Music
Albert Jiles
Albert Jiles was a traditional and brass band drummer who performed regularly at Preservation Hall in New Orleans.
Albert Jiles was a traditional and brass band drummer who performed regularly at Preservation Hall in New Orleans.
Andrew Jefferson was a New Orleans traditional jazz and brass band drummer and vocalist.
The first African American chief of the state’s judiciary
Bobby Jindal, the fifty-fifth governor of Louisiana, served from 2008 to 2016.
Bunk Johnson was a trumpeter and one of the leaders of the New Orleans jazz revival in the 1930s.
Chester Jones, a traditional jazz and brass band drummer, was a lifelong resident and community leader of the Treme neighborhood in New Orleans.
Edward Noon Johnson was a New Orleans musical personality, multi-instrumentalist, and inventor.
Frances Benjamin Johnston's seven-decade career as a photographer began in Washington, D.C. during the presidency of Benjamin Harrison, and concluded in New Orleans, months before Dwight Eisenhower's election to the same office.
Georgia Johnson was a businesswoman and civil rights activist in Alexandria from the 1920s to the 1960s.
Eddie "Guitar Slim" Jones has become one of the most widely-influential electric guitar players of the twentieth century.
Henrietta Windham Johnson was a social campaigner and civil rights activist in Monroe.
Henry Johnson, the first professional politician elected governor of Louisiana, served from December 1824 until December 1828.
One-Year Subscription (4 issues) : $25.00
Two-Year Subscription (8 issues) : $40.00