Mrs. Thomas P. Singletary is a gracious and popular Louisiana gentlewoman who
has shown marked capacity for the handling of business interests of important
order and who is a leader in both social and civic affairs in the capital city
of Baton Rouge. Upon the death of her husband she here assumed the active
control and management of the Baton Rouge Business College, the most important
institution of the kind in Louisiana outside the City of New Orleans, and her
regime as executive head of this excellent college has been marked by a splendid
growth in the service and value of the institution.
Mrs. Singletary,
whose maiden name was Sara Allen, was born on the homestead plantation of the
family in Livingston Parish, Louisiana, and is a daughter of the late Clinton
and Louisa (Dixon) Allen, the former of whom was born in South Carolina,
February 11, 1822, and the latter of whom was born in East Baton Rouge Parish,
Louisiana, in March, 1830.
Clinton Allen was reared in his native state
and received liberal educational advantages in his youth. After the death of his
father he accompanied his widowed mother, his six brothers and his one sister to
Louisiana, where the family home was established in Livingston Parish. He became
one of the extensive and successful representatives of plantation industry in
that parish, where he operated also his own cotton gin, and he was one of the
honored and influential citizens of that parish at the time of his death, in
February, 1872. His widow long survived him and died August 12, 1897, while
visiting at Denham Springs, this state. Mr. Allen was a staunch advocate of the
principles of the democratic party, and was a loyal and gallant soldier of the
Confederacy during virtually the entire period of the Civil war. Of the children
of Mr. and Mrs. Allen the eldest is Dallas, who resides on and has the active
management of the old homestead plantation in Livingston Parish; Alice is the
widow of Benjamin C. Dupree, D. D. S., and resides in Baton Rouge; Dr. John C.
was one of the prominent physicians and surgeons at Baton Rouge at the time of
his death, in 1905; Dr. Lawson, who likewise became a physician and surgeon of
ability, died on the old homestead plantation, as did also his twin brother,
Dawson, who there gave his attention to agricultural enterprise; Sara (Mrs.
Singletary) is the immediate subject of this review; Minnie died at the age of
nineteen years, and Harmason was four years old at the time of his death.
Under the preceptorship of a private tutor at the family home Mrs. Sara
(Allen) Singletary received her preliminary educational discipline, which was
thereafter advanced by her attending Reade Villa Seminary at Baton Rouge, and
Norvilla Seminary in St. Helena Parish. In the latter institution she was
graduated as a member of the class of 1884, and her degree of Bachelor of Arts
was later supplemented by that of Master of Arts.
On the 8th of January,
1889, was solemnized the marriage of Dr. Thomas P. Singletary and Miss Sara
Allen, and their ideal marital companionship continued until the death of the
Doctor at Baton Rouge on the 23d of January, 1916.
Dr. Thomas P.
Singletary was born in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, April 12, 1860, and
died at the age of fifty-five years and nine months, he was graduated from
historic old Henry and Emory College, Virginia, and received a most liberal
professional education. He became one of the distinguished physicians and
surgeons of his native commonwealth, served many years as coroner of East Baton
Rouge Parish, and at the time of his death was official physician for the
Louisiana Institute for the Blind. The Doctor served as president of the East
Baton Rouge Medical Society, and was an active member also of the Louisiana
State Medical Society. He held for a bug period the position of local surgeon
for the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad, and incidentally became a member of
the Order of Railway Surgeons. He was a stalwart supporter of the cause of the
democratic party, was affiliated with various social and fraternal
organizations, including the Woodmen of the World, and was a zealous member of
the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
Dr. and Mrs. Singletary became the
parents of three children: Alice is the wife of David W. Thomas, a publisher,
and they reside in Baton Rouge; Tom is secretary and treasurer of the Commercial
Security Company of Baton Rouge; and Katharine is, in 1924, a student in the
University of Louisiana.
Mrs. Singletary is loyally aligned in the ranks
of the democratic party, and is a zealous member of the First Baptist Church of
Baton Rouge, besides which she is a member of the Board of Trustees of the
Protestant Orphans' Home at Baton Rouge, a trustee of the Baton Rouge
Sanitarium, a director of the Commercial Securities Company, and a member of the
library board of the local organization of the United Daughters of the
Confederacy. Since 1917 Mrs. Singletary has been the owner and efficient manager
of the Baton Rouge Business College, and she has brought the institution up to a
very high standard in all departments of its work. She is the owner of two
business buildings in the capital city-the Allen Building, at 351 Florida
Street, and the Singletary Building, at 228 Third Street. She is the owner also
of a plantation in Livingston Parish and of her beautiful home place in Baton
Rouge, at 315 Church Street.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, page 116.
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