Alex Hunt, Jr. Led Family Business

Alexander (Alex) Trotter Hunt, Jr., who began his wood products career working for the family’s lumber business in Louisiana, oversaw Willamette’s sawmill, plywood and timberlands operations in the South, and in 1977 partnered in the startup of H&C Veneer and later formed Hunt Plywood and Hunt Forest Products, died November 17 in his native Ruston, La. He was 90.

Hunt was a high school football star and went on to play linebacker at Georgia Tech under head coach Bobby Dodd, including on the 1952 12-0 Georgia Tech national championship team, which beat Ole Miss in the Sugar Bowl. He also played for the 1951 undefeated, once-tied Tech team that is also recognized in some outlets as the national champion.

Hunt graduated from Tech in industrial management, married Laura James in 1953 and served in the Army during the Korean War. He returned to Ruston to work for the family lumber business, Hunt Lumber. He represented the third generation of Hunt lumbermen in Louisiana.

The company entered the plywood business in 1965 through a partnership with Continental Can and the construction of a plywood plant, known as Louisiana Plywood, which started up in 1966, located near the Hunt Lumber sawmill north of Dodson, La. When Continental Can sold its interests to Willamette Industries, the Hunts and Willamette began a profitable partnership, including additional plywood plants and the operation of a particleboard plant in Simsboro, La. The Hunts sold their interests to Willamette in 1972.

Hunt served as vice-president of Willamette’s Southern Building Materials Group for several years before venturing out to partner in H&C Veneer, which constructed a veneer and plywood mill in Pollock.

Hunt’s two sons would join him in the business and be major contributors to the expansion of the company with an additional plywood operation at Natalbany and hardwood and softwood sawmills and chipping operations.

“I learned that you have to have good people—in your woodlands and in your plants. That is the key to whether you stay in business or not,” Hunt once said, adding, “We always shipped a quality product.”

Before his death, the company built and started up a new southern yellow pine sawmill in Urania, La.

Hunt and Laura had two sons, Alexander Trotter Hunt, III, and James Davis Hunt. Laura Hunt died in 1992. Hunt married Sallie Shafto who died in 2008, and in 2009 he married Willie Heard Sherrouse.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Alexander and Alverne Davis Hunt, brothers Davis Hunt and Tommy Hunt. He is survived by his wife and his two sons and their wives and extended families, including 10 grandchildren and 25 great grandchildren.

Hunt was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Ruston serving as a former elder, was a former board member at Lincoln General Hospital and First National Bank of Ruston. He was an avid outdoorsman and enjoyed hunting, fishing and playing golf. He always maintained a passion for Georgia Tech football and supported his alma mater his entire life.

A graveside service was held November 20 at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Ruston.

RELATED ARTICLES

PRODUCERS SIGN ORDERS

 

Latest News

First CLT Office Opens In DC

Opened in fall 2022, the first mass timber commercial building in the U.S. capital city features more than 108,000 sq. ft. of mass timber. The building is an innovative retrofit at 80 M Street SE in Washington, DC: Termed an overbuild—extra stories atop an existing building—the expansion features three floors, where columns of mass timber are visible from the interior…

All Said And Done: Fifty Speakers Brought Their Expertise To PELICE

PART FOUR: This is the fourth of a four-part series summarizing the presentations delivered during the Panel & Engineered Lumber International Conference & Expo (PELICE) held this spring and hosted by Panel World in Atlanta March 31 to April 1. The first three parts appeared in the May, July and September issues. PELICE 2024 will be held March 14-15, 2024 again at the Omni Hotel at CNN Center in Atlanta…

Panel Industry Moves Ahead

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-In-Chief, Panel World November 2022 – As I glanced through the pages of the six issues of Panel World in 2022, various news developments refreshed my memory, but underlying it all was just the fact that business for the most part was conducted as usual. That we were back to…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Panel World Industry Newsletter reaches over 3,000 who represent primary panel production operations.

Subscribe/Renew

Panel World is delivered six times per year to North American and international professionals, who represent primary panel production operations. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative. Contact us today!