Art

Theodore Sydney Moise
In the 1840s Theodore Sydney Moise moved to New Orleans, where he operated a successful portrait studio for decades.
In the 1840s Theodore Sydney Moise moved to New Orleans, where he operated a successful portrait studio for decades.
Artist and travel writer Thomas Addison Richards captured unique natural features of the South, depicting the region's lofty river banks, picturesque live oaks, and lush cypress-filled swampland.
Thomas C. Manning served as the chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1877 to 1880.
Louisiana artist and architect Thomas Wharton is best known for the writings and sketches he kept in a daybook.
Thomas Overton Moore served as the fourteenth governor of Louisiana, leading the state through much of the Civil War.
Thomas Slidell served as chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1853 to 1855.
Louisiana architect Thomas Sully introduced innovative national architectural trends—aesthetic and structural—to New Orleans.
Toby Hart brought New Orleans its first professional sports franchise in 1887.
The Tunica-Biloxi Tribe is one of only four American Indian groups in Louisiana recognized by the federal government.
Five thousand to ten thousand white Louisianans fought for the Union during the Civil War.
The US Custom House at the foot of Canal Street in New Orleans is one of the most significant mid-nineteenth-century buildings in the nation.
Valcour Aime employed the latest technologies and oversaw the creation of an elaborate garden on his sugar plantation.
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