Tuesday, March 10, 2009

A Little Louisiana History Lesson...


...From the desk of el-meaux:

If Hurricane Katrina causing the levees to break in New Orleans is the only thing you know about Louisiana , here are a few more interesting facts about the Bayou State:

* Louisiana has the tallest state capitol building in the nation at 450 feet.

* The Louisiana SuperDome in New Orleans is the largest enclosed stadium in the world.

* The Lake Pontchartrain Causeway is the longest over-water bridge in the world at 23.87 miles.

* Louisiana 's 6.5 million acres of wetlands are the greatest wetland area in America.

* The oldest city in the Louisiana Purchase Territory is Natchitoches, Louisiana founded in 1714.

* The first bottler of Coca-Cola, Joseph Biedenharn, lived in Monroe , Louisiana and was one of the founders of Delta Air Lines, initially called Delta Air Service.

* Delta Airlines got its start in Monroe , Louisiana when Parish Agent, C.E. Woolman, decided to try dusting the Boll Weevil that was destroying the cotton crops in the Mississippi River Delta from an airplane. It was the first crop dusting service in the world.

* Southern University in Baton Rouge , Louisiana is the largest predominantly black university in America.

* Baton Rouge was the site of the only American Revolution battle outside the original 13 colonies.

* The formal transfer of the Louisiana Purchase was made at the Cabildo building in New Orleans on December 20, 1803.

* The staircase at Chritien Point, in Sunset, Louisiana was copied for Tara in "Gone with the Wind."

* Louisiana is the No. 1 producer of crawfish, alligators and shallots in America.

* Louisiana produces 24 percent of the nation's salt, the most in America.

* Much of the world's food, coffee and oil pass through the Port of New Orleans.

* Tabasco, a Louisiana product, holds the second oldest food trademark in the U.S. Patent Office.

* Steen's Syrup Mill in Abbeville, Louisiana is the world's largest syrup plant producing sugar cane syrup.

* America 's oldest rice mill is in New Iberia, Louisiana, at KONRIKO Co.

* The International Joke Telling Contest is held annually in Opelousas , Louisiana .

* LSU (The Ole War Skule) in Baton Rouge has the distinction of contributing the most officers to WW II after the U.S. Military academies.

* The Louisiana Hayride radio show helped Hank Williams, Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash achieve stardom. It was broadcast from KWKH Radio in Shreveport, Louisiana from 1948 to 1960.

* The term Uncle Sam was coined on the wharfs of New Orleans before Louisiana was a U.S. Territory as goods labeled U.S. Were from "Uncle Sam ."

* The game of craps was invented in New Orleans in 1813 as betting was a common activity on the wharves.

* When states had their own currency, the Louisiana Dix French for ten) was a favored currency for trade. English speakers called
them Dixies and coined the term Dixieland.

* New Orleans is the home of the oldest pharmacy in America at 514 Chartres Street in the French Quarter. These early medical mixtures became known as cocktails (guess they were good for what ails ya?), coining yet another term.

* New Orleans is the birthplace of Jazz, the only true American art form. Jazz gave birth to the Blues and Rock and Roll music.

Vive La Louisiane!!!


You win some, and you lose some. Who knew that the boll weevil destroyed crops from an airplane! I have not checked all these facts out for accuracy, so if you know that one or two are not true - well, good for you.

22 comments:

  1. The picture of boll weevils destroying crops from airplanes is a hoot. Are they dive bombers?

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  2. MotherAmelia, that was a howler, wasn't it? I posts them as they comes.

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  3. The boll weevil was destroying the cotton crop. The crop dusting was from an airplane. The boll weevils were not flying on airplanes. Marilyn

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  4. Marilyn, I know. I was noting the humor that came to mind from the awkward phrasing:

    ...the Boll Weevil that was destroying the cotton crops in the Mississippi River Delta from an airplane.

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  5. What can I say, Mimi? You be a real humourous literalist!

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  6. Susan, I be alawys on the prowl for humor, and I takes it where I finds it.

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  7. The NYT online had a list of its own "bloopers" which included:

    "… a stew of programs, some with warts and all.

    … assets that are hanging over a bank and need to be purged.

    … acquisitions that are absorbed and then molded into a giant.

    … unplugging a stoppage by shoring up something"

    I liked the warty stew best.

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  8. Warty Stew would not be on my list of menu items!

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  9. SusanKay, good ones. Yuk! to the warty stew.

    And I see that I can't spell. For some reason, I make many more mistakes on the laptop.

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  10. Contrebande, we used to call such in some kind of French ;=)

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  11. Speaking of D-P, Mimi when are you going to England?

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  12. TMI? One vital bit of information is missing. Gov. Jimmy Davis rode his horse, Sunshine, up the steps of the tallest capitol. As I'm sure you all know, Davis wrote "You Are My Sunshine".

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  13. Mimi when are you going to England?

    Susan, on the eighth day from today.

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  14. Hurray for Louisiana! I shall have to go make a drink and celebrate...

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  15. Bubs, any excuse will do for you, right?

    Or is it Louisiana = drink? Don't go up to the rural Nawth with that, my friend. It don't work like that up there.

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  16. AND Xavier University of Louisiana (aka XULA) in NOLA is, as far as I know, the only university that is both an HBCU (historically Black college or university) and a historically Catholic university -- AND it was founded by a woman!

    And speaking of pharmacies, XULA has a great pharmacy school.

    Also NOLA is the mother city for African American Catholics and the Black Catholic Institute is located at XULA and has degrees, certificates, and a great summer program for church leaders both lay and ordained.

    I love your list, Mimi. Thanks for reminding us what a great city New Orleans is!

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  17. Mimi
    one noteworthy Louisianna claim to fame the list forgot...

    Louisianna is also home to Grandmere Mimi, one of the Episcopal Church's most notorious... oooops I mean, most loved, best known, and widely followed bloggers in the Episcopal Church.

    je t'embrace, chere Mimi

    David@Montreal

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  18. Jane, thanks for your NOLA good list. You're a friend for life for that.

    David, you were, very likely, most right the way you said it first.

    Je crois que je t'embrace, cher David, mais je ne suis pas sûre.

    I may be butchering the French.

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  19. Isn't it embrasser ?

    Which means both embrace and kiss ;=)

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  20. Göran, of course, you could be right.

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