Recreation and Places
of Interest
Louisiana’s parks and other recreational
facilities attract hundreds of thousands of tourists
to the state every year. A large number of the
parks lie along water, and water sports are among
the most popular forms of outdoor recreation
in Louisiana. There is excellent fishing in Louisiana’s
many freshwater streams and lakes and along the
Gulf of Mexico. Wooded areas and coastal marshes
offer fine opportunities to observe wildlife.
Among the many interesting places to visit are
the numerous units of the state park system.
Privately owned sites open to the public include
many of Louisiana’s beautiful mansions
from what is called the antebellum period before
the Civil War (1861-1865). The state’s
chief tourist center, New Orleans, offers visitors
many attractions of historic interest, as well
as the atmosphere of a cosmopolitan city.
National Forest and National Parks
Kisatchie National Forest, the only national
forest in Louisiana, covers 243,000 hectares
(601,000 acres) in the north central part of
the state. It has facilities for camping and
a lake for swimming, fishing, and boating.
Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve
was established to preserve the rich natural
resources and culture of Louisiana’s delta
region. The park consists of four separate units:
Acadian, which interprets the Acadian and Native
American cultures of the area; the Barataria
Preserve, near Marrero, which focuses on the
natural and cultural history of the swamp and
marshlands of the region; the Chalmette, near
New Orleans, site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans;
and the New Orleans unit, which tells of the
history of the city. The Cane River Creole National
Historical Park and Heritage Area, authorized
in 1994, preserves buildings and landscapes associated
with the development of Creole culture. New Orleans
Jazz National Historical Park, also authorized
in 1994, educates visitors about jazz music as
it evolved in New Orleans. Poverty Point National
Monument, in northeast Louisiana, contains some
of the largest Native American earthworks found
on the continent, consisting of concentric ridges
which may have been dwelling foundations surrounding
a large central plaza. Arranged around the ridges
are four ceremonial and burial mounds. Also in
Louisiana is a portion of the Vicksburg National
Military Park, site of the siege in 1863 that
gave Union forces control of the Mississippi
River during the Civil War (see Vicksburg, Campaign
of).
State Parks
The system has nearly 30 units designated as
state parks, preservation areas, or commemorative
areas. Most of them have facilities for camping,
boating, swimming, and fishing. Chicot State
Park, the largest, is an area of rolling woodlands
in central Louisiana. The beautiful Fontainebleau
State Park extends along the northern shore of
Lake Pontchartrain. Sam Houston Jones State Park
is located in southwestern Louisiana, north of
Lake Charles. Chemin-a-Haut State Park lies in
northeastern Louisiana on Bayou Bartholomew.
Lake Bistineau State Park is situated on the
western shore of Lake Bistineau, which lies southeast
of Shreveport. Lake Bruin State Park, in the
eastern part of the state, lies on an oxbow lake
that was formed by a cutoff of the Mississippi
River.
Most of the state commemorative areas preserve
places of historic significance. They include
Marksville State Commemorative Area, in central
Louisiana, which is the site of a prehistoric
Native American village and an archaeological
museum. Longfellow-Evangeline, in south central
Louisiana, commemorates the heroine of the famous
narrative poem Evangeline (1847), by Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow. In the park is a museum devoted to
Acadian life. Fort Pike near New Orleans preserves
the ruins of a historic fort constructed after
the War of 1812 to defend approaches to the city.
The Audubon memorial, in the south central part
of the state, is the site of the plantation home
once occupied by the famous wildlife painter
John James Audubon. Mansfield State Commemorative
Area south of Shreveport was the site of a Civil
War battle. Near Natchitoches is Los Adaes, a
one-time capital of Texas.
Museums
Fine art collections are located in the major
cities of Louisiana. A number of scientific,
historical, and art museums are located on the
campuses of the state universities and Tulane
University. Exhibits devoted to state and regional
history are housed in the Louisiana State Museum
and in the Louisiana Historical Association’s
Confederate Museum, both of which are in New
Orleans, and in the Louisiana State Exhibit Museum,
at Shreveport. Also in New Orleans is the Louisiana
Nature Center. The Marksville State Historic
Site, at Marksville, includes a noted archaeological
museum. There are arboretums in Ville Platte
and Baton Rouge. Hundreds of museums, large and
small, are found around the state.
Other Places to Visit
Many of the state’s most popular tourist
attractions are located in New Orleans. In Louisiana
there are many beautiful antebellum mansions.
Among those open to visitors are Rosedown, at
Saint Francisville; Shadows-on-the-Teche, at
New Iberia; and Oakland, Beau Fort, and Cherokee,
all near Natchitoches. Scenic places of interest
include Avery Island, on the Gulf Coast, where
there are subtropical gardens and a bird sanctuary.
Sites on the National Register of Historic Places
lie scattered in rural and urban settings around
the state.
Source: MSN
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