Archaeology
Native American Mounds
Louisiana boasts some of the most significant Native American earthen monuments in North America and ranks second only to Mississippi in the number of mound sites.
Louisiana boasts some of the most significant Native American earthen monuments in North America and ranks second only to Mississippi in the number of mound sites.
Native American communities in Louisiana are culturally diverse with unique histories.
From the time of colonial exploration to the present, Louisiana’s landscape has inspired a rich variety of nature writing.
The Negro Leagues were the network of African-American baseball teams and players from the 1880s to the integration of baseball in 1946–47.
Nellie Lutcher was a renowned singer and pianist from Lake Charles.
Art, Aaron, Charles, and Cyril Neville comprise one of the most successful groups to emerge from New Orleans in recent decades; among many other projects, this family of musicians has performed and recorded as "The Neville Brothers" since 1977.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal brought jobs and resources to Louisiana during the Great Depression.
The effectiveness of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal program in Louisiana was undercut by conflict with US Senator Huey P. Long.
More than ten thousand people participated in America's longest-lived socialist community, the New Llano Cooperative Colony located south of Leesville in Vernon Parish.
In December 1927 several professional male members of the Arts and Crafts Club of New Orleans organized the New Orleans Art League.
One of the largest urban parks in the United States, New Orleans' City Park is home to many cultural and recreational attractions including the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Botanical Garden, golf courses, tennis courts, City Bark dog park, Tad Gormley stadium, and several lagoons.
New Orleans has been the subject of literature from the colonial period to the present day.
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