Art

Dom Gregory de Wit
In 1946, Benedictine artist Dom Gregory de Wit began working on his brilliantly colored, large scale murals for the St. Joseph Abbey near Covington, Louisiana.
In 1946, Benedictine artist Dom Gregory de Wit began working on his brilliantly colored, large scale murals for the St. Joseph Abbey near Covington, Louisiana.
Dorothy Dix, the pseudonym of Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer, was a writer and immensely popular advice columnist in the early twentieth century.
Louisiana drama, like all Louisiana literature, is a rich and diverse subject.
Edward Austin Burke, known as Major E. A. Burke, was a Louisiana politician during the Reconstruction era.
E. Howard McCaleb served as the chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court for one year, from 1971 to 1972.
Photographer E. J. Bellocq gained fame after his death for his portraits of prostitutes in Storyville.
The East Louisiana State Hospital in Jackson was the state's first major permanent facility to provide behavioral healthcare to patients.
Eddie Flynn was considered by many to be the finest amateur boxer in the history of New Orleans.
Edith Garland Dupre was a leading intellectual, civic, and religious leader in Lafayette in the early twentieth century.
Edmond Dédé was a prominent African-American musician and composer in born in New Orleans in the nineteenth century.
Edward Noon Johnson was a New Orleans musical personality, multi-instrumentalist, and inventor.
Edward Bermudez served as the chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1880 to 1892.
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