Fred Lyle “Buddy” Schiele, Sr. | |
Louisiana State Representative
for Concordia Parish | |
In office 1964 – 1968 | |
Preceded by | S. P. "Jack" Crane |
---|---|
Sheriff of Concordia Parish
| |
In office April 6, 1973 – July 1980 | |
Preceded by | Noah W. Cross |
Succeeded by | John Patrick |
Born | November 28, 1933 Vidalia, Concordia Parish Louisiana, USA |
Died | January 24, 2002 (aged 68) Alexandria, Rapides Parish, Louisiana |
Resting place | Natchez City Cemetery in Natchez, Mississippi |
Political party | Democrat |
Spouse(s) | Maxine Smith Schiele (married 1954-2002, his death) Children: |
Residence | Vidalia and Alexandria, Louisiana |
Alma mater | Vidalia High School |
Occupation | Farmer; Sheriff |
Religion | United Methodist |
Notes:
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Fred Lyle Schiele, Sr., known also as Buddy Schiele (November 28, 1933 – January 24, 2002), served from 1964 to 1968 as a Democratic state representative for Concordia Parish in eastern Louisiana adjacent to the Mississippi River.[1] Schiele (pronounced SHE LEE) did not seek reelection in the 1967 primary election but instead unsuccessfully opposed incumbent Sheriff Noah W. Cross of Ferriday, also in Concordia Parish. He won the sheriff's position in 1973 after Cross resigned.
Schiele was one of four sons born in Vidalia in Concordia Parish, to Catesby Edward Schiele and the former Lucille Rountree (1897-1977). In 1951, he graduated from Vidalia High School. Thirty years later, at the age of forty-eight, he procured his bachelor’s degree in business administration from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.[2] Prior to his involvement in politics, Schiele ran a cotton gin in Ferriday. He also served on the board of First Federal Savings and Loan in Vidalia.[3]
In 1954, Schiele married the former Maxine Smith (1937-2009), a 1955 graduate of Vidalia High School. The couple had five children: Fred Schiele, Jr. (born 1955), a former deputy sheriff for his father and the appointed chief of police in Ferriday, who later entered the trucking business in Dallas, Texas; Carole Ann Schiele Rice (born 1960) and Patricia Leigh Schiele (born 1962), both of Loranger in Tangipahoa Parish; Alan Maxwell Schiele (born 1964), a deputy sheriff in East Baton Rouge Parish, and Steven Lowery Schiele, II (born 1975) of Port Vincent, a village in Livingston Parish. Steven is named for Steven Schiele, I, a first cousin who was killed in an automobile accident in 1971. There were also three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.[4]
On April 6, 1973, more than five years after he first ran for sheriff of Concordia Parish, Schiele was appointed to the office by Governor Edwin Edwards, pending a special election, after incumbent Noah W. Cross was forced to resign after twenty-five years in office because of the failure of the appeal of his federal conviction of perjury.[5] Edwards settled on Schiele because the former legislator had successfully managed Edwards' 1971-1972 gubernatorial campaign in Concordia Parish.[3]
Sheriff Schiele won a full term in the 1975 election, but he was unseated in 1979 by fellow Democrat John Patrick, an insurance agent. He then completed his college degree and was employed thereafter by the Probation and Paroles section of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety. Schiele attempted a comeback in 1987 when he challenged incumbent Sheriff Hubert Lee McGlothin (1940-2004), who had previously been the mayor of Ferriday. In the 1987 contest, Schiele polled 1,155 votes (12.8 percent).[6]
McGlothin resigned midway in his second term as sheriff as a result of a criminal conviction. The Concordia Parish Police Jury, the parish governing body, then appointed Randy Maxwell, effective August 31, 1990, to serve until a special election was held on March 21, 1991. In that all-Democrat contest, Maxwell defeated Schiele, 4,619 (62.9 percent) to 1,900 (25.9 percent). Two other candidates shared the remaining 11.3 percent of the vote.[7] Maxwell was unopposed in the nonpartisan blanket primary for sheriff on October 19, 1991, and has since remained in the position though he has had close elections.[8]
The probation and paroles division relocated the Schiele's to Alexandria, where he died of a massive heart attack at the age of sixty-eight. He was a United Methodist. After her husband’s death, Mrs. Schiele, a native of Natchez, Mississippi, moved to Loranger to be near her two daughters. Schiele, like Sheriff Cross his predecessor, is interred at the Natchez City Cemetery across the Mississippi River from Vidalia.[9]
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