A Lake Bistineau Fishing Story for National Hunting and Fishing Day

This past Saturday was National Hunting and Fishing Day, an event celebrated by all 50 states every year on the fourth Saturday in September. It was established in 1972 when Congress passed two bills to have a day to celebrate the conservation contributions of U.S. hunters and anglers. So it seems a perfect time to share a fun fishing story (with some hunting thrown in, too) brought to me by a reader of this column, JoAnne McDonald.

Mrs. McDonald and her late husband Jerry had a house in Bossier Parish with a private pond near Lake Bistineau. It was highlighted in the Shreveport Times in 1995 because of a Minden, Louisiana centenarian, Miss Mary Babb, who, with the McDonalds’ invitation, would fish from a boat on their pond with her friend Lydon Taylor. Miss Babb fished at least once a week, from morning to sunset. With nonarthritic hands, she could she set the hook on the bluegill bream herself and see the slightest jiggle of a bream hook, no glasses needed.

 

At that stage in her life, fishing was one “Miss Mary’s” favorite past-times, but as a girl growing up on a farm in Cotton Valley from 1905 to 1924, she wasn’t included when her father and brothers went fishing. A friend introduced her to fishing’s pleasures as an adult. She also was an honorary member of the Sailes Hunting Club in Bienville Parish. She and her friend Margaret Stewart of Benton were the only two women at the deer camp. When someone bagged a buck, Miss Mary would help prepare the meat for the freezer, or make sausage with it. Additionally, the centenarian was still gardening and raising chickens and gathering their eggs. She knew how to live off the land, and never set foot in a mall until just prior to the 1995 article, when a friend took her to Pierre Bosser for some new shoes.

 

In Cotton Valley, Mary and her ten siblings worked on the family’s 160-acre farm until they moved to Minden in 1924, in the historic Killen Place, one of the oldest homes in Webster Parish. She lived there for the rest of her life. As a young woman, Miss Mary was active with the local home demonstration club, hosting meetings and reporting club doings to the local newspaper. She also taught school, worked for her father’s store and trained and worked as a nurse.

 

Early to mid-twentieth century Minden newspapers are filled with some of Mary Babb’s accomplishments, such as her work for the Federal Works Progress Administration (WPA), binding books so they can continue to be used, working to cleanup automobile graveyards across the region, keeping accurate demographic statistics such as births for the parish, becoming a WPA supervisor, and clerk at the Minden courthouse, keeping World War II selective service records. She also contributed to the war effort at the Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant in Minden.

 

Mary Babb died Nov. 22, 1996, at Minden Medical Center after a brief illness, less than a month shy of her 102nd birthday.

 

Like Mrs. McDonald did, we’d love for our readers to visit us with stories, clippings and photos of other remarkable people and memories from around Bossier Parish. We are located at 2206 Beckett St, Bossier City, LA. We are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org

 

For other fun facts, photos, and videos, be sure to visit the History and Genealogy Resources page at Bossierlibrary.org or follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB, @bplhistorycenter on TikTok.

 

Images: 

  • Illustration from Plain Dealing’s Roach-Strayhan-Holland American Legion Post #20 Home Dedication Cookbook, 1950
  • Headline from The Minden Herald February 17, 1939, page 1.

 

Article by: Pam Carlisle