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Local Bayou history

Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:05 pm
Posted by LSU Grad 2021
Baton Rouge LA
Member since Jun 2024
40 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:05 pm
What are the best places in Nola or Louisiana to teach my son about his French and Acadia ancestry? He's really interested in what led up to the Louisiana purchase & what not.
This post was edited on 6/26/24 at 9:55 am
Posted by RanchoLaPuerto
Jena
Member since Aug 2023
719 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:09 pm to
In NOLA? Not much.

There’s an Acadian Village in Lafayette.
Posted by FreddieMac
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2010
24553 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:10 pm to
Rural life museum when they have the actors
Posted by Sput
Member since Mar 2020
8330 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:12 pm to
Bawcomeville
Posted by SloaneRanger
Upper Hurstville
Member since Jan 2014
11034 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:13 pm to
quote:

to teach my son about his French and Arcadian ancestry? He's really interested in what led up to the Louisiana purchase & what not.


You mean Acadian. Not trying to be a smart arse, but these are two pretty different things. As for the Acadian migration, start at the old Acadian church in St. Gabriel. Then cross the river and spend some time in Cajun country: Lafayette, St Martinville, other places up and down Bayou Teche. There are lots of places you could go. Beautiful and very interesting area IMO.
Posted by ChestRockwell
In the heart of horse country
Member since Jul 2021
6214 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:14 pm to
No schools teach LA history anymore? They did when I was 12, back in 1984
Posted by doublecutter
Member since Oct 2003
6894 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:17 pm to
Acadian Museum in St. Martinville.
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
16436 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:23 pm to
quote:

Arcadian ancestry
Driskill Mt.
Posted by AutoYes_Clown
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Oct 2012
5305 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:33 pm to
Last year I posted asking about Fort Bute & Bayou Manchac LINK

The book Winding Through Time: The Forgotten History and Present-Day Peril of Bayou Manchac is amazing and available at local libraries. I got the electronic version from EBR Library System.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
102581 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:40 pm to


You know the place baw
Posted by Epaminondas
The Boot
Member since Jul 2020
5546 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:51 pm to
Re. Acadian history:
Acadian Memorial and Museum - St. Martinville.
Longfellow-Evangeline State Historic Site - St. Martinville.
St..Martin de Tours (Mother Church of the Acadians) - St. Martinville..
Vermilionville - Lafayette.

A common misconception is that Acadian and French are .more or less synonymous in Louisiana. But even some "Cajun" areas were originally settled by non-Acadian French who were in Louisiana prior to the arrival of the Acadians.
Check out this short book on the subject:
Carl Brasseaux Book

This post was edited on 6/25/24 at 11:08 pm
Posted by go_tigres
Member since Sep 2013
5363 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 10:52 pm to
There is an Acadian museum in Erath. Also, Shadows on the Teche used to do pretty good job of explaining the local(New Iberia) role in cajun history.

Acadian Museum
Posted by Kjnstkmn
Vermilion Parish
Member since Aug 2020
16606 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 11:23 pm to
Bump on the Acadian Village in Lafayette,

Also, smaller but in Erath:

https://www.acadianmuseum.com/ourcollection.html
This post was edited on 6/25/24 at 11:24 pm
Posted by GreenRockTiger
vortex to the whirlpool of despair
Member since Jun 2020
54055 posts
Posted on 6/25/24 at 11:30 pm to
quote:

What are the best places in Nola or Louisiana to teach my son about his French and Arcadian ancestry? He's really interested in what led up to the Louisiana purchase & what not.

quote:

In NOLA? Not much.

What a fricking idiot - not everything is in Lafayette.

In NOLA - St Louis Cathedral (named after a FRENCH king), the Presbytere, and the Cabildo.

Cajun people are descendants of the French that came down from Canada. A lot of French people came over directly from France to Louisiana.
Posted by CajunPhil
Chimes
Member since Aug 2013
797 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 4:11 am to
Et in Arcadia ego.
Posted by TheHarahanian
Actually not Harahan as of 6/2023
Member since May 2017
21755 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 4:16 am to

Lockport
Posted by 4cubbies
Member since Sep 2008
54891 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 4:43 am to
How old is your son? If he’s elementary or even middle school school aged, there’s a good book called The Louisiana Purchase: Would You Close the Deal? that does a great job explaining what led up to the LA Purchase.

Your local library probably has it and it’s pretty cheap on Amazon.

The Louisiana Purchase: Would You Close the Deal? (What Would You Do?) LINK

Posted by Jimbeaux
Member since Sep 2003
20939 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 4:47 am to
Capitol Park Museum

The Capital Park Museum on 4th Street in Baton Rouge is a good place to start. (Aka, Louisiana State Museum). It’s a very good museum and a beautiful place. It gives a nice overview of the regions of the state. I especially like the station that shows the different accents from the various cultural areas of the state. It’s a real gem that’s under appreciated.
Posted by White Roach
Member since Apr 2009
9666 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 4:59 am to
quote:

NOLA - St Louis Cathedral (named after a FRENCH king), the Presbytere, and the Cabildo.



Cabildo - Spanish
St. Louis Cathedral - original church was built by the French in 1718, but burned down two or three times. The big church was built by the Spanish in the late 1700s and elevated to cathedral status under Spanish rule.
Presbytere - Built under American rule after the Louisiana Purchase from France and statehood.

LA reverted from Spanish back to French rule as part of a war treaty in 1803 (I think). The French almost immediately sold the territory to the US to prevent the English, who the French were at war
with (again), from potentially acquiring it through a treaty settlement.

That said, there was much French culture in New Orleans in the 1700s and 1800s.
Posted by Y.A. Tittle
Member since Sep 2003
107770 posts
Posted on 6/26/24 at 5:18 am to
quote:

Cabildo - Spanish St. Louis Cathedral - original church was built by the French in 1718, but burned down two or three times. The big church was built by the Spanish in the late 1700s and elevated to cathedral status under Spanish rule. Presbytere - Built under American rule after the Louisiana Purchase from France and statehood.


The Ursuline Convent is the oldest French Colonial building in the US.

Lafayette’s “Cajun Village” is a tourist attraction built in the 1970s.
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