Celebrate Louisiana’s Bicentennial with “Louisiana Places Names”

Celebrate Louisiana’s Bicentennial with “Louisiana Places Names

Popular, Unusual, and Forgotten Stories of Towns, Cities, Plantations, Bayous, and Even Some Cemeteries

From Aansel to Zwolle, with Mamou in between, researcher Clare D’Artois Leeper offers an alphabet of Louisiana place names, both past and present. Leeper includes 893 entries that reveal a distinct view of the state’s history. Her unique blend of documented fact and traditional wisdom results in an entertaining guide to Louisiana’s place name lore.

Leeper considers the origins of each place as well as each name, drawing attention to the individuals who transformed Louisiana from an uninhabited wilderness into a populated state. Not surprising for a region that has existed under ten flags, Louisiana’s place names reflect a mixture of several languages and point to other locales across the country and around the world. Even the state’s name, Leeper points out, combines the French “Louis” and the Spanish “iana,” meaning “belonging to” Louis XIV. Name origins trace back to geography, flora, fauna, religion, weather, people, and occasionally, a flood, a favorite book, or a popular local dish.

Leeper conducted numerous interviews, visited courthouses, museums, and libraries, and used the Geographic Names Information System to create this fascinating collection of Louisiana history and folklore.

Clare D’Artois Leeper (1932-2012) wrote the newspaper column “Louisiana Places: Those Strange Sounding Names” from 1960 to 1979, and again from 2004 to 2006. She received her degree in library science and owned Legacy Publishing Company. She lived in Baton Rouge, named for the “red stick” that marked the hunting boundaries of the Bayougoulas and the Houmas.

October 2012
368 pages, 7 x 10, 1 map
978-0-8071-4738-2
Cloth $39.95, ebook available
Louisiana History