Additions to My Site = More to Explore!

Abandoned Store in Hutchinson

This old plantation store between Shreveport and Natchitoches, Louisiana, is where sharecroppers, who were paid with scrip, would buy what they needed from the plantation owner.

I’ve always meant to add information on Lousiana and Arkansas to my site, but time constraints have never allowed me sufficient time to explore those areas as much as I wanted. Which is funny, because most of my family lives in eastern Texas and Louisiana.

I decided that this year, I will include Louisiana and Arkansas into the “fold” – after all, my site is called Red River Historian. And the river certainly runs through those states, too! The Red River has a real presence in Louisiana’s history, and althogh my focus has been on western history, I’ve made the committment (and it wasn’t hard to committ, anyway) to learn and discover more about southern history.

It’s strange how until recently, the history of the US South has not been a big interest of mine. I think it stems from the proliferation of histories that deal with the South. The South is arguably the most-studied region in US history, especially the antebellum and Civil War periods, and somtimes it’s hard to wrap my head around it. I’m not a big Civil War fan, so I will continue to “gloss over” the war except when necessary, but I am interested in the periods of Americanization after the Louisiana Purchase.  So this is good news… it means I have a lot more exciting things to discover!

Published in:  on April 5, 2008 at 3:31 pm Comments (1)
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  1. So many times intresting topics are right in front of us and we don’t even realize it. It aprears that you have realized this when you commented on your past lack of interest in Louisiana History that you ar now writing about. I would like to point you to a new book about the wild and crazy times in Louisiana Politics. No, not the Edwin Edwards period, I’m talking about the 1920s and 30s. After 45 years of being buried away, the private political papers of Harvey Fields has surfaced. He was a law partner of Huey Long, Chairman of both the Democratic State Committee and Lousiana Public Service Commission. the papers also revealed that he instigatd the case against Governor Leche when Fields was Federal Prosecutor. Over 100 letters are published in the book. The name of the book is “I Called Him Grand Dad” or you can read about it on http://www.thomastfieldsjr.com .


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