Edgar Fernando Nichols, Allen Parish, Louisiana
Submitted by Mike Miller


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Edgar Fernando Nichols, a member of the Allen Parish Police Jury, and 
proprietor of the Oakdale insurance Agency, has been a hard and constant 
fighter in the business world for many years, now advancing and now the 
victim of some adversity, but on the whole achieving the best elements of
success.

He was born at Sidney in Delaware County, New York, September 22, 1880. 
His father, Fernando Nichols, had the distinction of being the first white 
child born in La Grange County, Indiana. He was born there in 1836. While 
living in Indiana, he was a farmer and sawmill operator, was a farmer in 
Delaware County, New York, for several years, where he married and in 1881 
went out to Stutsman County in Dakota Territory, now the State of North Dakota.  
He also homesteaded in Barnes County. North Dakota. In 1889 he was in the 
service of the Northern Pacific Railway at Pingree, North Dakota. Leaving 
there in 1893, he removed to Tennessee, becoming a farmer near Nashville in 
Davidson County. In 1899 he transferred his business interests to Warren,
Arkansas, where he followed his trade as a carpenter and builder, and acquired 
a considerable amount of real estate. In 1906 at the age of seventy he retired 
from business and moved out to Los Angeles, California, where he died in 1908. 
His wife was Mary Jane Cady, who was born in Delaware County, New York, and 
died at Los Angeles in 1923 at the age of eighty-six. Fernando Nichols was a 
veteran of the Union army, serving four years during the Civil war, at first 
in the Eighty-eighth Indiana Volunteer Infantry and later in the Engineers 
Corps. For many years he held an office in the Baptist Church.

Edgar Fernando Nichols attended public schools in North Dakota and Tennessee, 
the Central Tennessee Normal School at Greenbriar, and also time Howard 
institute. Ill health compelled him to leave school and seek recuperation 
in farm work. His first experience in business was with the Crandall & Leavitt 
Lumber Company at Warren, Arkansas, and he was foreman for this company when 
he left. In 1900 he went to Sabine Pass, Texas, as an inspector of timber, and 
on November 19, 1900, made his first acquaintance with the now thriving and 
prosperous town of Oakdale in Allen Parish, Louisiana. Oakdale was then a camp 
in the pine woods, consisting of a few houses, a store or two, a hotel, postoffice 
and saloon.  He came here to take charge of the shipping department of the 
industrial Lumber Company, operating the Calcasieu Mill at Oakdale.  He was
assistant superintendent o~ the mill when in 1909 he resigned to engage in the 
mercantile business as the Consumers Supply Company at Oakdale. He left that 
business after a year, and in 1911 established the Oak Lane Stock Farm, developing 
a fine dairy herd. Misfortune came along in diseases that wiped out practically 
all his herd, and in 1913 he had to start over again, this time in charge of the 
shipping department of the J. S. and W. M. Rice Lumber Company at Ward, Louisiana.

In August, 1918, Mr. Nichols entered the Camp Travis Young Men's Christian 
Association Training School, and in October of that year was made business 
secretary of the Camp Beauregard Young Men's Christian Association, remaining 
there until his discharge in January, 1919. Following this service for the 
cause during the World war, he became secretary of the Oakdale Chamber of
Commerce, and made that a live and efficient organization, housed in a building 
of its own. Mr. Nichols in 1922 acquired the Oakdale Insurance Agency, the 
largest general insurance agency in Allen Parish, forming a complete service 
in all branches of insurance except life. He is also secretary of the Louisiana 
Investment & Development Company of Oakdale, is a director of the Chamber of 
Commerce, secretary of the Oakdale Rotary Club, is a deacon in the Baptist Church 
and clerk of the Mount Olive Association.

Mr. Nichols has a deep interest in all public movements and issues in this 
part of the state. He is secretary of the Pelican Highway Association. In 
June, 1924, he was elected from Ward Five to the Allen Parish Police Jury.  
In Masonry he was the first to receive degrees in Yellow Pine ,Lodge No. 282, 
Free and Accepted Masons, of which he is past master and present secretary.
He is secretary and past high priest of Oakdale Chapter No. 71, Royal Arch 
Masons, is recorded and past thrice illustrious master of Oakdale Council 
No. 25, Royal and Select Masters, and is recorder of Emmanuel Commandery 
No. 24, Knights Templar. His hobby is hunting and fishing, and he has some 
kennels of fine pointer and setter dogs.

Mr. Nichols married at Oakdale, June 11, 1903, Miss Ida C. Godwin, who was 
born in St. Landry Parish. Her father, Alonzo M. Godwin, was a farmer, 
stockman and saw mill operator in St. Landry Parish, and was living retired 
in Glenmora, when he died, September, 1922, at the age of sixty-eight. For 
many years he served as deacon in the Baptist Church. Mrs. Nichols' mother
was Elizabeth (Blackwell) Goodwin, a native of Mississippi who died in 1916.  
Mrs. Nichols shares the many interests of her husband in the local life of 
the community at Oakdale, being particularly interested in church and church 
causes.

A History of Louisiana, (vol. 2), pp. 276-277, by Henry E. Chambers.  
Published by The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, 1925.