W. E. "Bill" Dykes

This article is about the Louisiana state senator W. E. "Bill" Dykes. For the gospel music singer, see Bill Dykes.
W. E. "Bill" Dykes
Louisiana State Senator from District 11 (then including Saint Helena, St. Tammany, and Tangipahoa parishes)
In office
1976–1984
Preceded by Grady Stewart
Succeeded by Gerry E. Hinton
Personal details
Born October 23, 1925
Saint Helena Parish, Louisiana, USA
Died February 23, 2015 (aged 89)
Resting place Montpelier Cemetery in Montpelier, Saint Helena Parish
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Ivyne Alessi Dykes (deceased)
Children

Bryan E. Dykes, Sr. (deceased)

Billie Claire Dykes Tycer
Residence Montpelier, Louisiana
Alma mater

Pine Grove High School in St. Helena Parish

Southeastern Louisiana University
Occupation Livestock and dairy farming
Religion Southern Baptist
Military service
Service/branch United States Merchant Marine
Battles/wars World War II

William E. "Bill" Dykes (October 23, 1925 February 23, 2015) was a Democratic former state senator from his native Saint Helena Parish, Louisiana, who represented his state's 11th District from 1976 to 1984. Prior to his legislative service, he had been mayor of Montpelier, Louisiana.[1][2]

The son Jesse and Willa Mae Dykes, he graduated in 1941 from the since defunct Pine Grove High School in Saint Helena Parish. The school was then under the principalship of John E. "Prof" Lisenby. He later attended Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond.

After service in World War II, Dykes in 1946 founded W. E. Dykes Feed & Dairy Supplies, later Dykes Feed & Fertilizer, in Amite in Tangipahoa Parish.[3] He and his late wife, the former Ivyne Alessi, had two children. Bryan E. Dykes, Sr. (1947–2011), who was married to the former Gloria Mack, was also a feed and fertilizer businessman and a ten-year mayor of Montpelier, where Bill Dykes resided. The Dykes' surviving daughter and son-in-law are Billie Claire Dykes Tycer and James Herndon Tycer.[4]

Dykes was a charter board member of the St. Helena Parish Hospital and a member on the Louisiana State Hospital Board. In the state Senate, he was the chairman of the Agriculture Committee.[1]

After the 1980 United States census, Dykes was moved into District 12, the same constituency with Sixty Rayburn, a behemoth of the legislature, against whom Dykes stood little likelihood of winning. The redistricting was required to accommodate increased representation by African-Americans, and District 11 was reassigned to the corridor from Hammond to Slidell. The seat went to the Democrat, later Republican convert, Gerry E. Hinton.[5] When state Senator Thomas H. Hudson of Baton Rouge, the chairman of the committee which had overseen the redistricting, became the Democratic candidate for Louisiana's 6th congressional district in 1986, Dykes worked for the successful election of GOP candidate Richard Hugh Baker, a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives. In 1986, Dykes' residence was not in the 6th District, but delivery trucks from his farm-supply business could be seen throughout that district festooned with Richard Baker signs. Rayburn, meanwhile, remained in the legislature until his own defeat in 1995 by Republican Phil Short.

On April 23, 1988, Dykes shot and killed Harold Bernard Vige in Montpelier, La. This incident was classified as a "hunting accident".[6]

Notes

Preceded by
Grady Stewart
Louisiana State Senator from District 11
(Saint Helena, Saint Tammany, and Tangipahoa parishes)

William E. "Bill" Dykes
19761984

Succeeded by
Gerry E. Hinton in District 11

Sixty Rayburn in District 12

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