Between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, lies the remnants of antebellum sugar plantations along Louisiana’s famed River Road, named for the Mississippi River that snakes its way through southern Louisiana before spilling into the Gulf of Mexico. Many of the eighteenth-century and nineteenth-century plantation homes that still exist along this road have been preserved, and some have been transformed into museums dedicated to retelling Louisiana’s antebellum period. A few of these museums attract as many as 200,000 visitors a year (Oak Alley and Laura, A Creole Plantation, for example). Most of these plantation house museums, however, have traditionally focused their narrative presentations on the planter and his family, which necessitates that ...
Plantations are one of the long-standing symbols of the U.S. South. Today, almost four hundred forme...
The Bayou Teche, winding 135 miles from its origin in Port Barre to meet the Atchafalaya River in Pa...
Cultural research on plantations has largely focused on the house tour and its representations of sl...
Between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, lies the remnants of antebellum sugar plantations along Louisia...
Heritage tourism plays an increasingly important yet controversial role in interpreting the emotiona...
Arbor framing view of formal garden; An historic plantation complex (with eight buildings) and house...
On plantation sites throughout the United States, slavery is commodified in a way that promotes ante...
The Whitney Plantation is located in St. John the Baptist Parish in Louisiana, about an hour west of...
This thesis evaluates the United Daughters of the Confederacy's (UDC) interpretation of Southern his...
During the five decades between the War of 1812 and the end of the Civil War, southern Louisianans d...
Documenting Louisiana Sugar provides historians and social scientists with an innovative tool for ex...
For our project, we decided to memorialize the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade in the form of a museum. O...
Research has shown how little tour guides in the American South talk about slavery and the enslaved ...
© 2016, © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper examines owners of ...
Plantations are one of the long-standing symbols of the U.S. South. Today, almost four hundred forme...
The Bayou Teche, winding 135 miles from its origin in Port Barre to meet the Atchafalaya River in Pa...
Cultural research on plantations has largely focused on the house tour and its representations of sl...
Between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, lies the remnants of antebellum sugar plantations along Louisia...
Heritage tourism plays an increasingly important yet controversial role in interpreting the emotiona...
Arbor framing view of formal garden; An historic plantation complex (with eight buildings) and house...
On plantation sites throughout the United States, slavery is commodified in a way that promotes ante...
The Whitney Plantation is located in St. John the Baptist Parish in Louisiana, about an hour west of...
This thesis evaluates the United Daughters of the Confederacy's (UDC) interpretation of Southern his...
During the five decades between the War of 1812 and the end of the Civil War, southern Louisianans d...
Documenting Louisiana Sugar provides historians and social scientists with an innovative tool for ex...
For our project, we decided to memorialize the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade in the form of a museum. O...
Research has shown how little tour guides in the American South talk about slavery and the enslaved ...
© 2016, © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper examines owners of ...
Plantations are one of the long-standing symbols of the U.S. South. Today, almost four hundred forme...
The Bayou Teche, winding 135 miles from its origin in Port Barre to meet the Atchafalaya River in Pa...
Cultural research on plantations has largely focused on the house tour and its representations of sl...