Roy Otis Martin Jr. (June 3, 1921 - March 22, 2007), was a timber industrialist and philanthropist from Alexandria, Louisiana. Background Martin was born in Memphis, Tennessee, to Roy O. Martin, Sr. (1890-1973) and Mildred Brown Martin (1892-1995). In 1923, the family relocated to Alexandria, the parish seat of Rapides Parish and the largest city in Central Louisiana. There they launched Roy O. Martin Lumber Company. Roy Jr. graduated in 1939 from Bolton High School in the Alexandria Garden District. Thereafter, he studied engineering at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge where he was a member of Sigma Pi fraternity. During World War II, he enlisted in the United States Coast Guard, in which he served in the Atlantic as a Machinist's mate First Class. In 1942, he married the former Barbara "Bobbie" Morros, the mother of his three daughters and namesake son. The marriage ended in 1993, when Mrs. Martin died of cancer. Under Martin, the company expanded from 250,000 to more than 370,000 acres between 1962 and 1978 and was one of the largest family-owned businesses in the American South. Roy O. Martin manufactures hardwood lumber, pine and hardwood plywood, and creosoted railroad ties, poles, and timbers. The company also offers hunting leases. Martin formerly operated a sawmill at Roy, also known as "Roytown", in Bienville Parish in North Louisiana; the community is named for Roy Martin, Sr. In 2004, the Martin company won the Forest Stewardship Award from the National Hardwood Lumber Association meeting in Toronto, Canada. Civic, church, political, and philanthropic endeavors Long active in Lions International, Martin was a founder of the Lions Crippled Children's Camp in Leesville in Vernon Parish in western Louisiana. He served until the age of seventy on the board of the Rapides Bank and Trust Company, since absorbed by Bank One Corporation. He was a charter member of the board which established the private Alexandria Country Day School. He was highly active in the First United Methodist Church in Alexandria and, a believer in faith-based charities, the Salvation Army. Under his leadership, the Salvation Army raised $500,000 for a new building and shelter on Beauregard Street in Alexandria. Martin was a delegate to the 1980 and the 1984 Republican National Conventions, which met in Detroit and Dallas, respectively, to nominate the Reagan-Bush ticket. From 1980 to 1984, he was a member of the Louisiana Board of Commerce and Industry, a post he filled under appointment from GOP Governor David C. Treen. Martin was survived by four children, Marilyn M. Robbins and her husband, Don, of Dubach in Lincoln Parish, Joyce Thibodeaux and her husband, Bill, of Houma in Terrebonne Parish, Carole M. Baxter and husband, Lee, of Alexandria (formerly Carole Couvillion), and Roy O. Martin, III, and wife Kathy, also of Alexandria; eight grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. He had two surviving brothers, Ellis Spencer Martin (1917-2013) of Pineville, who was also in the timber business for many years, and Norman K. Martin (born c. 1927) of Leawood in Johnson County in eastern Kansas, the sister city of Alexandria. From his marriage to Vinita, he acquired two step-daughters, Linda Vollman of Bunkie in Avoyelles Parish, and Jan Ford of Natchitoches, Louisiana. Martin is interred at Greenwood Memorial Park in Pineville. A month after his father's death, Roy O. Martin, III, through Martco, a division of Roy O. Martin Lumber Company, unveiled a $200 million oriented-strand-board plant near Oakdale in Allen Parish southwest of Alexandria. The largest plant of its kind in the world, the facility initially employed 170 persons. Like his father, Roy O. Martin, III, is heavily involved in civic activities. He holds two degrees from LSU and is a member of the Alumni Hall of Distinction. In 2012, Governor Bobby Jindal appointed him to serve on the Louisiana Board of Regents. A Southern Baptist and a Republican, Martin, III, is affiliated with Habitat for Humanity and the Salvation Army.
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