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  2. Melrose Plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melrose_Plantation

    The purchaser, F. R. Cauranneau of New Orleans, held the land and houses as an absentee owner until April 1884, when he found a buyer willing to pay $4,500 (~$128,555 in 2023) cash. The new owner, an Irish immigrant merchant named Joseph Henry, had married into a prominent local family. He gave the property the name Melrose, by which it is ...

  3. List of plantations in Louisiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plantations_in...

    Plantation heiress and manager Laura Lacoul Gore's (1861–1963) autobiography tells the family's history and her experience living at the plantation. Open to the public. 78001426 Laurel Valley Sugar Plantation: March 24, 1978: Thibodaux: Lafourche: 93000694 LeBeuf Plantation House: July 29, 1993: New Orleans: Orleans: Leonard Plantation: Not ...

  4. Laura Plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laura_Plantation

    The first owner, Guillaume Benjamin Demézière Duparc, lived at the plantation for 4 years, dying in 1808, 3 years after the house was completed. His daughter Elisabeth married into the Locoul family. Generations later, Laura Locoul Gore, who was born in the big house in 1861, inherited the plantation after she had married and moved to New ...

  5. Destrehan Plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Destrehan_Plantation

    Three swift trials were conducted, one in St. John the Baptist Parish, one at Destrehan Plantation (St. Charles Parish), and the third in New Orleans (Orleans Parish). Local justice was yet based on the traditional French system, which did not provide for a fair and impartial trial or an opportunity for appeal of a court's ruling.

  6. 1850 House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1850_House

    Limited docent- and curator-led tours are available as is self-directed viewing. Because residents of this row house were tenants who lived here for a few years at a time, the 1850 House does not represent any single family. Rather it reflects mid-nineteenth-century prosperity, taste, and daily life in New Orleans.

  7. Faubourg Livaudais - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faubourg_Livaudais

    The Faubourg Livaudais area is within the National Register Central City Historic District [3] and has many notable historical buildings and institutions, including up to about twenty churches throughout the area (Third Rose of Sharon Baptist Church, Gloryland Mt. Gillion Baptist Church, Second Mount Carmel Baptist Church, and Mt. Bethel Baptist Church, Pressing Onward Baptist Church, Second ...

  8. Thomas Jefferson's enslaved mistress' living quarters found - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-07-03-thomas-jeffersons...

    On a sunny weekday this spring, Monticello tour guide Tom Nash spoke to a group of white tourists and shared stories about slavery on the sprawling Jefferson plantation. "This is a spectacular ...

  9. Benjamin Laurent Millaudon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Laurent_Millaudon

    The Historic New Orleans Collection holds documents from Millaudon's life and career, including the Benjamin–Millaudon Papers (90-21-L), which relate to business between Millaudon and future Confederate cabinet officer Judah P. Benjamin, and the Millaudon and Gardanne Family Papers (2015.0073), which relate to two of his children, Philippe Millaudon (1823–1855), and Jeanne Henriette ...