
Visit USA > Louisiana
You Can Live Louisiana's Robust and Romantic History
Prehistoric Native Americans... adventuring explorers... silk-shirted plantation owners... priests and pirates... capitalists and cavalry... southern belles, gamblers, renegades and rogues: Louisiana has been the stage of a blazing historical drama colorful enough to rival that of many nations, and our historic landmarks keep those adventurous days very much alive. You can be an overnight guest in homes that routinely welcomed travelers a century or so ago, attend services in 200-year-old churches, talk politics in antebellum courthouses, sip mint juleps by the great red paddlewheel of a Mississippi steamboat. It's all still here... still functioning... still a vibrant part of the present.
The best-known chapters of the great saga of Louisiana, of course, are of the French and Spanish colonists called "Creoles" who founded New Orleans, the great steamboat races on the Mississippi, the state's rich plantation heritage and the settling of the bayou country by "Cajuns" from far-off Nova Scotia. But, like the Mississippi River, Louisiana never does anything simply. It always takes the scenic route, and there are always fascinating subplots: our Native Americans from prehistory through to the present, the African-Americans, the Spanish-speaking "Isleños," the Germans and Slavs, the Italians and Irish. All of these and others shared and still share a state where there is room enough to celebrate their heritage and spirit enough to let it endure.
4,000 years of our Native American History
From prehistory onward Louisiana has been home to many Native American tribes, and their cultures endure, shaping our present. Basket weaving, carving, boat making, alligator skinning and many other crafts and traditions are demonstrated at many festivals across the state. Poverty Point State Historic Site, an hour from Monroe/West Monroe, is one of the nation's most significant archaeological finds, a complex of ceremonial mounds about three-quarters of a mile in diameter.
The Louisiana State Exhibit Museum in Shreveport houses an excellent collection of Caddo, Coushatta, Choctaw and Chitimacha Indian artifacts. The Cabildo in New Orleans explores the relationship Native Americans had with settlers through all aspects of their daily lives. In Avoyelles Parish at Marksville, you'll find the Tunica-Biloxi Regional Indian Center and Museum, containing a long-buried collection of Indian/ European artifacts from Louisiana's colonial period, and the Marksville State Historic Site is an important archaeological site containing evidence of a 2000-year-old Native American culture.
Three miles north of the small town of Elton is the Coushatta Reservation. Exhibits at the Coushatta Tribe Visitors Center feature tribal history, and dancing demonstrations can be arranged with advance notice.

New Orleans is Louisiana’s most popular tourist attraction. Compared to other American cities, it is surprisingly laid back and distinctly European. History and culture mix with hip shopping, great restaurants and lively nightlife venues both in and beyond the heralded French Quarter, where the city was settled by the French in 1718.

Baton Rouge is full of culture, history and entertainment. Louisiana’s state capital offers everything from antebellum homes and up-close encounters with alligators to a large number of museums, both art and historical and an intimate account of Louisiana’s colorful political history.
You can’t go to Louisiana without traveling to a couple of the historic antebellum homes. They are filled with rich history and beautiful architecture. They are known throughout the state as a must see if you want to know anything about the state’s past. These homes come from a time period dating between 1830 and 1862. Most of the homes have columns and Greek pillars and are an amazing sight to see. The balconies, covered porches and grand staircases will leave you in awe.

Natchez adorns the banks of the Mighty Mississippi with her magnificent antebellum homes, fascinating history, exciting events, romantic atmosphere, and unlimited activities.

The Acadian village has been restored to its original condition by the residents of Lafayette. The village is located on a parcel of land 32 acres in total with 10 acres being transformed from farmland to a shaded lived in community with a waterway running through it.

Houma boasts the second largest Mardi Gras celebration in Louisiana. Spend the week eating King Cake, reveling at masked tableau balls, and standing roadside catching colorful beads.
Take a swamp tour - You will be amazed at the beauty of the bayous, marshes and lakes. In the daytime, you may see oyster, shrimp, and crab boats at work, along with egrets, herons, and... aligators.
Houma - New Orleans (96 km).


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