2018 Illustrated Parade Notes
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Biogeography of the Blue Crab Fishery, Barataria Estuary, Louisiana. Eugene Jaworski Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1971 Biogeography of the Blue Crab Fishery, Barataria Estuary, Louisiana. Eugene Jaworski Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Jaworski, Eugene, "Biogeography of the Blue Crab Fishery, Barataria Estuary, Louisiana." (1971). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 1929. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/1929 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 71-20,601 JAWORSKI, Eugene, 1941- BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE BLUE CRAB FISHERY, BARATARIA ESTUARY, LOUISIANA. The Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, Ph.D., 1971 Ecology University Microfilms, A XEROX Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan THIS DISSERTATION HAS BEEN MICROFILMED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE BLUE CRAB FISHERY, BARATARIA ESTUARY, LOUISIANA A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Geography and Anthropology by Eugene Jaworski B.S., University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1966 January, 1971 ACKNOWLEDGMENT Sincere gratitude Is extended to Dr. William G. Mclntire, chairman of the dissertation committee, whose guidance and understanding made the project possible. Special thanks go to Dr. Jack R. Van Lopik, for arranging financial support through Louisiana State University's Sea Grant Program. -
Population Ecology of the Ribbed Mussel in Southeastern Louisiana
POPULATION ECOLOGY OF THE RIBBED MUSSEL IN SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in The School of Renewable Natural Resources by Aaron Jacob Honig B.S. Tufts University, 2006 May 2013 I have argued in this book that we are human in good A human being is a part of the whole called by part because of the particular way we affiliate with us universe, a part limited in time and space. He other organisms. They are the matrix in which the experiences himself, his thoughts and feeling as human mind originated and is permanently rooted, something separated from the rest, a kind of and they offer the challenge and freedom innately optical delusion of his consciousness. This sought. To the extent that each person can feel like a delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us naturalist, the old excitement of the untrammeled to our personal desires and to affection for a few world will be regained. I offer this as a formula of persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free reenchantment to invigorate poetry and myth: ourselves from this prison by widening our circle mysterious and little known organisms live within of compassion to embrace all living creatures walking distance of where you sit. Splendor awaits in and the whole of nature in its beauty. minute proportions. Albert Einstein E. O. Wilson, Biophilia The Road goes ever on and on So speak out loud of Down from the door where it began. -
A Medley of Cultures: Louisiana History at the Cabildo
A Medley of Cultures: Louisiana History at the Cabildo Chapter 1 Introduction This book is the result of research conducted for an exhibition on Louisiana history prepared by the Louisiana State Museum and presented within the walls of the historic Spanish Cabildo, constructed in the 1790s. All the words written for the exhibition script would not fit on those walls, however, so these pages augment that text. The exhibition presents a chronological and thematic view of Louisiana history from early contact between American Indians and Europeans through the era of Reconstruction. One of the main themes is the long history of ethnic and racial diversity that shaped Louisiana. Thus, the exhibition—and this book—are heavily social and economic, rather than political, in their subject matter. They incorporate the findings of the "new" social history to examine the everyday lives of "common folk" rather than concentrate solely upon the historical markers of "great white men." In this work I chose a topical, rather than a chronological, approach to Louisiana's history. Each chapter focuses on a particular subject such as recreation and leisure, disease and death, ethnicity and race, or education. In addition, individual chapters look at three major events in Louisiana history: the Battle of New Orleans, the Civil War, and Reconstruction. Organization by topic allows the reader to peruse the entire work or look in depth only at subjects of special interest. For readers interested in learning even more about a particular topic, a list of additional readings follows each chapter. Before we journey into the social and economic past of Louisiana, let us look briefly at the state's political history. -
Jean Lafitte: History and Mystery
National Park Service Jean Laf itte U.S. Department of the Interior Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve Jean Lafitte: History and Mystery Who Was Jean Lafitte? Mystery and legend surround the life of Jean Lafitte. Was he a pirate, a patriot, or both? Is his last name spelled "Lafitte" or "Laffite"? Even the date and place of his birth and death are unknown. He was probably born in the early 1780s in either France or the French colony of St. Domingue (now Haiti) in the Caribbean. By 1810 he was in Louisi ana with his older brother Pierre. They might have been businessmen in New Orleans or independent privateers before becoming associated with the smugglers of Barataria. Pirates, Smugglers, and Lafitte always insisted that if he committed any Lafitte also always insisted that he was a privateer, Privateers crime, it was smuggling, and he blamed American not a pirate. (He was actually more of a land-based laws for forcing him into illegal activities. In 1807 the businessman than a privateer or pirate at sea.) A United States outlawed trade with Great Britain and privateer has permission from a government at war France because of the Napoleonic Wars in Europe. to capture any enemy ships. Merchants in New Orleans began to run out of goods to sell. The city of Cartagena in present-day Colombia had rebelled against Spain and gave permission Around the same time it became illegal to bring through letters of marque for privateers, includ slaves from Africa into Louisiana; it later became ing Lafitte's men, to capture Spanish ships and the illegal to import slaves into the rest of the United goods and slaves on board. -
Muddying the Waters of Maritime Piracy Or Developing the Customary Law of Piracy? Somali Piracy and Seychelles
137 MUDDYING THE WATERS OF MARITIME PIRACY OR DEVELOPING THE CUSTOMARY LAW OF PIRACY? SOMALI PIRACY AND SEYCHELLES Mathilda Twomey* This article examines the development of the law of piracy, specifically that arising from the threat of Somali pirates and the response of the international community in tackling the crisis it posed, while giving consideration to the legal innovations of a tiny island developing state, Seychelles, as a facilitator for the prosecution of international maritime piracy. Cet article porte sur les récents développements du droit dans le domaine de la piraterie maritime internationale (en particulier, celle pratiquée depuis les côtes somaliennes) et les réponses pratiques apportées par la communauté internationale pour les contrecarrer. Les développements de l’auteur portent sur la contribution des petits États insulaires dont les Seychelles, au mouvement de lutte contre la piraterie maritime internationale. I INTRODUCTION Piracy has existed for as long as the oceans have been plied for commerce. References to the practice exist in Homer's The Iliad1 and The Odyssey2 where piracy was considered a reputable profession.3 There are historical accounts of piracy across the world through all the centuries: in Scandinavia, where Vikings in the Middle Ages plundered most of Western Europe;4 in Russia, where the * Judge, Court of Appeal of Seychelles, PhD Candidate, Irish Research Council and Hardiman Scholar, National University of Ireland, Galway. 1 A T Wyatt (ed) Homer, The Iliad (William Murray tr, Harvard University Press 1924). 2 A T Wyatt (ed) Homer, The Odyssey (William Murray tr, Harvard University Press 1924). 3 See Coleman Phillipson The International Law and Custom of Ancient Greece and Rome (MacMillan, 1911). -
The Denitrification Potential of Eroding Wetlands in Barataria Bay, LA, USA
Science of the Total Environment 686 (2019) 529–537 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Science of the Total Environment journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/scitotenv The denitrification potential of eroding wetlands in Barataria Bay, LA, USA: Implications for river reconnection Jessica Vaccare a,EhabMeselheb, John R. White a,⁎ a Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, United States b Department of River-Coastal Science and Engineering, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, United States HIGHLIGHTS GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT • NO3 reduction rate of the submerged, eroded peat was within reported deni- trification rates for a variety of brackish marshes • the majority (~93%) of added NO3 was converted to N2O, indicating that deni- trification was the major NO3 reduction pathway • the submerged, eroded marsh soils will most likely play a large role in nitrate re- duction with river reconnection article info abstract Article history: Expressions of eutrophication have led to increased stress on coastal ecosystems around the world. The nitrogen Received 30 April 2019 (N) removal potential of coastal wetland ecosystems is important due to increased loading of N to the coast. In Received in revised form 25 May 2019 Louisiana, there is rapid coastal wetland loss due primarily to the presence of river levees, which have isolated Accepted 31 May 2019 the coastal basins, and a high relative sea level rise. Ecosystem managers are planning to construct the Mid- Available online 1 June 2019 Barataria sediment diversion which will reconnect the Mississippi River with Barataria Basin to build new wet- Editor: Jay Gan lands and nourish existing marsh. -
The Baratarian Archipelago and the Specter of Imperial Transgression in Kate Chopin’S the Awakening
Cursed Waters and Enchanted Isles: The Baratarian Archipelago and the Specter of Imperial Transgression in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening Emelia A. Abbe Chicago, Illinois Bachelor of Arts, Butler University, 2013 A Thesis presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of English University of Virginia May, 2015 Abbe 2 Introduction In Kate Chopin’s The Awakening, the mythical world of the Baratarian Islands is both exotic and erotic in its representation. The cast of characters that inhabit these south-eastern Louisiana coastal islands at any given time—both the fashionable New Orleansian resort-guests that descend on the area like flocks of migrating birds and the French-creole residents that must repeatedly adapt to the influx—amplify the sense of foreign-ness at work. This exoticism allows us to approach the story itself as acknowledging overlapping uses of geographical space. The collision of cultural and national ideologies concerned with social and economic interaction highlights Chopin’s archipelago as transnational. In her Barataria Bay, the ghosts of French- Haitian fugitives and outlaws cast their long shadows over the resort of Grand Isle where Spaniards, Mexicans, creoles, and others move in and around its margins. The plot operates, to a large extent, outside of the nation-space of the Southern United States to look at the country’s economic and ideological participation within a more global South. And this approach is emphasized by the protagonist’s unique situation as both quintessentially American and simultaneously dissatisfied by the demands of that identification. -
UNDER the BLACK HORSE FLAG ~Nnals of the Weld Family and Some of Its Branches
UNDER THE BLACK HORSE FLAG ~nnals of the Weld Family and Some of its Branches BY ISABEL ANDERSON, L1rr. D~ (Mrs. Larz Anderson) WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY Ut:bt l\ibet.sibe ~res~ Qtamlltibgt 1926 COPYRIGHT, 1926, BY ISABEL ANDERSON ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ilrf:Jt B.fbtrsibt ~rtss CAMBRIDGE • MASSACHUSETTS PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. , ..-L r ~ ...... ~ ·\?' :. _,./ ..- . ' . < ~ • U~DER THE BLACK HORSE FLAG Under the Black Horse Flag Preface THIS book is written for the f amity, and also, per haps, for those who love the sea, for my grand father's firm, the William Fletcher Weld Company, outlasted most of the merchant ship-owning houses in Boston, and after the Civil War it had the largest sailing fleet in America. The Black Horse Flag, which flew above his clippers, was a familiar sight to sailors, and many of his vessels were famous for their speed and general seaworthiness. The largest and swiftest of them all was the Great Admiral. At first I planned simply to collect and bind the logs of these clippers, but, finding that the greater portion of them would be of interest only to mari ners, I decided merely to use extracts. I have drawn as well upon family papers, which include both Weld and Anderson documents and my father's naval journals during the Civil War. These papers and logs opened up vistas of the Orient, the Barbary Coast, the Spanish Main, and pirates of the seven seas. When clippers no longer made white the ocean, the Black Horse Flag did not disappear, but flies to-day from the masthead of the yachts owned by different members of the Weld family. -
Jean Laffite and the Loupe Garou: Legends Made Louisiana
Blast from the Past 2020: Made in Louisiana Five Days of Fun Activities to Do at Home Jean Laffite and the Loupe Garou: Legends Made Louisiana Have you ever heard of a TALL TALE? Storytelling was a pastime or form of entertainment before there was tv or movies. Sometimes, these stories were entirely fictional, and sometimes, they were base, at least a little bit, on real historical figures. Can you think of any tall tales, myths, or legends you may have heard? Can you recall any that contained people from history? Let’s take a look at two famous Louisiana characters (one real and one fictitious or completely made up) made legendary through the gift of oral tradition or storytelling with each story getting a little more exaggerated, elaborate, farfetched, funny, or even heroic. Our first encounter will be with the infamous pirate, Jean Laffite. Once we learn about his life, we can make up our own tales of adventure while we wear home-made pirate hats and learn to navigate Louisiana waterways with map and compass in hand. Then, we will run into the likes of the swamp dwelling Loup Garou and get to know his friendlier side through the eyes of a young Cajun girl and a beloved Louisiana artist, George Rodrigue. Let’s Meet Jean Lafitte: Take note of this little known trivia that was learned about the pirate Laffite before he sailed away from our state: • Born between 1776 and 1780 and died around the 1820’s • Renowned pirate/privateer operating in the Caribbean, Galveston Island, and Louisiana ports – Pirates transport goods illegally or without permission. -
Jean Laffite Bibliography
i A Thesis CJsan«*•» Larfife Presented.to.the Faculty of the Rice Institute In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts. by William Richard Bridgwater 1930. , "-TO I '*"'' Jean Laffite Bibliography Unpublished Sources Laifite manuscripts in the Rosenberg Library at Galveston. Published Sources American state papers. Documents, legislative and executive, of the Congress of the United States. Washington, 1834 - 1861. Volumes used: Foreign relations, IV Naval affairs, I - III Claiborne, W.C.C. Official letter boohs of W.C.C. Claiborne, 1801 - 1816. Dunbar Rowland, editor. 6 v. Jackson, 1917. Debates and proceedings in the congress of the U- nited States; with an appendix containing state papers and public documents, and all the laws of a public nature with a copious index. Fifteenth Congress - second session: comprising the period from November 16, 1818 to March 3, 1819, inclusive. Compiled from authentic materials. Washington, 1855. Jackson, Andrew. Correspondence of Andrew Jackson. John Spencer Bassett, editor. Washington, 1926 - Lamar, Mirabeau Buonaparte. Papers of Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar. Charles Adams Gulick, Jr., editor. 6 v. Austin, 1924. Latour, Major A. Lacarriere. Historical memoir of the war in West Florida and Louisiana in 1814 - 15. With an 8 tjIs S • Philadelphia, 1816. Secondary Material Abney, A. H. Life and adventures of L.D. Lafferty; being a true biography of one of the most remarkable men. of the great southwest, from an adventurous boyhood in Ar¬ kansas through a protracted life of almost unparal¬ leled sufferings and hairbreadth escapee upon the frontier of Texas; in which are given many highly interesting incidents in the early history of the republic of Texas, with a brief review of affairs in Mexico during the same period. -
Barataria Basin
BARATARIA BASIN R2-BA-01-Home Place Siphon 1 Modified From: Louisiana’s Comprehensive Master Plan for a Sustainable Coast, p. 57 2 R2-BA-02-Bayou Dupont Sediment Delivery – Marsh Creation 3 Bayou Dupont Sediment Delivery Marsh Creation 3 Location Map 1 Marsh Creation 3 Bayou Dupont Sediment Delivery Bayou Dupont 1 Project Limits 550 Acres PPL 17 Project Limits Marsh Creation 3 Bayou Dupont Sediment Delivery Goals: 2 • Create/Nourish 550 ac intermediate marsh Preliminary Project Benefits: • 363 net ac over 20 years Identification of Potential Issues: • Oil & Gas Preliminary Construction Costs: • $25-$30 million Bayou Dupont Sediment Delivery Marsh Creation 3 Questions? Brad Crawford EPA Region 6 (214)665-7255 [email protected] 3 R2-BA-03-West Pointe a la Hache Marsh Creation 2 West Pointe a la Hache Marsh Creation 2 Location Map West Pointe a la Hache Siphons PPL 17 Project Limits 240 Acres West Pointe a la Hache Marsh Creation South 1 West Pointe a la Hache Marsh Creation 2 Goals: • Create/Nourish ~240 ac intermediate marsh Preliminary Project Benefits: • 138 net ac over 20 years Identification of Potential Issues: • Oil & Gas Preliminary Construction Costs: • $15-$20 million West Pointe a la Hache Marsh Creation 2 Questions? Ken Teague EPA Region 6 (214)665-6687 [email protected] 2 R2-BA-04-Bayou L’Ours Ridge Restoration and Terracing PPL19 PROJECT NOMINEE FACT SHEET February 4, 2009 Project Name: Bayou L’Ours Ridge Restoration and Terracing Coast 2050 Strategy: Coastwide: Maintain or Restore Ridge Functions Terracing Vegetative Plantings Local and Common Strategies: Maintain function of Bayou L’Ours Ridge Restoration of the Bayou L’Ours ridge is part of the State of Louisiana’s Master Plan. -
The War Against Piracy: 1717 and 2009 | New York & Piracy in The
Dec 2009 /Jan/Feb 2010 | $6.00 New York’s History Magazine THE WAR AGAINST PIRACY: 1717 aND 2009 | NeW YORK & PIRACY IN THE AGE OF THE LAFITTE BROTHERS | THE SILVER OAR AND PIRATEs – THE PAST COMES FULL CIRCLE | PIRACY AND SEAFARERES 2 DEc 2009/Jan/Feb 2010 VOLUME XLV NUMBer 1 3 4 BECOME A CORPORATE MEMBER From the Director 5 by Mary Ellen Pelzer 6 Ip er si eum iniam zzrilisl dit accum quis dolestrud et, core ver Corporate Membership includes many of the following benefits 7 sum quisi. and many more depending on membership level: 8 Acknowledgement in the Annual Report, Seaport, the quarterly Museum magazine/calendar of events, Museum Web 5 9 X site and Visitor Center XCourtesy passes to the Museum X Discounts for all employees at Bowne & Co., Stationers 10 XElectronic announcements about exhibitions, public and family programs and other events that can be placed on your New York & Piracy 11 organization’s intranet for employees XInvitations to exhibition opening receptions XSubscriptions to Seaport in the Age of the Lafitte Brothers 12 By John Otrompke 13 Jean and Pierre Lafitte were pirates who were mostly active 14 Benefit packages are available at many corporate membership levels. For membership information around New Orleans, but their activities extended as far away 15 L EMAIL [email protected] iCALL Carol Rauscher at 212-748-8776. as New York City. 6 16 17 The War Against Piracy: 1717 and 2009 18 By Virginia Lunsford 19 An analysis of how deep sea pirates disrupted trade and the 20 actions which governments took against them hundreds of 21 years ago, and the similar actions taken against pirates today.