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The Weekly Messenger Archive

  • St Martinsville, Louisiana
  • 18861919

About

St. Martinville, incorporated in 1843, is the seat of St. Martin Parish in south-central Louisiana. Settlement of the area began in the late 18th century by French-speaking families exiled from Acadia (Nova Scotia) by the British. Still celebrated today for its distinctive culture, St. Martin Parish is the setting of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem “Evangeline.” In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the parish’s most important crops were sugar, corn, and cotton. Oil was discovered at Breaux Bridge in 1899, but the mainstay of the local economy has always been agriculture. Located on Bayou Teche, St. Martinville is in the heart of “Cajun country,” and the French language was widely spoken there until recent times. A cultural center, the town won for itself the name “Petit Paris” or “Little Paris.” In the 19th century, it was a fashionable summer resort for affluent Creole families and members of the New Orleans French opera company.

Archive Info

  • 7,260
  • St Martinsville, Louisiana
  • 18861919
0

Source Information

The Weekly Messenger, 1886–1919 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: October 14, 2016

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The Weekly Messenger
St Martinsville, Louisiana
 • Page 4
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Marriage of Vincent / Bernard

Marriage of Vincent / Bernard

The Weekly Messenger
St Martinsville, Louisiana
 • Page 1
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J.G. Broussard home for a visit from working in New Orleans 1889
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Marriage of  / Rlousseel

Marriage of / Rlousseel

The Weekly Messenger
St Martinsville, Louisiana
 • Page 2
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The Weekly Messenger
St Martinsville, Louisiana
 • Page 2
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Archive Info

  • 7,260
  • St Martinsville, Louisiana
  • 18861919
0

Source Information

The Weekly Messenger, 1886–1919 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: October 14, 2016