Career
He is considered the youngest member ever elected to the Louisiana House. On February 1, 2014, less than two months before his death, Guidry and seven others were inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield. The Hall of Fame claims that Guidry was elected to the House by a margin of seventeen votes in 1952, when he was twenty-three.
He served from Lafourche Parish from 1952 to 1956.
Francis Dugas, a lawyer from Thibodaux, held a House seat from Lafourche Parish from 1956 to 1960. Guidry thereafter took office in May 1964 and left the House permanently in 1976 after three more terms.
In the first ever nonpartisan blanket primary held on November 1, 1975, Guidry did not run again. In his last term from 1972 to 1976, he served alongside future United States. Representative Billy Tauzin of Louisiana"s 3rd congressional district and later State Senator Leonard J. Chabert.
Willis prevailed and then defeated in the general election the Republican candidate, Hall Lyons of Lafayette, but it was Willis"s last term in the seat, for he was unseated in the 1968 primary by Patrick T. Caffery.
The photographs are posted on the Internet. In 1970, Representative Guidry obtained designation of the South Louisiana Tidal Water Control Levee District, signed into law that year by Governor John McKeithen. In 1978, the entity was renamed the South Lafourche Levee District.
Located in Galliano, the hurricane protection system consists of forty-eight miles of ring levee, 33,400 acres within the flood protection system, six pumping stations, and total acreage of nearly 440,000.
On April 29, 1975, in a "personal privileges" speech on the floor of the Louisiana House, Guidry, considered a Conservative Democrat, decried the communist takeover of the former South Vietnam. He became so outraged over the turn of fortunes against the United States in Southeast Asia that he questioned whether the country could survive until its 300th birthday.
Guidry said that voters have the mentality of "a fourteen-year-old". Guidry owned the Jet Drive-in Theater, located on Louisiana Highway 1 in Cut Office and the Jet Cinema in Galliano.
In the 1980s, the Jet Drive-In was closed because of the falling of the screen tower.
Foreign years a popular meeting place for young people, the Jet could accommodate five hundred cars, had a screen 150 feet in height, and a snack bar specializing in chili. Guidry also owned several other area theaters. The Jet became so popular that it drove most of his competitors out of business.
Guidry died on March 26, 2014, aged 84.