Home:
About Louisiana
Louisiana
No other state has a more varied or colorful past than Louisiana.
The state has been governed under 10 different flags beginning
in 1541 with Hernando de Soto's claim of the region for Spain.
La Salle later claimed it for Bourbon France and over the years
Louisiana was at one time or another subject to the Union Jack
of Great Britain, the Tricolor of Napoleon, the Lone Star flag
of the Republic of West Florida and the fifteen stars and stripes
of the United States. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Louisiana
became an independent republic for six weeks before joining the
Confederacy.
Earlier, in 1803, Louisiana had become a part of the United States
because of the region's importance to the trade and security of
the American mid-west. New Orleans and the surrounding territory
controlled the mouth of the Mississippi River down which much
of the produce of the mid-west travelled to reach market. To get
the vital region in American hands, President Thomas Jefferson
negotiated the Louisiana Purchase with Napoleon.
With the acquisition of Louisiana, Jefferson nearly doubled the
size of the fledgling U.S. and made it a world power. Later, 13
states or parts of states were carved out of the Louisiana Purchase
territory.
Through much of its early history Louisiana was a trading and
financial center, and the fertility of its land made it one of
the richest regions in America as first indigo then sugar and
cotton rose to prominence in world markets. Many Louisiana planters
were among the wealthiest men in America.
The plantation economy was shattered by the Civil War although
the state continued to be a powerful agricultural region. The
discovery of sulphur in 1869 and oil in 1901, coupled with the
rise of forestry sent the state on a new wave of economic growth.
Eventually, Louisiana became a major American producer of oil
and natural gas and a center of petroleum refining and petrochemicals
manufacturing, which it remains to this day.