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Louisiana Creole history

The Deed Before the Eulogy: Henriette Delille, the Free Woman of Color Who Bought Her Institution

June 3, 2026 by The Kinstructure Company

A second page of the 1850 handwritten notarial act of sale in French, brown ink on aged cream paper, showing the purchase price and terms.

In 1850 Henriette Delille, a free woman of color in New Orleans, signed a notarized act of sale and bought the land for the institution she founded. This is her documented record, anchored to the deed.

Filed Under: Genealogy, Louisiana Heritage, Women's History Wednesday Tagged With: Faubourg Tremé, free women of color, Henriette Delille, Louisiana Creole history, Marie Josephe Diaz, New Orleans, notarial archives, plaçage, Sisters of the Holy Family, Venerable Henriette Delille

Titine of Opelousas: The Woman Who Ran the Old Bank Hotel

May 26, 2026 by The Kinstructure Company

Newspaper advertisement reading "Ed. P. Veazie, Justice of the Peace, Office at Titine's Hotel, old Bank," published in The Opelousas Journal on January 30, 1874.

Celestine Perrault, known as Titine, ran a large hotel in Opelousas for at least a quarter century. Three generations of her family lived under that roof. A Justice of the Peace kept his office there. This is her documented record.

Filed Under: Genealogy, Louisiana Heritage, Women's History Wednesday Tagged With: Celestine Perrault, free women of color, Henry Bloch, Louisiana Creole history, Manouche Lataste, Opelousas, Railroad Hotel, St. Landry Parish, Suzanne Moreau, Titine

Who the USDA Helped: Three Crop Notices from One 1909 Louisiana Newspaper

May 22, 2026 by The Kinstructure Company

Composite image showing three newspaper clippings from page nine of the St. Landry Clarion of May 22, 1909, arranged left to right: "Crops In Lafayette" reporting boll weevil damage in Lafayette Parish, "Farmers Disappointed" reporting Irish potato crop failure in Avoyelles Parish, and "Other Moneyed Crops" reporting James Clayton's USDA-backed oats and hay success in East Baton Rouge Parish.

On May 22, 1909, the St. Landry Clarion ran three short notices on one page. Cotton was failing in Lafayette. Potatoes were failing in Avoyelles. Oats and hay were succeeding in East Baton Rouge with USDA help. This is what those three pieces document together.

Filed Under: Louisiana Heritage, The Great Migration, This Day In History Tagged With: 1909, agricultural extension, Avoyelles Parish, Black agricultural history, boll weevil, cotton, East Baton Rouge Parish, Great Migration, James Clayton, Lafayette Parish, Louisiana Creole history, Louisiana diaspora, St. Landry Clarion, tenant farming, USDA

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