Art

Helen Maria Turner
New Orleans painter Helen Maria Turner was best known for her paintings of people in their own homes and women in gardens.
New Orleans painter Helen Maria Turner was best known for her paintings of people in their own homes and women in gardens.
Henrietta Windham Johnson was a social campaigner and civil rights activist in Monroe.
Henry Howard was an important Louisiana architect of the nineteenth century.
The Barrow family built Highland Plantation in antebellum St. Francisville, Louisiana.
Hippolyte Sebron resided in Louisiana for a brief time, from 1849 to 1855, but he had a profound effect on the development of landscape and genre painting in the state.
New Orleans's French Quarter was an early testing ground for preservation measures, and it continues to be one today.
Archaeologists at sites across Louisiana help fill in the written record through physical excavations of the past.
For the first sixty years of its existence, the Hotel Bentley was the social hub of Alexandria.
The United Houma Nation claims approximately 17,000 members and continues to keep Native American traditions alive from their tribal center in Lafourche Parish.
In the eighteenth century Houma people established trade and political relationships with French and Spanish colonists. In the twentieth century Houmas unified their community and successfully struggled for political recognition.
Hubert Rolling was a nineteenth century New Orleans pianist and composer.
Huddie "Lead Belly" Ledbetter is one of the most important grassroots musicians of the twentieth century.
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