BILLY Joe BOOTH
Billy Joe Booth
Compliments of Billy Hathorn, Class of 1966
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Billy Joe Booth (April 7, 1940 - June 30, 1972) played professionally with the
Ottawa Rough Riders in the Canadian Football League from 1962-1970. He also
played for his alma maters, Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and Minden
High School in Minden, the seat of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana,
where he was born and reared. After his football career, Booth was an electrical
contractor for the IC Electric Company in Harvey, a census-designated place on
the west bank of the Mississippi River in Jefferson Parish near New Orleans.
Booth and his friend, James W. Magee, Jr. (1938-1972), of Morgan City in
Terrebonne Parish in south Louisiana, were killed in an airplane crash near
Dorchester, Ontario. The two were in Canada on a fishing trip when their
four-seat Piper Cherokee Arrow crashed during a thunderstorm. Witnesses said
that the plane blew up and fell to the ground, with wreckage spread over an area
of some one and one-half miles. The plane was en route from Windsor to London
but crashed some ten miles before reaching its destination.
Booth was born and reared in the small city of Minden. He graduated from Minden
High School in 1958 and then LSU in 1962, having received a bachelor of science
degree in physical education. At Minden High School, Booth played football
from 1954 to 1957. His coach for the first three seasons was the former
professional player, George Doherty, but Doherty left Minden for Louisiana Tech
University in Ruston in Booth's senior year. Another of Booth's coaches was his
maternal uncle, Patrick Cary Nation (1918-2005), later a school principal. Booth
was designated "All-State" and the "Outstanding Blocker" in 1956. He also played
baseball in 1956 and ran track from 1955-1958. He was All-State in track in
1957. He was an elected member of the MHS Student Council in his senior year. At
LSU, he played in the 1962 Senior Bowl.
Booth was six feet tall and weighed 240 pounds. Many had considered him too
small to be a defensive end, but his toughness and determination was said to
have overcome his physical limitations. His size thwarted his ultimate goal of
playing in the National Football League. Booth's team won the Ryder Cup in both
1968 and 1969. During the 1969 season, he was named "Outstanding Lineman" in the
eastern division of the Canadian Football League. He lost the coveted Schenley
Award to John Legrone of the Edmonton Eskimos. Booth was not compelled to retire
but could likely have played a few more seasons. Many lamented his decision to
leave the game and the circumstances of his ill-fated fishing trip.
He was the son of Coy Dexter Booth (ca. 1915-2004), who retired in 1978 from the
Kansas City Southern Railway and was formerly employed as a carman by Louisiana
and Arkansas Railroad, and the former Fern Nation (1915-2001) a Minden
native. The Booths were living in Shreveport when their son was killed. Booth
married the former Janice Schouest, whom he met at LSU, and was the father of
two young sons, Mike Booth (born ca. 1963) and Coy Ulysses Booth (born ca. 1965
- since deceased, automobile accident victim). He had a sister, Carole Booth
Mulina (born ca. 1944), and brother-in-law, Andy V. Mulina (born ca. 1942), then
of Cleveland, Ohio, and later of the St. Louis suburb of Chesterfield, Missouri.
Booth grew up in the Missionary Baptist denomination. After his death, the
congregation of the former Central Missionary Baptist Church of Shreveport,
under the late pastor Dwayne Furlow, established the Billy Joe Booth Memorial
Press. Booth's father at the time was a deacon at the church. The late L.L.
Clover, a prominent Missionary Baptist minister from Minden and longtime friend
of the Booth family, officiated at the dedication ceremonies. When Central
Baptist merged with another congregation, the Booths transferred their
membership to the Heritage Missionary Baptist Church in Bossier City.
Six years before his death, Booth penned a letter to his young sons informing
them that he might not live as long as most people. Booth urged the boys to turn
their lives over to Jesus Christ. Booth told his sons: "The good Lord has been
good to me, and He will do the same for you if you will only put your faith and
trust in Him." In making the letter public, Pastor Furlow added in his comments:
"We need to be ready to meet God at every moment. We do not know when our name
shall be called by the Death Angel."
Booth is interred in Westlawn Memorial Park in Gretna in Jefferson Parish.
The following information was submitted by Waurynne Hurley Neeley. Billy's father was Coy Booth. He worked with Waurynne's Dad at the L&A Railroad in Minden, Louisiana. They were both carmen.
Billy Joe Booth, MHS - Class of 1958
According to what we have been able to learn from the obit of Billy Joe Booth...Funeral Services were held for Billy Joe Booth, 32, son of Mr. & Mrs. Coy D. Booth of Shreveport will be at 3:30 p.m., Monday at the Mothe Funeral Home in Harvey, Louisiana. Billy Joe Booth was one of two persons killed in a plane crash at London, Ontario around noon Friday, June 30, 1972. Also killed in the crash was J. W. Mc Gee of Morgan City. The two were in Canada on a fishing expedition and their plane crashed during a thunderstorm. Billy Joe was working as an electrical contractor at Harvey, and was a former professional football player. He played professional football with the Ottawa Rough Riders from 1962 to 197_ and was selected as all pro in the Canadian League. Survivors in addition to Mr. Booth's parents include his widow Janice Schouest Booth and sons, Mike Booth and Coy Booth, both of Harvey; and a sister, Mrs. Carole Mulina of Cleveland, Ohio. Burial will be in Westlawn Memorial Park in Gretna.












