East Baton Rouge Parish Library

Chenier Plain, Richard B. Crowell

Label
Chenier Plain, Richard B. Crowell
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Chenier Plain
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
914445901
Responsibility statement
Richard B. Crowell
Summary
"Richard B. Crowell chronicles the history and economic development of a region in southwest Louisiana defined by unique geologic formations and distinguished by its position beneath the Mississippi flyway. Crowell traces the evolution of this region's well-known sport hunting legacy, creating the first comprehensive narrative history of the area, from 1800 to today. In Chenier Plain, the author takes a fresh look at the decline of French and Spanish influence in coastal Louisiana and investigates an isolated region struggling to find its place, against inhospitable conditions, following the Civil War. Less than a decade after Reconstruction, one individual, financed by an English syndicate, began developing this remote region through tenacity and aggressive business practices. Crowell tells this story of economic development, weaving it together with personal tragedies and natural history. In chronicling the Chenier Plain's transition from a center of market hunting to one of sport hunting Crowell highlights opportunistic land purchases by a U.S. President, British and American businessmen, a university president, and an illiterate French-speaking Acadian whose property became the nexus of The Coastal Club, the oldest hunting lodge in the geographic region. The combination of these events with the background of six embryonic hunting clubs established before 1929 and modern methods of waterfowl habitat conservation will illustrate how inextricably linked sport hunting is to the life and preservation of this remote Louisiana world of ridges and marsh"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Foreword -- Chenier Plain, from territory to private ownership -- Outsiders capture the Chenier Plain -- The comfort of language -- Three defining canals -- Market to sport hunting -- The first hunting club neighborhood -- Coastal Hunting and Fishing Club -- The Coastal Club -- The campus -- The marsh -- Research and renewal -- Afterword -- Appendix
Classification
Content
Mapped to