Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Margaret Stewart Hill: Hunting with a Passion While Seeing for Two

 National Hunting and Fishing Day was established in 1972, when Congress passed two bills to have a day celebrating the conservation contributions of U.S. hunters and anglers. The day is celebrated by all 50 states on the fourth Saturday in September. In Bossier, it’s celebrated every year at Bayou Bodcau Reservoir. In this history column, we highlighted the day on Wednesday, Sept. 17 with the story of Miss Mary Babb, the fishing centenarian. Here’s a follow-up piece, this time featuring hunting and Miss Mary Babb’s friend, Margaret Hill, along with her husband, Walter.




Mary Babb, whose passion was fishing, fished at least once a week on a pond in Bossier Parish that was owned by JoAnne McDonald and her husband. Ms. McDonald is the one who shared a clipping about Ms. Mary from the Sunday, June 4, 1995, Shreveport Times with me. The article noted that Mary also was an honorary member of the Sailes Hunting Club in Bienville Parish. When she was in her 90’s, she was the club’s oldest member. She and her friend Margaret Stewart (later Hill) of Benton were also the only two women at the deer camp. Margaret was the club’s first and only full voting member of the hunting club.


Like Mary Babb and her zeal for fishing, Margaret Stewart Hill’s passion for hunting started later in life. She picked up a gun for the first time well into her 40s, and shot her first deer that very day. Born and raised in Atlanta, Texas (which is just due west of north Bossier’s Plain Dealing community), Margaret Groves married Carl Stewart soon after graduating from Atlanta High School. She raised 6 boys and a girl, and worked for 30 years as a hospital LPN, much of that time on her own after her first husband passed away in 1981. Once the kids were raised and she started hunting, she spent the next 30 years outhunting most of the men at the hunting club. One of these men was Walter Hill of Benton, a farmer and public servant who’d been hunting at Sailes since the year it opened in 1960. As Margaret’s friend, neighbor and hunting buddy since the mid 1980’s, Walter, also widowed, became her husband on Valentine’s Day 2007.


Walter was legally blind, a result of a 1970s industrial accident. He was also 85 percent deaf. Because he was deaf, she had to elbow him to stealthily let him know a deer was approaching, or if he was inadvertently making any loud noises. She also was always the shooter for him. Then she read in a magazine about a blind hunter in Texas who was able to hunt with a special laser scope. She called the secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries to see if Walter could hunt with such a scope and was told no; it was against the law. Margaret, who also had a blind son, and was an experienced advocate, straightaway called her state representative and friend Henry Burns of Haughton. She asked Henry to get the law changed.


Sixteen states had already put such a bill in place. HB 39, introduced by Mr. Burns and signed by Governor Jindal in 2009, allowed him and others with sight of 20/200 or less to hunt with a sighted hunter and a laser scope to properly align the rifle or shotgun. Margaret reported that seventy-five percent of the meat they ate was what they killed, and now Walter could help keep up the supply.


Margaret also volunteered as a guide for small groups of youth during the state’s special youth hunts, when kids 16 and under could hunt with a certified hunter prior to the regular shooting season. An October, 2000, article in The Shreveport Times featured Margaret, at age 65, reporting that two of the five youngsters in her group, who were aged 12 and 13, brought home a deer. Margaret praised the youth hunt for building up the young hunters’ confidence.


Mary Hill passed away December 8, 2015 at the age of 80. On her October 28 birthday that year, opening day of the season, she shot her last deer. As reported in her obituary, it was “a big, beautiful 8 point.” Her husband Walter passed away a year and a half later.


Like Mrs. McDonald, who passed along to us the story of Miss Mary Babb, which then led us to the story of Margaret and Walter Hill, we’d love for our readers to visit us with stories, clippings and photos of other remarkable people and memories from around Bossier Parish. We are located at 7204 Hutchison Drive, Bossier City, LA. We are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org


For other fun facts, photos, and videos, be sure to visit the History and Genealogy Resources page at Bossierlibrary.org or follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB and check out our blog http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/.

Image: Walter and Margaret Hill with doe he harvested using laser-sighted gun/special to The Times/Jan. 5, 2011 

Article by: Pam Carlisle 

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Bossier High Band Impressive at Sugar Bowl

The 1960 Sugar Bowl featured a New Year’s Day matchup of Southeastern Conference rivals LSU and Ole Miss. The second-ranked Rebels were eager to avenge a 7 – 3 loss to the third ranked Tigers that occurred on Halloween night following an 89-yard punt return for a touchdown by LSU star halfback Billy Cannon. For the Bossier High School marching band, the bowl provided not only a chance to see top college teams in action, but also offered the opportunity to step onto a national stage.



Three months earlier, Bossier High had welcomed a special visitor to see the band perform. According to the Bossier Tribune of October 11, 1959, a man named Irwin Poche, chairman of the New Orleans Mid-Winter Sports Association’s Pageant Committee, came to Bossier’s Memorial Stadium to see the band during halftime of a Bossier High vs Byrd football game. The reason for his visit was to consider inviting the band to play at the Sugar Bowl. The Tribune stated that the Bossier Chamber of Commerce and the Bossier Parish School Board had informed the sports association of the band’s availability for the bowl and invited the association to preview the band. Poche was said to be “very impressed with the splendid group.”


The Bossier band had distinguished itself by being selected to represent Louisiana numerous times at the Lions Club International band competition, winning first place in 1956, 57 and 59 in cities such as Miami, New York and Atlantic City against dozens of other high school bands from throughout the country. More first-place wins would come in the 1960s. With that track record, it’s no surprise that the Sugar Bowl showed interest.


Within days of Mr. Poche’s visit, the band received the hoped-for invitation. The Bossier High marching band was bound for New Orleans. Bossier Schools Superintendent T. L. Rodes was thrilled. “This marks the realization of a dream that has extended for years in Bossier,” he was quoted as saying in an article in The Shreveport Journal on October 13, 1959. News of the invite created so much excitement that the Bossier Chamber made arrangements to help get fans to the game. According to the Bossier Tribune’s October 18 edition, the chamber sponsored a train to carry approximately 300 band boosters, parents and fans to the bowl game, and orders for tickets to ride the train inundated chamber offices.


As game day approached, band members spent untold hours preparing for their performance. The Bossier Press of November 20, 1959 stated, “Fourteen big minutes. Those are the precious minutes in which thousands of eyes – and perhaps millions – will be turned upon the world champion Bossier High band.” The band was scheduled to perform for eight-minutes during a pre-game exhibition and six minutes at halftime. The game would be televised nationally.


When their moment to shine came on New Year’s Day 1960, the Bossier High band members didn’t disappoint. In short, they knocked it out of the park, er, stadium. Both The Shreveport Journal and The Shreveport Times of January 2 stated that the band received a standing ovation. An article in The Times from January 5 detailed the band’s performance, saying members executed maneuvers called “Company Fund,” “Diamond” and “X,” among others, while playing music like the “Grand Entry March,” “March Gloria” and “Colossus of Columbia March.” The newspaper stated that the band exited the field “by dividing into four main sections, two breaking toward the sidelines and the other two filling in as the other two approached them.”



Accolades weren’t long in coming. According to The Shreveport Times article from January 5, Bossier band Director Kenneth Green’s office was “flooded” with letters from states such as Texas, Illinois, Missouri, North and South Carolina, and Mississippi offering praise for the band’s showing and the “high degree of discipline” of its members. One letter writer asked Green for notes and diagrams of the band’s performance. A reporter for the New Orleans Times Picayune was said to have written that his vote for outstanding players during the Sugar Bowl would go to the Bossier band. Managing Editor for The Shreveport Journal Robert Packwood wrote on January 4, “It was one of the finest band performances we have ever seen and, as far as we are concerned, outdid any college band that appeared New Year’s Day in any of the televised bowl halftime shows.” Well done, Bearkats.


Film of the band at the Sugar Bowl is available for viewing by searching on YouTube for Bossier City High School band 1960. If you have any photos or other information relating to the history of Bossier City or Bossier Parish, the History Center may be interested in adding the materials to its research collection by donation or by scanning them and returning the originals. Call or visit us to learn more. We are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org. We can also be found online at https://www.facebook.com/BPLHistoryCenter/ and http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/


Images: 

  • Bossier High Marching Band 1959-60/photo by Shorter/History Center collection
  • Headline from The Shreveport Times, January 2, 1960
Article by: Kevin Flowers

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Tri-State Oil Tool Company - A Bossier Titan

There was once a company of international prominence headquartered right here in Bossier City, Louisiana. Tri-State Oil Tool Industries Inc., or Tri-State Oil Tool Company, was once the one of the largest employers here in Bossier Parish, and whose wide-reaching influence would see a dozen international locations and nearly three dozen local. What got them there, and where did they go?



Tri-State Oil Tool got its start right here in Bossier City just under sixty years ago, in December of 1945, and was founded by Gary H. Burnham Tri-State Oil Tool. Mister Burnham was then quickly joined by a co-owner by the name of Earl P. Sawyer. The company was founded with a small staff, just seven, with their company mascot Junior the fox terrier. Tri State Oil Tool Company, as the name suggests, was in the business of supplying the oil fields of the Ark-La-Tex and beyond with, according to a June 18th, 1951, Shreveport Times article, “a complete line of squeeze, acidizing and fishing tools, well testing tools, both formation and casting; all sizes of wash over pipes, and several types of drill pipe equipment with tool joints.” Six years after their founding, in 1951, Tri-State Oil Tool would move their headquarters to a larger newly built location on East Texas Street, not far from where the BPL Central Complex sits now. Indeed, there were several local locations, such as Lafayette or Magnolia, AR. Already, at the time of their office move, the company had begun reaching an international clientele, with service as far north as Canada, though this would not be the end of their international ambitions.



The 1970s were a busy time for the company, with a series of large international location openings in quick succession, as well as a major shakeup on the corporate side. In 1974, Tri-State Oil Tool would open in Aberdeen Scotland to serve the North Sea oil fields off the coast of the United Kingdom. In 1978, they would expand into Egypt, as many of their costumers did large amounts of work in the Suez oil fields. The following year, 1979, would see a location open in Singapore, to serve the oil fields there. Wherever their customers were, the Tri-State Oil Tool Company would expand to meet their needs. To better coordinate this worldwide, a new office complex was built at 2701 Village Lane in 1980, where the company would remain until its end. The new locations, however, were not made in a vacuum. In 1973, according to The Los Angeles Times, Baker Oil Tools Incorporated, an L.A. based company, acquired Tri-State Oil Tool Industries for an undisclosed number of shares in the Baker Oil Tools company, entwining the two forever. It would be in 1992 that Tri-State Oil Tool was folded entirely into Baker Oil, after moving their headquarters to the Houston area.



The legacy of Tri-State Oil Tool Industries is as a former industry leader, whose equipment was sought around the world. With their sixtieth anniversary just around the corner, think back to this former Bossier Parish titan.







If you have any photos or other information relating to the history of Bossier City or Bossier Parish, the History Center may be interested in adding the materials to its research collection by donation or by scanning them and returning the originals. Call or visit us to learn more. We are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org. We can also be found online at https://www.facebook.com/BPLHistoryCenter/ and http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/


  • TSOT Home Office, Plant & Pipe Yard (History Center Collection - 2000.036.011)
  • Early TSOT Store (History Center Collection - 2023.002.322)
  • TSOT International Office Print (History Center Collection - 2023.002.278)
  • TSOT Aberdeen, Scotland Staff (History Center Collection - 2023.002.274)
  • Early TSOT Vehicle Fleet (History Center Collection - 2023.002.272)
Article by: Jonah Daigle

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

A Lake Bistineau Fishing Story for National Hunting and Fishing Day

September 27 is National Hunting and Fishing Day, an event celebrated by all 50 states every year on the fourth Saturday in September. It was established in 1972 when Congress passed two bills to have a day to celebrate the conservation contributions of U.S. hunters and anglers. It seems a perfect time to share a fun fishing story (with some hunting thrown in, too) brought to me by a reader of this column, JoAnne McDonald. 



Mrs. McDonald and her late husband Jerry had a house in Bossier Parish with a private pond near Lake Bistineau. It was highlighted in The Shreveport Times in 1995 because of a Minden, Louisiana centenarian, Miss Mary Babb, who, with the McDonalds’ invitation, would fish from a boat on their pond with her friend Lydon Taylor. Miss Babb fished at least once a week, from morning to sunset. With nonarthritic hands, she could still set the hook on the bluegill bream herself and see the slightest jiggle of a bream hook, no glasses needed. 


At that stage in her life, fishing was one “Miss Mary’s” favorite past-times, but as a girl growing up on a farm in Cotton Valley from 1905 to 1924, she wasn’t included when her father and brothers went fishing. A friend introduced her to fishing’s pleasures as an adult. She also was an honorary member of the Sailes Hunting Club in Bienville Parish. She and her friend Margaret Stewart of Benton were the only two women at the deer camp. When someone bagged a buck, Miss Mary would help prepare the meat for the freezer, or make sausage with it. Additionally, the centenarian was still gardening and raising chickens and gathering their eggs. She knew how to live off the land, and never set foot in a mall until just prior to the 1995 article, when a friend took her to Pierre Bosser for some new shoes. 


In Cotton Valley, Mary and her ten siblings worked on the family’s 160-acre farm until they moved to Minden in 1924, in the historic Killen Place, one of the oldest homes in Webster Parish. She lived there for the rest of her life. As a young woman, Miss Mary was active with the local home demonstration club, hosting meetings and reporting club doings to the local newspaper. She also taught school, worked for her father’s store and trained and worked as a nurse. 


Early to mid-twentieth century Minden newspapers are filled with some of Mary Babb’s accomplishments, such as her work for the Federal Works Progress Administration (WPA), binding books so they can continue to be used, working to cleanup automobile graveyards across the region, keeping accurate demographic statistics such as births for the parish, becoming a WPA supervisor, and clerking at the Minden courthouse, keeping World War II selective service records. She also contributed to the war effort at the Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant in Minden. 


Mary Babb died Nov. 22, 1996, at Minden Medical Center after a brief illness, less than a month shy of her 102nd birthday. 



Like Mrs. McDonald did, we’d love for our readers to visit us with stories, clippings and photos of other remarkable people and memories from around Bossier Parish. We are located at 7204 Hutchison Drive, Bossier City, LA. We are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org


For other fun facts, photos, and videos, be sure to visit the History and Genealogy Resources page at Bossierlibrary.org or follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB and check out our blog http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/.


Images: 

  • Illustration from Plain Dealing’s Roach-Strayhan-Holland American Legion Post #20 Home Dedication Cookbook, 1950
  • Headline from The Minden Herald February 17, 1939, page 1.


Article by: Pam Carlisle


Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Combat Skyspot in SE Asia: The B-52s On-the-Ground Advantage

Operational since December of 1954, the B-52 Stratofortress bomber aircraft and its distinctive hulking silhouette are familiar, over 70 years Advantage, to anyone living near North Louisiana’s Barksdale Air Force Base. When the B-52 entered service, the Air Force’s Strategic Air Command (SAC) intended it for use in the “Cold War” to deter the expanding and modernizing military of the Soviet Union and its increasing nuclear capabilities. In the 1960s, projects to replace the B-52 with a new bomber had been aborted or scrapped after disappointing results. With the escalating situation in Southeast Asia, B-52 bombers were modified to continue as the US Air Force’s main bomber for eventual combat missions in the Vietnam War. Not all of these modifications were to the actual aircraft itself, but also to its “team.” The B-52s needed some extra help on the ground, and that help came in the form of radar technicians. The 1st Combat Evaluation Group (1CEVG), headquartered at Barksdale, stepped up in a secret mission named Combat Skyspot. 

 


On August 1, 1961, SAC's 1st Radar Bomb Scoring (RBS) Group at Carswell AFB (Fort Worth) had merged with the 3908th Strategic Standardization Group to form the 1st Combat Evaluation Group (1CEVG) at Barksdale Air Force Base. This new organization had the dual mission of providing radar bomb scoring services as well as standardization and evaluation services, filling the constant need for challenging training and testing scenarios. In the mid-1960s, 1CEVG personnel at Barksdale modified SAC RBS equipment to make it capable of directing aircraft at extended distances to the precise release point over a target. These modifications were important because though the B-52 was an especially deadly weapon in itself, its accuracy fell short. The aircraft’s crew needed a way to meet the challenges of accurately finding and distinguishing points and features on the ground from the air, especially with bad weather or other obstructions to visibility. 


After several months of testing, Barksdale’s 1CEVG ground-directed bombing (GDB) system was deployed to southeast Asia from various SAC RBS sites under the name Combat Skyspot. The Combat Skyspot sites were maintained and operated for more than ten years by SAC personnel on temporary duty assignments. During deployment, the forward area commander had control of the system, but overall command and administrative control remained under SAC’s 1CEVG at Barksdale. 


With its integrated combination of radar, computer, and communications systems, each GDB radar station provided crucial route corrections as the bomber approached the target, and then designated when to release its bombs. The system was so effective that the radar stations and their technicians became prized targets to hostile forces. Over 3,000 Combat Evaluation Group personnel manned ground radar sites in South Vietnam, Thailand and Laos, 24 hours a day from March 1966 to August 1973.


In November 2007, a monument to all the 1st Combat Evaluation Group personnel killed in SE Asia was installed at Barksdale’s 8th Air Force Museum. Featured on the tall, middle panel of the stone triptych was the group’s last and deadliest enemy attack of the Vietnam War, occurring in Laos in March 1968 at the Lima-85 site. North Vietnamese fighters scaled the mountain, atop which sat the radar site and brutally killed 12 men. The men’s names are carved in the panel. 


Special space on the panel was given to Chief Master Sgt. Richard L. "Dick" Etchberger, who posthumously received an Air Force Distinguished Cross for saving the lives of at least two of the men at the Lima-85 site. After 11 of the 19 members of the radar crew on the mountain were killed, Etchberger tended to the wounded and fought off the advancing North Vietnamese troops for hours, even though he had little or no combat training, until a rescue helicopter arrived. Braving gunfire, he helped load the wounded onto slings to be lifted into an aircraft hovering overhead. After finally boarding himself, Etchberger was killed after an enemy soldier below fired his AK-47 at the helicopter.



The Combat Skyspot Memorial at Barksdale read, in part:

During their 90-month period of service in Southeast Asia, Combat Skyspot crew directed over 300,000 USAF, Navy, Marine and RVN re-supply, reconnaissance, rescue and tactical air missions as well as 75 percent of all B-52 strikes. Over 3,000 men of CEG manned ground radar sites in South Vietnam, Thailand and Laos 24 hours a day from March 1966 until August 1973. This memorial is dedicated in memory to the nineteen members of CEG who gave their lives in this effort


The dedication of the monument was not held until June of 2008, to coincide with a reunion of former members of the 1st CEVG and their families. Family members of those memorialized were also in attendance. An official Air Force photo shows Master Sergeant Etchberger’s brother, together with one of the men saved by Etchberger, laying a wreath in front of the monument. 


Because the operations were classified, the details of the technician’s deaths were not revealed, or properly honored, until the missions became declassified. The monument was rededicated in 2012, when Chief Master Sgt. Richard L. Etchberger's Air Force Distinguished Cross was upgraded to the Medal of Honor for heroism, and Master Sgt. James H. Calfee's Bronze Star was upgraded to a Silver Star for gallantry in action. Family members were again present, but just as importantly, members of the community attended to honor their sacrifices.  Bossier City’s Airline High School Viking Band played for the occasion at the museum, which that same year had been renamed the Barksdale Global Power Museum. 


If you have stories or photographs of people connected to SAC at Barksdale, or have served our community in any capacity, please visit or contact us at the History Center. We are located at 7204 Hutchison Drive, Bossier City, LA and are open M-Th 9-8, Fri 9-6, and Sat 9-5. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org For other local history facts, photos, and videos, be sure to follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB, @bplhistorycenter on TikTok, and check out our blog http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/.


Images: 

  • Combat Sky Spot Area of Effectiveness. With a maximum range of about 230 miles, COMBAT SKY SPOT radars covered most areas of interest, with the notable exception of northern North Vietnam. The installation of a modified COMBAT SKY SPOT site on LS 85 in 1967 covered this gap. (U.S. Air Force photo)
  • A photo of Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Richard L. Etchberger taken in an unspecified location in 1968. USAF photo

Article by: Pam Carlisle