
Louisiana Facts, State Trivia & Information
- The world famous "Mardi Gras" is celebrated in New Orleans. Mardi
Gras is an ancient custom that originated in southern Europe. It
celebrates food and fun just before the 40 days of Lent: a Catholic time
of prayer and sacrifice.
- The Battle of New Orleans, which made Andrew Jackson a national
hero, was fought two weeks after the War of 1812 had ended and more than
a month before the news of the war's end had reached Louisiana.
- Louisiana was named in honor of King Louis XIV.
- Baton Rouge hosted the 1983 Special Olympics International Summer
Games at LSU.
- Louisiana has the tallest state capitol building in the United
States; the building is 450 feet tall with 34 floors.
- Louisiana is the only state in the union that does not have
counties. Its political subdivisions are called parishes.
- Louisiana is the only state with a large population of Cajuns,
descendants of the Acadians who were driven out of Canada in the 1700s
because they wouldn't pledge allegiance to the King of England.
- The Superdome in New Orleans is the worlds largest steel-constructed
room unobstructed by posts.
Height: 273 feet (82.3 meters), Diameter
of Dome: 680 feet (210 meters), Area of Roof: 9.7 acres, Interior Space:
125,000,000 cubic feet, Total floor footage: 269,000 sq. ft. (82,342 sq.
meters), Electrical Wiring: 400 miles (640 kilometers)
- Metairie is home to the longest bridge over water in the world, the
Lake Pontchartrain causeway. The causeway connects Metairie with St.
Tammany Parish on the North Shore. The causeway is 24 miles long.
- Louisiana is the only state that still refers to the Napoleonic Code
in its state law.
- Since 1835 the New Orleans & Carrolliton Line is the oldest
street railway line still in operation.
- Saint Martin Parish is home to the world's largest freshwater river
basin, the Atchafalaya Basin; the basin provides nearly every type of
outdoor recreational activity imaginable.
- Breaux Bridge is known as the "Crawfish Capital of the World".
- The first American army to have African American officers was the
confederate Louisiana Native Guards. The Corps d'Afrique at Port Hudson
was sworn into service on September 27, 1862.
- In Louisiana, biting someone with your natural teeth is considered a
simple assault, but biting someone with your false teeth is considered
an aggravated assault.
- The Saint Charles streetcar line in New Orleans and the San
Francisco, California cable cars are the nation's only mobile national
monuments
- Jennings is called the "Garden Spot of Louisiana" for it's rich and
productive farmland. Jennings sobriquet {nickname} became a "Northern
Town on Southern Soil".
- Baton Rouge's flag is a field of crimson representing the great
Indian nations that once inhabited the area.
- Money Magazine has rated Terrebonne Parish, in the heart of Cajun
Country the best place to live in Louisiana for 3 years in a row.
- In 1718 The French found New Orleans and marked "Cannes Brulee" on
maps upriver in the area known today as the City of Kenner. French for
"Burnt Canes", Cannes Brulee was a name given by explorers who observed
natives burning cane to drive out wild game.
- Between April 17,1862 and May 18, 1864 20 major Civil War battles
and engagements were fought on Louisiana soil.
- In 1803 the United States paid France $15 million for the Louisiana
Territory. 828,000 square miles of land west of the Mississippi River.
The lands acquired stretched from the Mississippi River to the Rocky
Mountains and from the Gulf of Mexico to the Canadian border. Thirteen
states were carved from the Louisiana Territory. The Louisiana Purchase
nearly doubled the size of the United States.
- bayou: \BUY-you\ n. a French name for slow-moving "river"
- Louisiana's first territorial governor, William C.C. Claiborne had
great admiration for the awkward bird that inhabited the Gulf Coast
region. The pelican, rather than let its young starve, would tear at its
own flesh to feed them. The Governor's great respect for the Pelican led
him to first use the Pelican symbol on official documents.
- The Catahoula Leopard Dog, often called the Catahoula Hound, is the
official state dog.
- The City of Sulphur is the 13th largest city in Louisiana and is
named for the chemical and mining industry that helped to establish
Calcasieu Parish in the late 1800's.
- The Town of Walker became a municipality under the State's Lawrason
Act (136 of 1898) on July 9, 1909 as a village.
- Saint Joseph's Cemetery, the only known United States cemetery
facing north-south is in Rayne.
- Incorporated in 1813 under the Lawrason Act, Saint Francisville is
the second oldest town in Louisiana.
- The Union Cottonseed Oil Mill of West Monroe was in the planning
stages as early as 1883. By 1887, it provided the area with many jobs
for the laborers of the area. The Union Oil Mill is the oldest industry
in Ouachita Parish.
- French speaking Acadians in the mid-1700s settled the Lafayette
Parish region of south Louisiana. The Acadians were joined by another
group of settlers called Creoles, descendants of African, West Indian,
and European pioneers. At the time of the migration, Louisiana was under
Spanish rule and authorities welcomed the new settlers.
- The city of Kaplan is referred to as "The Most Cajun place on
earth".
- The town of Jean Lafitte was once a hideaway for pirates.
- Winnsboro, the "Stars and Stripes Capital of Louisiana", is one of
the most patriotic cities in America. On Memorial Day, July 4th,
Veteran's Day, Labor Day, and other special occasions, approximately 350
American flags fly proudly along highway 15.
- The name "Bogalusa" is derived from the Indian named creek "Bogue
Lusa", which flows through the city.
- Frances Parkinson Keyes, one of America's best selling authors,
lived in Crowley for more than ten years.
- The golden spike, commemorating the completion of the east-west
Vicksburg, Shreveport and Pacific Railroad, was driven at Bossier City
on July 12, 1884, by Julia "Pansy" Rule. It was the first such spike
driven by a woman.
- Jim Bowie, the legendary adventurer and hero of the Battle of the
Alamo, lived in Opelousas after moving there from Kentucky. Opelousas is
the third oldest city in Louisiana.
- The City of Ponchatoula is the oldest incorporated city in
Tangipahoa Parish. Ponchatoula derives its name from the Choctaw Indian
language meaning "hair to hang" because of the abundance of Spanish moss
on the trees surrounding the area.
- Le Musee de la Ville de Kaplan {The Kaplan Museum} is located in the
center of downtown Kaplan. Le Musee at appropriate times has exhibits
centered on the seasonal festivals. Mardi Gras, Easter, July 4, Bastille
Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas.
- Rayne is known as the "The Frog Capital of the World".
- Notations on the original plats of survey for the area that is now
Ville Platte stated that surveyors had to use pirogues and flat boats to
properly do their work.
- Because Covington is in a region referred to as the Ozone Belt, it
has long been known for its clean air and water.
- Gueydan is known as the "Duck Capital of America" in recognition of
its abundance of waterfowl.
- Mamou bills itself as "The Cajun Music Capital of the World." Mamou
musicians, in particular the musicians who have perform at Fred's Lounge
have been a major force in expanding the audience for Cajun music far
beyond Southwest Louisiana.
- The Harvey Canal Locks near Westwego connect the Mississippi River
to the Harvey Canal. Back in the 1800s the locks served as ferries to
transport railroad cars from one side of the canal to the other. Workers
would then reunite the railroad cars on land. This service may have
sparked the name of the town. According to one local folk tale, trainmen
would shout "West We Go" as the railroad cars were reconnected and
pulled out of the station.
- Church Point boasts the designation "The Buggy Capital of the
World". A festival celebrates this designation annually on the first
weekend in June.
- The Creole House in French Settlement was built of cypress wood. It
is typical of the dwellings built in the late 1800's because cypress was
so plentiful in the surrounding swamps.
- Fort Polk was established in 1941 and named in honor of the Right
Reverend Leonidas Polk, the first Episcopal Bishop of the Diocese of
Louisiana. On March 12, 1993, Fort Polk officially became the home of
the Joint Readiness Training Center.
- Pineville is home to a one of a kind museum called the Old Town Hall
Museum. It is the only museum in the entire state of Louisiana dedicated
to municipal government.
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