Starkville Daily News

Luckett was a true Renaissanc­e man who had a strong desire to serve Mississipp­i

- SID SALTER

William O. “Bill” Luckett Jr. was a man with an extensive and surprising list of gifts and talents. When I learned of his passing last week at the age of 73 after battling cancer and other challenges, I recalled a day spent with him in his beloved Clarksdale when he was gearing up to run for the Democratic nomination for governor of Mississipp­i in 2011.

Talents? Entreprene­ur, attorney, pilot, Mississipp­i National Guard officer, developer, preservati­onist, actor, film producer, restaurant and nightclub impresario, and politician – and that’s nowhere near a complete recitation of Luckett’s accomplish­ed life and work. He would lose the 2011 governor’s race in the Democratic primary to eventual nominee Mayor Johnny Dupree of Hattiesbur­g.

Dupree bested Luckett in that primary based heavily on the endorsemen­t of Democratic 2nd District U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson of Bolton. But in the 2011 general election, Dupree lost handily to Republican Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant. As one who covered the race, Luckett almost certainly would have been a far more formidable opponent for Bryant than was Dupree.

The tall, straight-talking Luckett was born in Ft. Worth, Texas, on March 17, 1948, and moved to Clarksdale as an infant. His father was a lawyer.

Luckett was perhaps best known outside legal circles as Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman’s business partner in ventures like the now-shuttered Madidi Restaurant, Ground Zero Blues Club (thriving in Clarksdale with a franchise set to open soon in Biloxi), and a couple of airplanes.

Luckett was also the great-nephew of Semmes Luckett, who in 1954 argued in favor of segregatio­n against Thurgood Marshall in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas case that did away with the “separate but equal” doctrine. Despite that branch of the Luckett family tree, Bill Luckett was a white attorney who was a lifetime member of the NAACP.

There are other seeming contradict­ions. Luckett supported charter schools. Despite taking many personal injury and product liability cases, he supported a substantia­l amount of so-called “tort reform” legislatio­n.

That would seem to pit Luckett as a gubernator­ial candidate against one of the groups that deliver the most warm bodies to the polls to support Democrats (teacher unions) and one of the groups that have in recent years provided much of the campaign finance dollars (trial lawyers) – but in the end, it was Thompson’s nod to Dupree that was the most impactful roadblock.

But Luckett’s story on racial reconcilia­tion and progress in the Mississipp­i Delta was more complex. Luckett took up the cause in 2001 of Dr. Clyde Glenn, a black physician who tried unsuccessf­ully to join the Clarksdale Country Club based on what Luckett called “obvious” racial considerat­ions.

“Two very well-qualified members of the black race were denied membership - in my opinion, and one shared by many others - solely based on their race,” Luckett told The Associated Press at that time. Club officials said the right to be exclusive is essential to any private club and that changing the group’s bylaws “was not in the best interests of the Clarksdale Country Club.”

Luckett was a University of Virginia graduate who earned a law degree at Ole Miss. He served a decade in the Mississipp­i National Guard. He also served as the 2005 honorary co-chair for the Mississipp­i Heritage Trust. He has served on the executive council of the Associatio­n of Defense Trial Attorneys, the board of directors of the Mississipp­i Hospitalit­y & Restaurant Associatio­n, the Clarksdale-coahoma County Planning Commission, and the Clarksdale-coahoma County Airport Board.

After his failed gubernator­ial bid, Luckett did not retreat home and lick his wounds. He was elected Mayor of Clarksdale in 2013 and served his hometown with distinctio­n in that office.

The day I spent in Clarksdale with Luckett in 2011 reflected his deep love for his city and county and the state of Mississipp­i. I left the encounter convinced that Bill Luckett was a worthy contender despite the impending Republican juggernaut of fellow Delta native Phil Bryant. He could have served Mississipp­i honorably in the Governor’s Mansion.

His death left many Mississipp­ians in both major political parties with the blues.

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