HISTORICAL AND STATISTICAL COLLECTIONS
OF LOUISIANA
TERREBONNE
The
primitive history of all countries is generally involved in obscurity;
and this section of the state forms no exception to the general rule. That
this parish was formerly the hunting grounds of a tribe of Indians there
can be no doubt: the traces of their existence remain to this day unimpaired
by the ravages of time. But of the origin, history and characteristics
of these tribes we are left in perfect ignorance, except such faint conjectures
as may be gathered from the monumental mounds, or other relics, that have
survived after their very names have been buried in oblivion. Architecture,
too, is frequently the only living witness of the historian's page; and
from their ruins in hoary grandeur, we contemplate the change of ages,
and draw from their silent tomes the manners and customs of the people
who reared them, which, especially among savage nations, must always be
vague and uncertain. This remark carries with it more regret and disappointment
when applied to the North American tribes-the untutored, unenlightened
children of nature, whose strange destiny forms a memorable epoch in the
annals of the New World. Of architecture they knew little or nothing, consequently
all information from their source is lost. Living in rude huts, of an ephemeral
nature, they looked only upon the present-and, unguided by the light of
science, seldom let their prophetic thoughts launch upon the unknown ocean
of the future. War and pastime seem to have been the chief aims of their
existence, or at least of their ambition. But to these there is an exception:
I mean the Mexicans or Peruvians. The teocallis of the former are probably
the greatest ancient wonders and curiosities on the Western Continent.
They were very numerous, many of them, indeed, very humble in construction;
others, again, reared in magnificent grandeur, resembling, in miniature,
the pyramids of Egypt. The "houses of God," as they were called, were formed
of solid masses of earth, walled with baked brick and cement, and of a
pyramidal form. In this respect they resembled the mounds and circumvolutions
in the other parts of North America; but they resemble them also in another
important feature-the burial place of an extinct race, whose relics have
been frequently excavated from their sleep of ages. The only material
difference appears to be, that, in Mexico and Peru, where stone was abundant,
it was used to strengthen and give durability to the mounds; whereas those
constructed on the borders of the Mississippi, south, are built entirely
of earth, there being little or none of the former material.
In the
Parish of Terrebonne there are at least fifteen or twenty of these mounds,
situated on the Bayous Grand and Petit Caillous, Terrebonne, and the Black,
of various sizes, and from appearances, of various dates. But the most
remarkable of these is at Tigerville, about twenty-five miles from Houma,
on the Bayou Black. From these mounds, which are undoubtedly the work of
man, several skulls and bones of a human body have been picked, whence
it is generally inferred, that they are or have been a repository of the
dead, as were the celebrated pyramids of Egypt, and the mausoleums and
temples of antiquity. But this may be doubted. It is well known, that the
Natchez, and other tribes of North America, were fire-worshippers. The
Choctaw Indians called these mounds the "' Hills of God," or the "Houses
of the Great Spirit." As the pyramids of Egypt and the teocallis of Mexico
were dedicated to their gods, the most magnificent to the sun, which in
all nations is regarded as the type of the Deity, so on an humbler scale,
these mounds were doubtless constructed for worship-each tribe according
to its own peculiar superstition. In further proof of this, there are many
of these tuniuli, or "Houses of the Sun," terraced, and their tops ornamented
with chapels, in which the idols were worshiped. Besides, on exploring
these, many relics and utensils, bearing a near resemblance to those used
in Mexico or Peru, have been found. Some there are, who attribute the design
of these mysterious hills to a security against the annual overflows of
the Mississippi; but this is absurd. As on Berwick's Bay, for instance,
where stands the most remarkable one in the state, it is pitched upon the
highest land, which, even with the greatest overflow ever known, has never
been covered with water. We also find them on high and elevated plains,
on hills and other places, which would not have been the case, as the motives
were not the same. But where is the race that constructed these memorials
of their existence? Ages have passed by, and no other record, nay, not
even tradition, has come down through the night of time, to tell us of
their existence. All is mystery of mysteries. If the semi-civilized tribes
of Mexico have failed to trace their descent, or common origin, what may
be expected from the ignorance and imbecility which characterize most of
the aboriginal nations from the Bay of Honduras to the Gulf of Mexico?
The north seems to have been the great hive of mankind, whence emanating,
they hsb:e rimved over the fruitful fields of civilization, swept off'
the lndsd s l of improvement, and sunk into a profound night of dark ages,
till by degrees the sun of science has risen above the horizon, and the
world commenced, as it were, a new life and existence. Look at the monumental
remains strewed upon the shores of Yucatan, remnants of a mighty people,-but
even tradition is lost in the silence of s,es! We know from history that
these countries were overrun by warlike tribes from the north, who, sweeping
away the vestiges of civilization, blended with the conquered race, and
by degrees emerged from barl,trism and ignorance to an almost civilized
state. This was the condition of the Mexicans at the time of the conquest;
and though the other portions of the continent seem not to have made such
strides in civilization, yet in Florida and to the north, many antiquities
remain, that attest taste, workmanship and mechanical skill to a high degree.
These nations, in the continual wars, may have been swept away, and their
conquerors, intent only on the wild game of the forest, characteristic
of their nature, neglected to profit from the past, and sunk into irremediable
ignorance, superstition and oblivion.
From tradition,
however, we know that a tribe called the Houmas once inhabited this section.
They were, doubtless, insignificant as a race, as no notice is taken of
them in the report of the various tribes, published by order of Jefferson.
At present, there are but few remaining, say ten or twenty-the whole number
could not have exceeded one hundred. In the year 1822, by an act of the
legislature, dated March 22, the Parish of Terrebonne was carved out of
the Parish of La fourche Interior, a part of the old county of Lafourche,
consisting of the present parishes of Assumption, Lafourche, and Terrebonne.
The boundaries of these parishes have been defined by the legislature,
and it is unnecessary to repeat them in this place. Terrebonne takes its
name from a navigable bayou rising in the vicinity of Thibodaux, and running
south and southeast, empties into the Gulf of Mexico. The original name
of this bayou was, I believe, Derbene, from one of the first settlers,
but afterwards assumed the more appropriate designation of Terrebonne,
or good land, which for fertility cannot be surpassed by any in the world.
There are other large water-courses or bayous traversing the parish, the
principal of which are, the Grand and Petit Caillous, De Large, and Blue,
that bounds the parish on the east. All of these rise in the northern
part of the parish and run southward into the Gulf. Bayou Black,
on the contrary, which is second to none in the parish in importance, rises
about two miles below Thibodeaux, and after running southeast about eighteen
miles in the vicinity of Houma, suddenly turns to the northwest, and after
receiving the waters of the Chickahoula and the Tiger, empties into the
Chene, which, uniting with the Shaver and Penchant, seeks the Gulf through
the Atchafalaya River. All of these bayous are more or less inhabited,
but the principal settlements are on the Caillous, Black, and Terrebonne.
The majority of these settlements consist of small creole farmers, though
on the bayous Grand Caillou, Black, and Terrebonne, there are as fine plantations
as may be found in the state. On the Bayou Blue there is little arable
land, and not in sufficient quantities to form a plantation of moderate
size. There have been several attempts by individuals and state enterprise
to clean out this bayou, under the hope of redeeming vast bodies of land
now covered with water and unfit for use. But all these schemes have proved
abortive, from the fact that there is not sufficient fall to the gulf to
draw off the waters, nor is the channel sufficiently large to drain the
vast floating prairies and lakes between the Lafourche and Terrebonne.
Nevertheless, the upper part of Bayou Blue is well timbered, and some part
of it planted in cane and corn; but the crops are precarious, from the
heavy rains and overflows of Lafourche. Bayou Penchant, which rises near
the centre of the parish and runs northwestward into the Chene, is almost
unknown, and very little of the country bordering on its banks has ever
been explored. A few years ago there was an expedition fitted out to survey
the whole extent of this bayou; and though they reported large bodies of
high land discovered in the interior of the parish, their accounts were
generally so contradictory and unsatisfactory, that no further attention
has ever been given to the subject. On reference to the map of the state,
a large number of lakes, bays, and inlets, will be discovered in the southern
portion of the parish, near the coast, but these are of no great depth
or size, with the exception of Cat Island Lake, but their waters abound
in oysters and fish. The islands formed by this bay and sea have within
the last few years become the resort of many persons, from this and the
adjoining parishes. Houses, hotels, gambling shops, &c., have been
erected, and these islands bid fair to become the chief watering places
and summer resorts on the coast. All that section of the parish lying between
the bayous, (with the exception of the arable soil and timber upon the
borders,) is one vast floating prairie, or shallow lakes of water, which
probably will never be brought into cultivation, and are equally unfit
for grazing or rice. During the winter season these waters are alive with
duck, and afford to the French their chief article of food and commerce.
As we approach the coast to within fifteen or twenty miles of the sea,
the whole face of the country appears as one unbounded sea-marsh or prairie,
dotted here and there with small ponds of water, and sufficiently elevated
for grazing purposes in dry weather, though at other times it is boggy,
yet well adapted to rice, which, with a little labor, might be made a profitable
article for market. On either side of the aforementioned bayous the lands
in their primitive state are covered with heavy timber and canebrakes,
which extend back to the prairies, a distance varying, according to the
elevation, from five to forty arpents in depth, for the high lands, though
the swamps extend much farther, frequently for miles in depth. Here abounds
the cypress, that invaluable tree to the planter, together with the ash,
elm, gum, sycamore, pecan, mulberry, live oak, and other species, in great
abundance; willow, locust, maple, magnolia, elder, sassafras, persimmon,
and others, common to all the southern portion of the state, and too well
known to need description in these cursory observations.
There
are two large Spanish grants of land in this parish: one a grant to J.
Zalrado, the other to Jos. Talbo, and two or three Lowxie claims of several
thousand acres, which, I believe, have never yet been confirmed, but the
titles have, doubtless, become good by prescription. With these exceptions,
all the lands held by individuals have been entered or floated upon; and
by the union of a number of those entries, most of the plantations have
been formed. During the overflow of 1828, the whole parish, with the exception
of some elevated ridges, was under water. Last year, shortly after the
grand levee gaye way, the southern portion, particularly those lands on
the Black, were overflowed, and most of the crops destroyed. The water
in the river, however, falling shortly after, no considerable loss was
sustained, as the portion referred to is but thinly settled. The earliest
settlements that appear to have been made in this parish, were, I believe,
about the year 1810.
The first
permanent settlers were the parents of the Thibodaux,* a highly respectable
family of the parish, and whose history is intimately blended with this
portion of the state. Their father, Henry Schuyler Thibodaux, was, I think,
a Canadian, of Lower Canada, and emigrated from NewYork to Louisiana in
the year 1794. On his arrival in Louisiana he settled on the " Arcadian
Coast,'" where he married Miss Brigitte Bellanger, in the year 1800, and
in the year succeeding moved to the present Parish of Lafourche, nearly
opposite to the present town of Thlibodaux, which was named after him.
Here he continued to reside up to the close of the year 1810, when he moved
to the parish of Terrebonne, about five miles from Thibodaux, where his
present descendants still continue to reside. Mr. Thibodaux died about
the year 1830. During his life he possessed an unbounded influence in this
section of the state, which his descendants have had the good fortune to
profit by. I could relate several anecdotes respecting which, whether prompted
by envy or malevolence, show the characteristic of the man, and the superior
power of mind over the superstitions of a rude, unlettered people. But
this is no place for such. His history is connected with that of the state,
having held sundry important offices, and he was spoken of for governor
a short time before his death. His wife survived him twenty years;
her death occurring on the 29th of December, 1850. She was descended, on
her father's side, from the family of Jacques Cartier, the French navigator,
and was born in the new Parish of West Baton Rouge, on the 4th of July,
1776, consequently at the timie of her demise had reached the age of seventy-four
years. The death of this venerable lady was much lamented, for she possessed
many noble qualities; among these were business-like qualifications, judgmnent,
skill, and prudence, by which, from a comparative state of poverty, she
was enabled to leave her descendants in opulent circuminstances, together
with all the distinction and influence that wealth alone can command. Beside
these, she was charitable, kind to her servants, hospitable, and liberal
in donations to objects of internal irimprovmenets. She left five children:
two daughters and three sons. One of the daughters was married to Lenfroy
Barras, formerly parish judge of the parish for many years; the other to
E. Porche, formerly probate judge for a short period. The sons have all
occupied places of distinction in the councils of the state and of the
nation. H. I. and 11. C. have represented this senatorial district
in that capacity; while the youngest, B. G. Thibodaux, after practising
law with considerable reputation for several years, was elected by a large
majority to the lower house of Congress. Since the expiration of his term.,
he has abandoned the profession of the law, and settled down quietly in
his domestic circle, more congenial to his feelings than the boisterous
sea of politics. He has a fine collection of scientific and literary works,
the only library of consequence in the parish. This name is sometimes spelled
Thibeaudeaux, or Thibodeaux; but I believe the above is correct.
Within
the last few years the parish has been rapidly settling up with an enterprising
and active American population. Among the old pioneers, I would respectfully
mention Robert R. Barrow, James Cage, the late Dr. Batey, Judge Barras,
and V. P. Winder; though there are others deserving great credit for energy
and enterprise, whose personal biographies would probably be not onlyinteresting,
but useful. But to write a correct biography is a difficult thing, and
I am not one of those who delight to blazon forth a man's virtues in bold
relief and keep his vices in the background. Out of these, however, I would
single Robert R. Barrow, as one of the most extraordinary men, not only
of the parish, but of the state. He is a man of commanding talents; and
by prudence, foresight and management, has accumulated an immense
property, and bids fair to become one of the richest men in the state.
He is hospitable, but unpopular with all, from what cause I am unable,
or rather unwilling to say. His residence is about a mile and a half below
Houma, ornamented with fruit and shade trees, and one of the most beautiful
ill tihe parish. Nearlyv all the large planters in the parish are American,
though a majo ity of the population is Creole. The latter are at this place
in general, though there are many noble exceptions, an indolent, uneducated
race-oppressed by poverty, and, like all poor people, have poor ways.
As soon as the young man attains the age of puberty, his paternal share
is meted out to him, usually consisting of a gun and a few pounds of powder,
and he is left to shift for himself. He can, however, always find a living.
Free labor here is worth 81 25 per day, anld during the rolling season,
he is employed in taking off the crops, by which means he is enabled to
furnish his family with provisions. They generally till a few acres of
land-raise corn, potatoes and rice, though few of them have slaves. During
the winter they kill vast numbers of duck and other game, both for use
and market. A rich planter will frequently buy out several of these small
farms, and open a large plantation; and as much of the parish still remains
unsettled. they open new places, which, in the course of time, must eventually
in like mananer be merged into sugar estates.
The seat
of justice of this parish is Houma, a considerable village, situated on
the banks of the Bayou Terrebonne, about 18 miles below Thibodaux. It consists
of five stores, ten or twelve dwelling-houses, a church (Methodist) a blacksmith
shop, a school-house, hotel, grogshop and billiard-loom, together with
the paraphernalia of justicesuch as the court-house, Clerk's, Sheriff's
and Recorder's offices, (all in one building,) and a jail. Officers
here, though elective, are hereditary, and descend from father to son,
or in default, to collateral relations; and here appears to be an antagonism
between the American and Creole part of the population. There are also
in this place sundry lawyers' and doctors' offices. Of the former there
are three, whose occupants make by their profession firom two to three
hundred dollars a year. There are also three whose united practice averages
from five to six thousand dollars a year. The probate judges were
S. M. Guyol, L. Barras, H. M. Thibodaux, and E. Porche, when the office
was abolished. The district judges were B. Winchester, Debleux, Nicolls,
and Randall, the present incumbent, appointed under the new constitution.
From 1822 to 1846 there were 583 judgments. 0n the new docket, from 1846
up to the present time, 830. This shows a great increase of business, and
in fact there are generally from 40 to 50 judgments rendered up at each
sessions. There are many appeals, and owing to the manner in which suits
are decided, 40 out of 50 are generally sent back reversed, or for a new
trial.
I will
now briefly give the natural history of the parish, and first, of Quadrapeds.
-Among the domestic anilmals of this parish, the most useful is the mule.
They are hardier and ca::3icr iept than the horse, and better adapted to
the usages of agriculture. Yearly large droves are imported into the parish
fr'om the western states -principally from Kentucky and Missouri, and always
command a good sale and large prices. Horses also are annually imported,
and though less serviceable than the mule, they are in great demand, from
the constant diminution of their numbers, arising from fatigue and want
of acelimiation. Those that are reared here are dwarfish, and unfit for
the laborious purposes of agriculture, though they are used to adcvanitage
by the Creoles in tilling their small farms. Like the mustang of Texas,
they appear better adapted to a warm, st:t'y climate, and for undergoing
the hardy horsemanship to which they are subject. Immediately as these
animal are capable of bearing a rider, they are put under whip and spur,
at full gallop, and it is this premature hardship, together with the want
of attention, the stunts and depreciates the race. In respect to the other
domestic animals, I would briefly remark, that but little care is given
to any except what are indispenable to family use, or the purposes of agriculture.
The only individual who has bestowed attention to the folding and breeding
of live stock, is Jamies Cage, v-,ho, on a limited scale, has attempted
to unite the interest of the farmer to the wants of the plante:r. However,
nearly every plantation in the parish is supplied with cows, oxen, hogs,
&c., but only in such numbers as are coaducie to the comfort, or necessarv
use of the planter - no one pretending to make them either an object of
pride, or commerce.
Passing
over the domestic tribe, it e.ld not be improper in this place to notice
a few of the wild animal tlt yet linger in the brakes aend wildernesses
of the parish, though they are all fast disappearing. The most numerous
of these are such as are found in every new count.. try of the tropic zone,
such as deer, tiger, otter, wild cat, squirrel, raccoon, opossum, rabbit,
mole rats, mice, &e. The deer are becoming scarce. They are generally
found along the borders and swamp-lands of the Caillous. De Large, and
Lecasse. The tiger-cat was formerly very numerous, and on several occasions
have attacked individuals with great ferocity. But as the parish became
settled, they gradually retreated into the most uninhabitable parts, and
are silently disappearing. I have omitted to mention the wolf, because,
though this animal is sometimes seen here, it does not inhabit this section,
and is probably astray froml some of the adjoining parishes. It would be
useless in me to give a detailed account of all these animals, their habits
and varieties, which are nearly the same in every part of this state of
the same latitude; and besides, it would be a needless waste of time and
paper in treating a subject which more properly belongs to the natural
historian. I shall therefore pass over in silence the various species of
turtle, shell-fish, snakes, alligator, &c., in which the waters abound,
and enumerate, 1st, the birds; 2d, the fish; and 3dly, the insects most
common-o to this section of country.
First,
then, in respect to birds: The most numerous are the mocking birdl, black-bird,
snipe, blue crane, grosbeak, duck, (several varieties,) rice-bird, wren,
white crane, red-birds, hawks, buzzard, crow, owls, (several varieties,)
bats, pelicans, curlew, and gulls-the three last principally seen about
and inhabiting the sea-coast. The following are scarcer, though occasionally
met with in some localities in large numibers, viz.: bluejay, pigeon, dove,
wood-peckler, lalk, sap-suckers, and king-fishers. There are other valuable
birds that are frequently hunted in the vicinity of lakes and on the coast,
but they are migratory. Among these I would mention the sandhill and whooping
cranes, wild geese, &c. Snow-birds, sparrows and robins appear in large
numbers in winter, but disappear at the openiing of spring. The martin,
also, is seen here during the spring and sumimer, but migrates in winter.
The habits of these birds are the same as in all other countries where
they abound, or to where they migrate, and any further particular notice
of them in this place is deemed unnecessary. 2d. The Fish: These are taken
in any quantity by those who delight in the sport, and abound in the lakes,
bayous, and along the coast-the most common of which are as follows: cat-fish,
buffalo, sheeps-head, shore pike, trout, perch, (several kinds,) besides
vast quantities of sardines and red-fish, inhabiting the bayous and inlets
near the sea-shore. Gar fish are very numerous, as also eels, but the irnmer
are never eaten, and the latter seldom sought after. The oyster appears
to be the most profitable article of commerce which the waters afford;
large quantities of these are brought into market, or shipped to Orleans,
and for flavor and size are not surpassed by those of the more northern
climates. Fishing and hunting, however, here excite but little or no attention
and with all the liberality of nature-the bounty of the air and waters-the
leisure of youth is passed in more exciting amusements, usually attendant
on wealth improperly directed, a luxuriant climate, or neglected education.
But to this general remark there are many exceptions; and there is probably
as much talent, energy and enterprise in the parish, according to its population,
as any in the state. I will here conclude my observations on the natural
history of animals of this section by a brief allusion to the insect tribe,
which, though numerous, are of no great variety. These are-the mosquito,
gnat, green and black flies-very troublesome to horses-green, striped,
ring, and yellow wasps, bees, locusts, (scarce,) mosquito hawks, ants,
grasshoppers, and sand-fly, though this last is only found in the vicinity
of the sea-coast.
From the
animal we naturally descend to the vegetable kingdom. I have already noticed
some of the most important forest trees, and will here briefly confine
myself to the enumeration of the few varieties of plants indigenous to
this section of the state. This is no locality for a botanist, though the
rains are abundant, and the soil luxuriant. The following very common species
are all that I have met with, though there may be others that have escaped
my observation: these are the blackberry, dewberry, iron, hog and smart
weeds several varieties of vine, such as the rattan, poison, grape, and
mus cadine in particular, which grows in great abundance; also the green
briar, morning-glory, passion-flower, wild indigo, mullen, (scarce,) and
several species of water plant-the most common of which is, the nympha
odorata, or alligator-bonnet. The palmetto, which is found in all low,
stiff soils in the south, grows here exuberantly, though not in such large
quantities as I have seen in the adjoining parishes, and becomes more abundant
as we approach the coast. The fruit trees to which this section of the
state appears peculiarly adapted, are the orange, the fig, the plum and
pecean. With little attention large groves of oranges might be raised,
and there has been more attention given to them latterly than formerly.
The principal difficulty is in rearing the small tree: and even after they
have attained their growth, unless with proper care, they will be destroyed
by a black worm concealed in a green envelop, and penetrating the bark.
The lemon is still more difficult to raise. Frequent experiments have been
tried on the apple, but they have all failed, or produce only a shriveled,
dwarf fruit. The peach is more successful; and on elevated ridges, with
proper care and attention, grows to a fine healthy appearance, though the
trees are generally left to shift for themselves, in consequence of which
the fruit is infterior. Mulberries grow wild, and in some places in great
abundance. We have also the black and dewberries in immense quantities.
Straw berries do not appear to do so well; whether from the improper method
of cultivating them, or soil, or climate, I am unable to say. The banana
has lately attracted some attention, but requires protection from the cold.
Mr. R. R. Barrow has a great number of them planted out, and has succeeded
in raising some of the finest fruit I ever saw. But all minor considerations
are to be overlooked in the great staple production of the parish-sugar.
There
are one hundred and ten planters, eighty sugar houses, forty-three steam
power, and thirty-seven driven by horse. The ordinary yield is from 12
to 13,000 hhds., of from 13 to 14,000 lbs. net, and about 20,000 barrels
of molasses. The average cost of sending sugar to the New-Orleans market
is, for freight, $3; insurance, 40 cents; for cooperage, tarpaulins, and
watching, 30 cents, or about $3 70 per hogshead. On molasses-for freight,
$1 25; insurance, cooperage and watching, 20 cents, or $1 45 per barrel.
The whole cost of the sugar imay be put at 445,000, and that of the molasses
at $30,000, and these, together with the back freights, make an annual
charge of $100,000. The principal reason why freights are so high,
is owing to the transportation by the Terrebonne Navigation Company, who,
since their separation from the Barrataria Canal, have built a boat at
the cost of $5,000, to run between Houma and Thibodaux. The water heretofore
has been let in from Lafourche, but this, by depositing a large amount
of sediment and filling up the Terreboinne, has been abandoned, and it
is now contemplated to carry on the navigation by the construction of locks.
By reference to a report on the condition of this canal and the manner
in vhich it has been constructed, it will be seen that both companies have
been badly managed, and thousands of dollars have been recklessly squandered
on a work which still remains incomplete, and is fast going to ruin and
dilapidation for want of funds to complete it.
The Barrataria
Canal is partially finished as far as Bayou Black, and a considerable quantity
of sugar, molasses and freights are shipped by it from the Terrebonne through
lakes Long and Field to Bayou Lafourche. The completion of this canal would
doubtless be of great benefit to this section; but the project is now nearly
forgotten in the all-absorbing topic of the New-Orleans and Opelousas Railway,
which must eventually be completed, as the advantages are boundless, and
the inducements opened to capitalists cannot but remain obvious to the
humblest individual. But a proper discussion of those objects would require
a lengthy article of themselves. I will therefore close this article with
a short reply to your fifth and sixth queries.
There
are no levees in this parish except in the rear of a few plantations to
keep off the back water fiom occasional crevasses on the Bayou Lafourche.
The drainage is either into the bayous or the swamps, according to circumstances.
The roads at present in the parish are remarkably good, though a few years
ago they were almost itnpassable. I have frequently traveled from Houma
to Thibodaux with two feet water on the roads. Since then, the fences have
been thrown back, the roads elevated and ditched, and in most instances
well bridged, so that traveling has become as much a pleasure as a duty.
Most of the plantations are fenced with what is called picket fences, always
on the front facing the bayou, and frequently on the side boundaries, but
seldom in the rear, which is protected by the swamps.
The parish
is healthy, (though its lands are low and moist,) and there have been several
instances of longevity from eighty to ninety years. The principal disease
is intermitting fever, brought on by exposure and intemperance. The books
of marriages, births and deaths, as kept by Lefroy Barras, Parish Judge,
show 200 mnarriages from 1822 to 1847; births from 1825 to 1845, 60; deaths
firom 1822 to 1846, 60. I cannot vouch for their correctness, as all such
datas must be very imperfect in every parish of the state, owing to the
carelessness in which business was transacted under the old probate system.
The number of voters in the parish is 540; public schools 13; value of
lands, 82,651,700; value of negroes, $2,001,500. Total value of taxable
property, $4,986,092. There is no college in the parish, but an excellent
free-school, at Houma, and well patronized.
In respect
to religion, it is rather below par; however, there is a half-finished
brick Catholic church at Houma, generally well at tended, (nearly all the
Creoles being Catholics;) also a Methodist church, the general rendezvous
for all denominations. The circuit preachers have heretofore been very
regular in holding church at this place, but latterly they seem to meet
with but little encouragement, and are frequently starved out. There is
also another small Methodist church at Tigerville, in pretty much the same
condition as that at Houma. Notwithstanding this, the march of the parish
is onward. Blessed with as rich a soil as any in the world, it needs but
energy, enterprise and labor, to make it the wealthiest parish in the state.
Yearly men of capital and means are opening large plantations - lands have
risen in price-and those who but a few years ago were in ordinary circumstances,
have become rich and independent. |