Architecture
Camp Moore
Camp Moore in Louisiana served as the training location for more than 20,000 Confederate soldiers during the Civil War.
Camp Moore in Louisiana served as the training location for more than 20,000 Confederate soldiers during the Civil War.
The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception serves as the seat of the Diocese of Lake Charles, Louisiana.
The Centenary State Historic Site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
Architect Charles Colbert's contributions to the shaping of mid-Twentieth Century architecture in southern Louisiana are profound.
Chrétien Point, the center of the Civil War's Battle of Buzzard's Prairie in 1863, is rumored to have been spared when its owner, Hypolite Chrétien II, gave the Masonic sign.
The Alexander State Forest Headquarters building is an important structure associated with the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), and a particularly fine example of the Corps’ accomplishments
Andrew Jackson was entertained at Cottage Plantation while en route to Natchez after the Battle of New Orleans.
The architectural firm Curtis and Davis designed the Superdome, Rivergate, and other notable buildings in New Orleans and throughout the state.
The Cypress Grove Cemetery in New Orleans has a monumental entrance gate suggesting a triumphal passage from one world to the next.
Established in 1787, Destrehan Plantation is the oldest documented plantation in the lower Mississippi Valley.
Dogtrot houses, like those found in North Louisiana, are composed of two enclosed buildings separated by a passage that is open at the front and back; the so-called dogtrot.
The East Louisiana State Hospital in Jackson was the state's first major permanent facility to provide behavioral healthcare to patients.
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