew. R. C. Drew served as a district judge from 1882 to 1900 and again from 1904 to 1911.
Death
Drew died in Minden at the age of seventy-one. He is interred beside his wife in the older rear section of the historic Minden Cemetery.
R. C. Drew's grandson was the Minden City Judge and State Representative R. Harmon Drew, Sr., a delegate to the most recent state constitutional convention held in Baton Rouge in 1973-74. One of R. C. Drew's great-grandsons is the Circuit Court of Appeal Judge Harmon Drew, Jr., also of Minden but based at the Shreveport court.
 
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