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Dicey11
Member since Sep 2023
7 posts

What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?

Reading a book about the 1900 Galveston hurricane which is the deadliest natural disaster in American History and it mentions how Galveston could've been the Houston of today.

My question is what cities in Louisiana could've or should've been bigger if it wasn't for unforeseen circumstances (Hurricanes, bad city politics, etc.)


Tigers2010
New Orleans Saints Fan
Member since Nov 2008
8775 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Bawcombville


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3211
Paul Allen
California Fan
Montauk, NY
Member since Nov 2007
74316 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Natchitoches. On an interstate with a university.


LemmyLives
LSU Fan
Texas
Member since Mar 2019
5004 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
quote:

bad city politics


That's not an unforeseen circumstance in Louisiana, it's a design feature.


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370
RefineryRich
Iowa Fan
Member since Aug 2023
551 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Every one of them if just one more citizen would have moved there...


Jones
Member since Oct 2005
88893 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
quote:

and it mentions how Galveston could've been the Houston of today.


Curious how with the lack of space


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171
Eightballjacket
LSU Fan
Member since Jan 2016
7210 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
New Orleans was the 10th largest U.S. city by population in 1880.


BigPerm30
Chicago Cubs Fan
Member since Aug 2011
23781 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
New Orleans is no doubt the answer. Was bigger than Houston, Atlanta, etc. Obviously being land locked didn’t help but it was corruption and Louisiana politics that derailed it. Now it’s a whole different problem.


tigerfan84
LSU Fan
Member since Dec 2003
19107 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Wiki

quote:

Harrisonburg is a village in and the parish seat of Catahoula Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 348 as of the 2010 census, down from 746 in 2000.


quote:

Harrisonburg was once a trade capital because of its location on the Ouachita River, with easy access to the Mississippi River and New Orleans. The Harrisonburg Road ran through the area as it crossed Louisiana between Mississippi's Natchez Trace and Texas' El Camino Real.


quote:

Harrisonburg was considered for the new site of the Louisiana state capital when the legislature decided to move it from New Orleans after the Civil War.

This post was edited on 9/17 at 4:26 pm


SixthAndBarone
Member since Jan 2019
7157 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Whichever city on the North Shore between Denham and Slidell that Walt Disney was planning on building Disney World before his Orlando plans. Rumor is the politicians wanted kickbacks and Walt chose Florida.


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Limitlesstigers
LSU Fan
Lafayette
Member since Nov 2019
2375 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Maurice Heyman almost built the Oil Center in Opelousas but it got blocked by a City Councilman who was worried about "crime."

It's kind of ironic because Opelousas is statisically the most dangerous small town in the state.


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310
KamaCausey_LSU
Member since Apr 2013
13861 posts
 Online 

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Alexandria probably. Central location in the state.


offshoretrash
LSU Fan
Farmerville, La
Member since Aug 2008
10090 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Eros was once bigger than West Monroe until a tornado tore the town up then a fire burned down the saw mill. Now it has a population of around 50.


LSUSkip
LSU Fan
Central, LA
Member since Jul 2012
16450 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Baton Rouge and New Orleans both could be much bigger if it weren't for shitty Louisiana politics. The port of the Mississippi River alone should be a rather large economic driver. Miami is a closer option for anything coming from the Eastern countries now, but Mississippi River access was a massive deal at one point in time.


tigerfan84
LSU Fan
Member since Dec 2003
19107 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
quote:

Alexandria probably. Central location in the state.


from wiki

quote:

Louisiana State University Agricultural & Mechanical College had its origin in several land grants made by the United States government in 1806, 1811, and 1827 for use as a seminary of learning. It was founded as a military academy and is still today steeped in military tradition, giving rise to the school's nickname "The Ole War Skule". In 1853, the Louisiana General Assembly established the Seminary of Learning of the State of Louisiana near Pineville in Rapides Parish in Central Louisiana. Modeled initially after Virginia Military Institute, the institution opened with five professors and nineteen cadets on January 2, 1860, with Major, later Colonel, William Tecumseh Sherman as superintendent.


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151
cadillac7563
LSU Fan
Birmingham, AL
Member since Aug 2014
1522 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
New Orleans was almost THE airport hub of the south, aka ATL, which would have changed a lot population wise but not in the demographic or political realm


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220
nitwit
Member since Oct 2007
11853 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Louisiana cities are not unique in having politics and corruption restrain growth, especially fifty years ago or more.
But some cities experienced a sort of civic malpractice, often supported by local churches, to restrain growth.
Ruston, Alexandria and Shreveport certaily experienced this.
Natchitoches has been its own worse enemy in charting its future. That city never recovered from romantic notions of its history and a movie production which paralyzed its citizens with self satisfaction.


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164
USEyourCURDS
USA Fan
Member since Apr 2016
11867 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Hammond I-12/55 split


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270
Tarps99
New Orleans Saints Fan
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
6404 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
quote:

My question is what cities in Louisiana could've or should've been bigger if it wasn't for unforeseen circumstances (Hurricanes, bad city politics, etc.)


Houma/Morgan City

Had US 90 become an interstate back in the 1950’s, Houma could have been much bigger or be a bigger suburb of New Orleans with much better transportation access.

Same with South Lafourche, if the Larose Lafite Highway was built out to connect Larose with Lafite, it would make a trip to New Orleans from my house a 30 minute drive instead of an hour and a half. Also the road would have created a hard barrier or natural levee south of the Intracoastal limiting salt water in the Barataria basin it would also be where a levee should have been built to protect the Westbank of New Orleans.
This post was edited on 9/17 at 4:53 pm


HubbaBubba
LSU Fan
F_uck Joe Biden, TX
Member since Oct 2010
44859 posts

re: What Cities in Louisiana could've been much bigger?
Jefferson, TX.

It was developed on land that was part of the Louisiana purchase, named in honor of Thomas Jefferson, and so, I'm including it, as it served as an important cultural and civic port as travel up the Mississippi to the Red River and past Shreveport, up Twelve Mile Bayou to Caddo Lake, then to the Cypress River, where Jefferson was built on the high banks.

It was an important outpost of commerce and trade into the Texas/Spanish/Western lands as it represented the least expensive route for transporting goods from the great commerce center of the Port of Orleans.

Today, it's a sleepy B&B community.

History of Jefferson, TX.


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