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Louisiana Orphan Train Museum

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Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Louisiana Orphan Train Museum
Phone:
+1 337-948-9922

Hours:
SundayClosed
MondayClosed
Tuesday10am - 3pm
Wednesday10am - 3pm
Thursday10am - 3pm
Friday10am - 3pm
Saturday10am - 2pm


The history of the area that is now the US state of Louisiana began roughly 10,000 years ago. The first traces of permanent settlement, ushering in the Archaic period, appear about 5,500 years ago . The area formed part of the Eastern Agricultural Complex. The Marksville culture emerged about 2,000 years ago out of the earlier Tchefuncte culture. It is considered ancestral to the Natchez and Taensa peoples. About 1,000 years ago, the Mississippian culture emerged from the Woodland period. The emergence of the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex coincides with the adoption of maize agriculture and chiefdom-level complex social organization beginning in c. 1200 AD. The Mississippian culture mostly disappeared around the 16th century, with the exception of some Natchez communities that maintained Mississippian cultural practices into the 18th century. European influence began in the 16th century, and La Louisiane became a colony of the Kingdom of France in 1682, before passing to Spain in 1763. It became part of the United States following the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. Antebellum Louisiana was a leading slave state; in 1860, 47% of the population was enslaved. Louisiana seceded from the Union on 26 January 1861. New Orleans, the largest city in the entire South and strategically important as a port city, was taken by Union troops on 25 April 1862. During the Reconstruction Era, Louisiana was part of the Fifth Military District. In 1898, the white Democratic, planter-dominated legislature passed a new disfranchising constitution, whose effects were immediate and long-lasting. The disfranchisement of African Americans did not end until the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.
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