Longtime CEO, publisher Lou Major Sr. dies after battle with lymphoma
|
Lou Major, whose journalism career in Louisiana and with Wick Communications Company spanned six decades, died on Tuesday. Major, a native of New Orleans who resided in Bogalusa, La., for 55 years, had lived in Slidell, La., since 2006. He was 82 when he died after a lengthy battle with lymphoma.
Born in Meridian, Miss., he was reared in New Orleans and Jefferson Parish. He attended Tulane University for two years and was a journalism graduate from Louisiana State University. He joined The Daily News in Bogalusa as a news reporter in 1951. After subsequently serving as sports editor, news editor, and general manager, Major became publisher of the paper in 1963. He also served a period as publisher of The St. Tammany News-Banner and The Slidell Sentry News, both in St. Tammany Parish.
In 1993, Major became executive vice president of Wick Communications Co. He then became president and chief executive officer at Wick. He guided the company’s operations from his office at The Daily News in Bogalusa via phone, fax, and email. He served on the Wick board of directors while he was the company’s chief operating officer, and continued on the board after his retirement in 2002. When his final term ended in 2012, he had worked with Wick Communications at local and corporate level for 60 years.
Major was a member of the Louisiana Press Association 50-Year Club, and was inducted into the LSU's Manship School of Journalism Hall of Fame in recognition of his long career in community journalism. At the induction ceremony in Baton Rouge, Major was honored for his courage in leading The Daily News' coverage of Bogalusa's civil rights activities in the 1960s, in spite of threats by the Ku Klux Klan to The Daily News, and to Major and his family.
During his career in Bogalusa, Major was honored as one of Bogalusa's Young Men of the Year by the Bogalusa Jaycees. When Jaycees’ sponsorship of that program ended, The Daily News, under Major, picked up sponsorship and expanded it to Citizen of the Year to include women. Later, in addition to the Bogalusa Citizen of the Year, Major put the newspaper's support behind the similar Citizen of the Year program in Franklinton, La.
Major also instituted and personally coordinated each year the Christmas Care and Share Program, which has provided holiday food boxes to thousands of Washington Parish families for more than 20 years.
Major was active in the Mill Town Players and served on that community theater group’s board of directors. He served as president of Bogalusa Community Concerts, on the boards of the United Way, the Red Cross, and the Salvation Army, and was a member of the Bogalusa Rotary Club.
He was preceded in death by his parents, A.J. Major Sr. of New Roads and Bertha Lawrence Major or Laurel, Miss.; by his brother A.J. Major Jr., and by his sister Delores Major Harmeyer.
He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Blanche “Peggy” Ripp Major of Slidell; sons Lou Major Jr. of Stafford, Va., Steven Major and wife Renee of Cleveland, Ga., Jason Major and wife Deanna of Singapore; daughter Christie Major Hall and husband Rick of Covington, La.; and six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
In accordance with his wishes, a private family service will be held.