Background
Campbell was born and reared on the Black River in Concordia Parish, the youngest son of Mr. and Mistress F. L. Campbell, who were among the early pioneers of the region.
Campbell was born and reared on the Black River in Concordia Parish, the youngest son of Mr. and Mistress F. L. Campbell, who were among the early pioneers of the region.
Campbell graduated in 1896 from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
He served nearly thirty-two years from June 1908 until his death, which occurred the same month as his reelection to a ninth four-year term. F. L. Campbell was named assessor of Concordia Parish in 1888 by Governor Francis T. Nicholls and again in 1892 by Governor Murphy J. Foster, Senior Eugene Campbell was himself appointed assessor by Governor Newton C. Blanchard.
Campbell had five brothers, including a twin who died in early childhood.
He played as an End, and was named as a letterman, on Louisiana State University"s first football team in 1893. After Campbell died in Ferriday of a lingering illness, Campbell served under appointment of Governor Earl Kemp Long as sheriff until her death a year and a half later on July 25, 1941.
By that time Noah West. Cross of Ferriday began the first of his twenty-five years as sheriff, seven nonconsecutive and interrupted terms, in the combined law-enforcement and tax-collecting position. A Vidalia native, Darlene Campbell was the daughter of Mike J. Schuchs and the former Julia Brunk.
She was quickly buried on the same day that she died.
In 1936, when Sheriff Wyatt Luther Nugent of Grant Parish was killed in the line of his duty, his widow, Lydia Ann Rosier Nugent, served briefly thereafter. Services for both Campbells were held at the family residence, a Queen Anne Revival style house at 2 Concordia Drive in Vidalia. The house, included on the National Register of Historic Places, years later burned to the ground.
Both are interred at Natchez City Cemetery.
The Tensas Gazette in neighboring Saint Joseph in Tensas Parish opined at the time of Campbell"s passing: There was probably no other man in public life in this section at least, who had a greater hold on the people of his parish than Gene Campbell enjoyed. Indeed, it was often said that Gene Campbell held every public office in Concordia Parish in the hollow of his hand.
. The heavy load laid upon him in the last year of his life almost proved his undoing and unquestionable hastened his death.
Gene Campbell"s own weakness.. was his devotion and loyalty to his friends, oft at his own prejudice.