Ronald Clarence "Ron" Bean | |
| |
In office January 1992 – January 2004 | |
Preceded by | Richard Neeson |
---|---|
Succeeded by | Sherri Smith Buffington |
Born | November 4, 1938 Shreveport, Louisiana, USA |
Died | April 19, 2005 (aged 66) Shreveport, Louisiana |
Resting place | Forest Park Cemetery West in Shreveport |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Second wife, Carol Grady Bean (born 1946) |
Children | Mary Elizabeth Bean
John E. Bean (deceased) Elizabeth Ann Bean Kershaw (deceased) |
Religion | Southern Baptist |
Ronald Clarence Bean, known as Ron Bean (November 4, 1938 – April 19, 2005),[1] was a Republican state senator from his native Shreveport, Louisiana. A Moderate Republican, Bean served from 1992 to 2004[2] and was hailed by his peers for "nonpartisanship".
Bean was a United States Army soldier with service in South Korea and Vietnam and a pilot decorated for heroism. He died of renal failure at the Louisiana State University Medical Center in Shreveport. He had undergone two kidney transplants and suffered from steadily declining health since 2001.[1]
Bean's friends said that he never lost his sense of humor. Besides the kidney transplants, Bean contracted pneumonia, which required hospitalization in 2003, back surgeries, a helicopter crash in 1973 that led to his health problems, and the strains of politics.[1] He outlived two of his three children.
"He was snake bit," said former Democratic Senate President Donald Elliott Hines (1933-2019) of Bunkie in Avoyelles Parish, a physician who for eight years sat behind Bean in the Senate. "As soon as he got over one problem he'd have another one. But I never heard him complain one time. He met adversity and then went on with it and never let it affect his personal outlook or his demeanor or his relationship with anybody."
In 2001, Bean collapsed just outside the Senate chambers. He'd taken medication that knocked his blood pressure down to zero, said Hines who, along with others, revived Bean with CPR before emergency medical help arrived.[3]
"Some guys are funny-funny; to me, Ron was the kind of guy who was funny with a very dry sense of humor," said former Democratic state Senator Don Kelly of Natchitoches: "I can't ever recall seeing him mad; I've seen him aggravated, but never mad. He was just ... a great guy."
Kelly said much of the talk among legislators at the funeral only days earlier for state Senator John Joseph Hainkel, Jr. (1938-2005) of New Orleans was of their friend Bean. Hines, who succeeded Hainkel as Senate President, said that it had "been a tough, tough few days we've had here."
Bean and Gregory Williams "Greg" Tarver, another state senator from Shreveport, met while serving on the Caddo Parish Police Jury (equivalent of county commission in other states). Though Bean was a white Republican and Tarver is an African-American Democrat, the two found that they could work together and became close friends.
"I used to drive to his house late at night and we'd go places together; we just became big buddies. ... I could tell you a lot of funny things Ron did and I did, but none of them for print. He was a character," said Tarver. Bean often told Tarver, whose family is in the funeral home business, that he'd be "the first white man you'll ever have to bury." Tarver added, "That was our standing joke. … I told him that my family had [then] been in the business for 105 years, and we ain't [sic] buried a white man yet. We'd joke about that all the time."
Bean's Caddo Parish colleague, Republican former state Senator Max T. Malone said onn learning of Bean's death: We lost a great individual today. He had a courageous battle with his medical problems that resulted from his military service. … His agenda was to bring the most he could to Shreveport and Bossier City -- that was his main agenda."[3]
In 2003, the Louisiana Senate gave the ailing Bean a standing ovation after his colleague Robert Jocelyn Barham of Oak Ridge in Morehouse Parish recalled the circumstances that led to Bean's health problems.
During the Senate's farewell bid to Bean in 2003, Senator John Hainkel called Bean "the ultimate in courage." He referred not only to Bean's work to expand insurance coverage for transplant patients and to encourage organ donations, but also to May 1973, when Bean, then a U. S. Army chief warrant officer, was piloting Army One, the helicopter that carried the president.
Bean carried Secret Service agents to the Bahamas to replace the crew assigned to then-President Richard M. Nixon; the helicopter developed problems and ditched in the water. Bean ingested jet fuel that brought about his later health problems. He continued to dive and saved six of the seven Secret Service agents.[3]
Consultant Jerry Parnell Payne (born 1942) recalled that Bean did not want his military heroism to be used in campaigns. "It was the third campaign I ran for him before I even found out about his military stories," said Payne. "Then he threw a fit and didn't want us to use any of that; we did anyway. Of all the campaigns I've run, and that's 150 or so, I never worked for a man more earnest, more honest, a guy who exhibits integrity more than Ron Bean."
Bean was elected as a Republican to the Caddo Parish Police Jury in 1975 and served a single four-year term from 1976 to 1980. He was defeated for reelection in the 1979 general election by the Democrat Ponder F. McInnis (born 1940).
Bean lost his first race for the state Senate in 1987 when he was defeated by incumbent Democrat Richard Grady Neeson, Sr. (born 1946). Bean was also defeated by fellow Republican Hazel Fain Beard in the race for mayor of Shreveport in 1990. He received only 5,056 votes (8 percent) in the nonpartisan blanket primary for mayor.[4]
In the 1991 primary for state senator, Bean secured a general election berth against fellow Republican Tommy Armstrong, a conservative candidate who was serving a one-year unexpired term in the Louisiana House of Representatives created by the resignation of Robert P. "Bobby" Waddell, Sr., who became a state district court judge. Armstrong had also been a member of the Caddo Parish Commission, formerly known as the police jury. His continuous police jury service began in 1976 at the same time as that of Bean. Armstrong left the commission with a year remaining in his fourth term. Armstrong led with 13,354 votes (40 percent), and Bean followed with 8,866 votes (26 percent). Republican Ken Wright, with 6,088 votes (18 percent), ran third, and Democrat Bobby Bruce Shofner (born 1948), with 5,494 votes (15 percent), finished in fourth place.[5]
In the second contest held on the same day that Edwin Edwards defeated David Duke for governor, Bean narrowly upset Armstrong, 20,474 (51 percent) to 19,720 (49 percent).[6]
"The third time around [1991; actually fourth time counting the police jury defeat] was the charm, and the citizens were smart enough to elect him," said Diana M. Simek, another of Bean's campaign managers. "Even in the losses, he never lost his sense of humor ..." For twelve years he served District 38, which includes Shreveport and parts of DeSoto Parish to the south.
In 1995, the conservative Christian Coalition and Family Research Council attempted to unseat Bean's bid for a third term in the nonpartisan blanket primary. In the first round, Bean led with 15,044 votes (49.6 percent) to 12,636 ballots (41.7 percent) for fellow Republican Judy Dawson Boykin (born 1952), a member of the Caddo Parish School Board. A third candidate, Democrat Jim Crowley, polled 2,652 votes (8.7 percent). In the general election, Bean was a narrow winner: 16,550 (50.8 percent) to Boykin's 15,995 (49.2 percent).
In 1999, Bean overwhelmed fellow Republican Daniel Eugene "Dan" Perkins (born 1953), another candidate of the Religious Right, backed by the Shreveport pastor Billy McCormack, one of the national directors of the Christian Coalition. Bean polled 17,866 ballots (71 percent) to Perkins's 7,368 (29 percent).[7] The defeat of Perkins was Bean's last victory and by far his most convincing. Health problems forbade his running again in 2003, when he was succeeded by his legislative aide and fellow Republican, Sherri Smith Cheek Buffington, another Moderate Republican long opposed by the "Religious Right" but never defeated.
"He's got an 'R' behind his name and I've got a 'D' behind mine, but that didn't mean a thing," said Don Kelly, whose apartment was next to Bean's in the Pentagon, which houses legislators in Baton Rouge not far from the Capitol. "Ron was out to do what was right. He didn't follow this philosophy or that; he'd look at something, analyze it, and then do what's best for his constituents and what's best for Louisiana."
In 1999, the Senate named Bean the President Pro Tempore, after Dennis Bagneris of New Orleans left the legislature to become a state appeals court judge.[2] Bean was the first Republican to hold the pro tempore post since Reconstruction.
"I am delighted that my peers thought enough of me to vote for me," Bean said. "I consider myself a Moderate Republican, who can get along with folks on both sides of the fence. I hope I can contribute in a positive way to the bipartisan effort in the Senate to move the state forward."
Bean lost his only son, John E. Bean (1961-2000), the victim of a traffic accident. Sherri Buffington said that Bean didn't "break down" until after he left the hospital, where he'd been "trying to take care of John's children and his daughter-in-law … I think one of the most defining statements I ever heard him make was when we were driving away and he was crying," said Buffington, after talking of how close the father and son were. "He said, 'I have to remember that for forty years I've had what some people never have in a lifetime.' That's Ron. He was always able to take a negative and make something positive out of it."
Bean's nephew, Adrian Johngene "John" Bean, Jr. (1947-2006), was also a U.S. Army helicopter pilot in Vietnam. He also flew helicopters offshore to oil rigs, and with his wife, Jan, owned and operated Herby-K's Restaurant in Shreveport. Adrian Bean was shot down three times while serving as a medevac pilot. In one mission in which he escaped, he and his crew were rescued by an Army helicopter.[8]
Bean died in Shreveport at the age of sixty-six. He was survived by his wife, Carol Grady Bean (born 1946), and a daughter, Mary Elizabeth Bean of Shreveport. His funeral was held in the temporary quarters of Summer Grove Baptist Church[3] in South Park Mall in Shreveport, with his former pastor, Wayne DuBose, officiating. One of the speakers, Huntington Blair "Hunt" Downer, Jr. a retired major general of the Louisiana Army National Guard, a former Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives, and a failed 2003 gubernatorial candidate, noted that Bean had risked his life to save nearly all of the men otherwise doomed in the helicopter crash. He presented a flag to Carol and Mary Bean.
Categories: [Louisiana People] [United States Army] [Vietnam War] [Politicians] [State Senators] [Moderate Republicans] [Southern Baptists]