Government, Politics & Law
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Governors of Louisiana
This is a complete list of the governors of Louisiana, their terms, and links to biographical entries.
This is a complete list of the governors of Louisiana, their terms, and links to biographical entries.
Organized in 1827, Grace Church serves Louisiana's second oldest Episcopal parish.
New Orleans novelist and historian Grace King made the city and state of her birth an abiding theme in her work.
The massive Greek Revival plantation house is a modern replica of the original structure at Greenwood which burned to the ground in 1960.
Guerrilla warfare in Civil War Louisiana attacked both Confederate and Union forces, as well as civilians.
Gumbo is a thick soup that could be considered the signature dish of South Louisiana.
Gumbo is a thick soup popular in Louisiana.
Haller Nutt owned and operated several plantations including Araby, Evergreen, and Winter Quarters in Louisiana and Cloverdale and Laurel Hill in Mississippi.
After announcing painter Harold Rudolph's arrival in New Orleans in 1873, local papers praised his portraits as being among the best ever produced in the city.
New Orleans painter Helen Maria Turner was best known for her paintings of people in their own homes and women in gardens.
Henriette Delille was a free Afro-Creole woman who founded sodalities, or religious sororities, for women of African descent that dedicated themselves to the care of the poor, the enslaved, and free people of color.
Henry Clay Warmoth was the first governor of Louisiana under Radical Reconstruction.
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