By: History.com Editors

Louisiana

The New Orleans Skyline

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Published: November 17, 2009

Last Updated: February 27, 2025

Louisiana sits above the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the Mississippi River, bordered by Arkansas to the north, Mississippi to the east and Texas to the west. Founded by the French, ruled for 40 years by the Spanish and bought by the United States in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, New Orleans is known for its distinct Creole culture and vibrant history.

Significant battles of the War of 1812 and the Civil War were fought over the city. Louisiana’s capital city is Baton Rouge. It is also home to the historic port city of New Orleans, which is famous for its unique cuisine, jazz and spectacular Mardi Gras festival. In its last hundred years, the key struggles of New Orleans have been social (poverty, racial strife) and natural (hurricanes, floods and slowly sinking land).

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Louisiana Native American History

When the first French colonists arrived in the area now known as Louisiana in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, the land had already been settled for more than 10,000 years by Native Americans. An estimated 15,000 people speaking 22 languages had formed numerous groups, including the Atakapa, Caddo, Chitimacha, Choctaw, Houma, Natchez and Tunica tribes.

In the early 1700s, various Native American groups allied with and fought against European settlers. The Tunica and Caddo Tribes allied with the French against the British. The Chitimacha entered a 12-year war against the French; most were killed, and many others were enslaved or forced to migrate. And the Choctaws allied with the French against the Natchez, who had attacked a French colony and killed hundreds of settlers. During the Natchez War of 1729, nearly all the Natchez were killed; the remaining few were enslaved or forced to migrate and join other pro-British tribes, including the Chickasaws, Creeks and Cherokees.

The Louisiana Purchase of 1803 drew many new American settlers to Louisiana and led the United States government to covet new territory. In the early 19th century, the Chitimacha, the Choctaws, Caddo and Tunica were compelled to give up most of their land. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 subsequently required the evacuation of Indigenous people to “Indian Territory” (modern-day Oklahoma). Most of those who did not leave were forcibly removed on what became known as the Trail of Tears, resulting in the deaths of an estimated 3,000 Indigenous people.

The four federally-recognized tribes in Louisiana today include the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana, the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians and the Tunica-Biloxi Indian Tribe of Louisiana. The Chitimacha is the only tribe in Louisiana to still live on some of their native lands. The Chitimacha and the Coushatta are renowned for their traditional, intricately-designed woven basketry.

Louisiana Exploration and Colonial History

Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto was the first European to visit Louisiana during his 1541 expedition down the Mississippi River. In 1682, French explorer René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle claimed the territory at the foot of the Mississippi River for France and named it Louisiana after Louis XIV.

The first permanent French settlement was created in 1715 in modern-day Natchitoches. In 1718, Canadian-born Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville—known as the “Father of Louisiana”—founded New Orleans, which he named after the Duc d’Orleans. The city became the French colony’s capital in 1723. During the era of French Louisiana, the French crown and several chartered proprietors they contracted governed the territory. In addition to French settlers, the colony was populated in the 18th and 19th centuries by German immigrants and French-Canadian immigrants known as Acadians.

During the Seven Years’ War between France and England in the mid-1700s, France offered to give Louisiana to Spain in return for help fighting the British. Spain rejected the offer, but England caught wind of a supposed “secret alliance” between the countries and attacked Spain. In 1762, Louis XV of France again offered Louisiana to his cousin, Charles III of Spain, with the Treaty of Fontainebleau. France hoped the gift would incentivize Spain to end the conflict and keep the territory out of the hands of the British. England finally recognized Spanish ownership with the 1763 Treaty of Paris.

The Spanish were slow to take control of their new acquisition, and they allowed the mainly French settlers in the territory to maintain their language and customs. The first Spanish colonial governor, Don Antonio de Ulloa, arrived in 1766 and created strict trade restrictions, including banning business with England and the importation of French wine. The French settlers rebelled, ousting de Ulloa in 1768 and demanding the territory return to French hands. Spain countered in 1769 by sending a fleet of 24 ships and 2,000 troops, who retook the colony, reaffirmed Spanish rule and punished leaders of the rebellion.

The Louisiana Purchase and Statehood

The Louisiana Purchase was the conclusion of a decades-long struggle between France, England and Spain for control over North American territory—particularly around the Mississippi River, which enabled trade throughout much of the continent.

In the 1790s, a diplomatic incident led to a short war between the United States and France. In 1802, French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte forced Spain to return Louisiana to France with the secret Treaty of San Ildefonso.

In 1803, Thomas Jefferson, fearing French control of Louisiana would compromise control of the Mississippi River, bought the Louisiana Territory from Bonaparte, who had given up on creating a “New France” in the Americas. Purchased for $15,000,000, the Louisiana Purchase became the single largest land acquisition in American history. It more than doubled the size of the United States and added more than 500 billion acres of land between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains.

In 1812, Louisiana became the 18th state admitted to the Union. In 1813, the newly-minted state became involved in the War of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain. Due to slow communications, the Battle of New Orleans was fought in Louisiana two weeks after the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the war, was signed. General Andrew Jackson led about 5,700 troops to one of the most important land victories of the war, emerging from the battle a national hero.

Slave Shackles

Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, people were kidnapped from the continent of Africa, forced into slavery in the American colonies and exploited to work as indentured servants and laborers in the production of crops. Shown are iron shackles used on enslaved people prior to 1860.

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Slave Ship diagram

This chart shows the packed positioning of enslaved people on a ship from 1786.

DeAgostini/Getty Images

Slavery in Jamestown

In late August 1619, the White Lion sailed into Point Comfort and dropped anchor in the James River.Virginia colonist John Rolfe documented the arrival of the ship and “20 and odd” Africans on board. History textbooks immortalized his journal entry, with 1619 often used as a reference point for teaching the origins of slavery in America.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Shown is an iron mask and collar used by slaveholders to keep field workers from running away and to prevent them from eating crops such as sugarcane, circa 1750. The mask made breathing difficult and, if left on too long, would tear at the person’s skin when removed.

MPI/Getty Images

The first U.S. president, George Washington, owned enslaved people, along with many of the presidents who followed him.

Buyenlarge/Getty Images

Isaac Jefferson, enslaved by President Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence and the third president of the United States, was born on a large Virginia estate run on slave labor. His marriage to the wealthy Martha Wayles Skelton more than doubled his property in land and enslaved people. This is a portrait of Isaac Jefferson, enslaved by Jefferson, circa 1847.

Fotosearch/Getty Images

Slave Auction

The slave auction was the epitome of slavery’s dehumanization. Enslaved people were sold to the person who bid the most money, and family members were often split-up.READ MORE: Married Enslaved People Often Faced Wrenching Separations

Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Slave Auction

Broadside advertising an auction outside of Brooke and Hubbard Auctioneers office, Richmond, Virginia, July 23, 1823.

Chicago History Museum/Getty Images

An enslaved Black male youth is shown in this photo from the 1850s, holding his white master’s child.

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Enslaved women and children, circa 1860s

From left to right: William, Lucinda, Fannie (seated on lap), Mary (in cradle), Frances (standing), Martha, Julia (behind Martha), Harriet, and Charles or Marshall, circa 1861.The women and their children were enslaved at the time this photograph was taken on a plantation just west of Alexandria, Virginia, that belonged to Felix Richards. Frances and her children were enslaved by Felix, while Lucinda and her children were enslaved by his wife, Amelia Macrae Richards.

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

By the start of the American Civil War, the South was producing 75 percent of the world’s cotton and creating more millionaires per capita in the Mississippi River valley than anywhere in the nation. Shown are enslaved people working on sweet potato planting at Hopkinson’s Plantation in April 1862.

Library of Congress

Slavery in America

Enslaved people in the antebellum South constituted about one-third of the southern population. A formerly enslaved man from Louisiana, whose forehead was branded with the initials of his owner, is shown wearing a punishment collar in 1863.

adoc-photos/Corbis/Getty Images

Despite the horrors of slavery, it was no easy decision to flee. Escaping often involved leaving behind family and heading into the complete unknown, where harsh weather and lack of food might await. Shown are two unidentified men who escaped slavery, circa 1861.

Library of Congress

The Scourged Back

A man named Peter, who had escaped slavery, reveals his scarred back at a medical examination in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, while joining the Union Army in 1863.

Library of Congress

Confederate soldiers rounding up Black people in a church during the American Civil War, Nashville, Tennesee, the 1860s.

Kean Collection/Getty Images

HISTORY: Slavery in America

The Emancipation Proclamation, issued on January 1, 1863, established that all enslaved people in Confederate states in rebellion against the Union “shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free.” But for many enslaved people, emancipation took longer to take effect. Shown are a group of enslaved people outside their quarters on a plantation on Cockspur Island, Georgia, circa 1863.

Corbis/Getty Images

Slavery

Slaves have been a part of Louisiana’s history since the French colony was established. Given its location at the mouth of the Mississippi River, New Orleans eventually became the largest and most significant slave-trading center in the United States during the 19th century. On the eve of the Civil War, slaves made up nearly half of the state’s population.

In the 1790s, a slave uprising in the French colony of San Domingue led to the formation of Haiti. Haitian plantation owners escaped to New Orleans with their slaves, more than doubling the city’s population in the early 1800s. The Haitian slaves’ defiant spirit led to the 1811 Slave Revolt when more than 500 Louisiana slaves killed their captors before they were slaughtered by the military.

During Spanish rule in the mid-1700s, slaves were allowed to earn money from selling goods and then buy their families’ freedom, leading to a significant population of free former slaves. From the early 19th century until the Civil War, New Orleans had one of the largest populations of free Black people in the South. Some were wealthy and well-educated, and many settled in the New Orleans suburb of Tremé.

The Civil War

After the election of President Abraham Lincoln, who promised to abolish slavery, Louisiana became the sixth state to secede from the Union on January 26, 1861. During the Civil War, the manufacturing hub of New Orleans supplied Confederate troops, and around 60,000 Louisianans eventually served in the Confederate Army.

From the start of the war, Union troops sought to seize territory on the Mississippi River to control critical trading ports and divide the Confederacy. The capture of New Orleans on April 28, 1862, secured the Confederacy’s biggest city and most important seaport for the Union. On May 9, Union troops seized control of the state capitol at Baton Rouge. The last major Civil War battles in Louisiana were fought during the 1864 Red River Campaign, when the Union attempted and failed to secure Shreveport, Louisiana.

Reconstruction and Civil Rights Movement

In 1864—before the end of the Civil War and the passage of the 14th Amendment—the Louisiana legislature passed a state constitution that banned slavery but didn’t allow African Americans to vote. White politicians lashed back with Black codes limiting former slaves’ freedom. Violent clashes erupted between radical Republicans, who wanted to grant Black people the right to vote, and white supremacists enraged by Reconstruction policies.

Louisiana’s 1868 state constitution granted Black citizens the right to vote. One of the most progressive state constitutions in the United States at the time, it also banned the Black codes and guaranteed African Americans public education and access to public facilities. Reconstruction in New Orleans was especially successful, integrating many institutions, including nearly all public schools. Louisiana was the first state in the United States to have a Black governor, New Orleans resident P.B.S. Pinchback, from 1872 to 1873.

This progressive stance incensed white supremacists, leading to the implementation of Jim Crow laws. Homer Plessy, a Black Louisiana man, contested the constitutionality of a law segregating train cars. His case—Plessy v. Ferguson—made it to the Supreme Court, and its 1896 decision instilled “separate but equal” statuses throughout the country for the next half-century.

Black Louisianans again fought against injustice during the 1950s and 1960s civil rights movement. Activists organized the first bus boycott of segregated buses in Baton Rouge in 1953, two years before the Montgomery bus boycott. In February 1957, Martin Luther King Junior formed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference—a key civil rights organization—at the New Zion Baptist Church in New Orleans. Louisianans participated in many more boycotts, freedom rides and sit-ins that led to the integration of schools, transportation and public facilities.

Cajun, Creole and Cultural Contributions

A diverse blend of ethnic backgrounds in Louisiana, particularly New Orleans, has made the area famous for its rich cultural heritage. Two of the most prominent ethnic groups are Cajuns and Creoles. In the 18th and 19th centuries, “Creole” was used to designate anyone who was native to Louisiana, regardless of their ethnicity. Over time, people with Native American, West African, German, Canadian, French and Spanish backgrounds all contributed to the Creole culture. These people blended their culinary, linguistic and musical practices to create a new cultural phenomenon; gumbo, for example, is a mix of French, West African and Native American ingredients and culinary techniques.

Cajuns were once known as Creoles. Originally the descendants of a French-speaking group of Acadians exiled from Canada in the 1700s, some of these people began self-identifying as Cajun instead of Creole at the end of the 1800s. Over the next century, “Creole” became associated with Black culture, while “Cajun” became associated with white culture—even though the groups were historically intertwined.

Louisiana’s blend of cultures resulted in cultural traditions unique to Louisiana, including colorful Mardi Gras celebrations and jazz—which was created by New Orleans musicians in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Date of Statehood: April 30, 1812

Capital: Baton Rouge

Population: 4.52 million (2020)

Size: 51,988 square miles

Nickname(s): Pelican State; Sportsman’s Paradise

Motto: Union, Justice, Confidence

Tree: Bald Cypress

Flower: Magnolia

Bird: Eastern Brown Pelican

Interesting Facts

  • At 34 stories high and 450 feet tall, the Louisiana State Capitol is the tallest of all state capitol buildings. On September 8, 1935, Senator Huey Long—who had been instrumental in convincing the public to construct the new building in 1935—was assassinated in one of its corridors.

  • Hurricane Katrina hit landfall in southeastern Louisiana on August 29, 2005, as a Category 3 storm. The most destructive natural disaster in U.S. history, it resulted in more than 1,800 deaths—over 1,500 of which were in Louisiana—and close to $100 billion in damages.

  • The word “bayou”—a marshy body of water often associated with Louisiana—comes from the Choctaw (Mobilian) word “bayuk.”

Hurricane Katrina

New Orleans on average is 6 feet below sea level and Hurricane Katrina turned fatal after catastrophic levee damage around the city. Here, on August 30, 2005, water can be seen spilling over along the Inner Harbor Navigational Canal.(Credit: Vincent Laforet/AFP/Getty Images)

Vincent Laforet/AFP/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Mayor Ray Nagin declared that the New Orleans Superdome would become a last-minute shelter space for those who could not leave during the mandatory evacuation order. The roof of the structure did not hold up after the first night of the storm, leaving the 10,000 people who had sought refuge there vulnerable.(Credit: Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images)

Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

It was estimated that 80 percent of New Orleans was flooded as levees began to break and leak, leaving many people who stayed behind stranded on their roofs. Flooding in most areas was at least as deep as 10 feet.(Credit: Vincent Laforet/AFP/Getty Images)

Vincent Laforet/AFP/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Fifteen-year-old Lynell Wright carries Luric Johnson, age 3, through a flooded intersection crowded with survivors awaiting rescue at the St. Cloud bridge on August 30, 2005. In the end, about 60,000 people were rescued by various groups.(Credit: Marko Georgiev/Getty Images)

Marko Georgiev/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

A plea for help appears on the roof of a home flooded in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.(Credit: Robert Galbraith/AFP/Getty Images)

Robert Galbraith/AFP/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Quintella Williams feeds her 9-day-old baby girl, Akea, outside the Superdome as she awaits evacuation from the flooded city. Crowds of refugees driven from their homes by Hurricane Katrina had gathered in hopes of being evacuated.(Credit: Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images)

Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

A looter carries a rifle while riding a bike in a K-Mart in the Garden District in New Orleans, Louisiana.(Credit: Marko Georgiev/Getty Images)

Marko Georgiev/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

By September 1, the number of occupants of the Superdome had swollen to over 30,000, with an additional 25,000 at the city’s Convention Center. Thousands of troops poured into the city by September 2 to help with security and delivery of supplies to stranded victims. (Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Mario Tama/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Reports of theft, rape and gun violence increased as food and safe water supplies were depleted. A man injured in a fight is seen here carried away from the Superdome after shots were fired and a near riot erupted.(Credit: Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images)

Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Evacuees crowd the floor of the Reliant Astrodome September 2, 2005 in Houston, Texas. The facility is being used to house 15,000 refugees who fled the destruction of Hurricane Katrina.(Credit: Dave Einsel/Getty Images)

Dave Einsel/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

A man searches a message board on the floor of the Astrodome for information about missing family members on September 3, 2005.(Credit: Dave Einsel/Getty Images)

Dave Einsel/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Survivors on a rooftop in New Orleans catch MREs (meals ready to eat) from a Navy helicopter on September 3, 2005. The city remained underwater as military helicopters carried out evacuations.(Credit: Daniel J. Barry/WireImage)

Daniel J. Barry/WireImage/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

A man watches as an army helicopter drops water on burning houses in a neighborhood of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Some neighborhood blocks burned down entirely with firetrucks unable to drive through flooding to respond quickly.(Credit: Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images)

Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

Hurricane Katrina

Hurricane Katrina left more than 1,800 deaths in its wake, caused $100 billion in damages, destroyed or compromised over 800,000 housing units and ultimately left thousands homeless.(Credit: Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images)

Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images

American Library Association, Indigenous Tribes of New Orleans & Louisiana.

Coushatta Tribe, Our Story.

Sovereign Nation of the Chitimacha, Tribal History.

National Park Service, Early Choctaw History.

National Park Service, American Indians in Louisiana.

Jena Band of Choctaw Indians, History.

64 Parishes, Natchez Indians.

Louisiana Department of Culture Recreation and Tourism, American Indians: The First Families of Louisiana on the Eve of French Settlement.

Louisiana Office of Cultural Development, Louisiana's Native Americans: An Overview.

Tunica-Biloxi Indians of Louisiana, History.

64 Parishes, Caddo Nation.

Caddo Nation, History.

Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Cavelier de la Salle.

Louisiana Department of Culture Recreation and Tourism, Colonial Louisiana.

Library of Congress, Louisiana as a French Colony.

Library of Congress, Louisiana as a Spanish Colony.

Library of Congress, The Louisiana Purchase.

Kansas Historical Society, Louisiana Purchase.

American Battlefield Trust, Battle of New Orleans.

National Archives, Treaty of Ghent (1814).

Louisiana Department of Culture Recreation and Tourism, The Civil War.

64 Parishes, Civil War Louisiana.

Louisiana Department of Culture Recreation and Tourism, Reconstruction.

64 Parishes, Reconstruction.

United Teachers of New Orleans, Some Black History You Should Know.

National Park Service, Creole History and Culture.

University of Louisiana at Lafayette, German-Americans.

National Park Service, From Acadian to Cajun.

Louisiana House of Representatives, Louisiana Capitol History and Tour.

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Citation Information

Article title
Louisiana
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 21, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
February 27, 2025
Original Published Date
November 17, 2009

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