Coming October 25!

Available For Purchase at the Museum

The city of Plaquemine sits along the Mississippi River where it meets with Bayou Plaquemine. Famous French explorer Sieur d’Iberville was brought to the bayou in 1699 by the Bayogoula Tribe, who inhabited land a few miles south. While trade boats and ferries began operating on the waterway during the early 1700s, it was not for another 100 years, in 1819, that the first foundations of a town began to appear at the mouth of the bayou. The cattle, sugarcane, and lumber industries brought English, French, Spanish, Italian, Irish, and German settlers and African Slaves. After building the Plaquemine Lock in 1909, the city became a commercial hub for trade as it connected New Orleans with the western half of the state.

Meet the Authors

Meghan C. Sylvester is a public historian and the director of the Iberville Museum in Plaquemine. Burke Devillier is a native of Plaquemine. After inheriting years of research from his father-in-law, Anthony P. Fama, he has devoted his retirement to sharing those stories. Together the two captured the town’s diverse essence using photographs from the local families that Fama collected and collections donated to the Iberville Museum.

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