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LOUISIANA:
| Louisiana's
African American Heritage Trail:
They blazed many trails.
Now you can retrace their footsteps.
For centuries, African Americans in Louisiana
have changed the world with their ideas, art,
and action. From street corners and marketplaces,
to churches and cafés, to universities
and beyond—Louisiana's new African American
Heritage Trail takes you to the places that
have inspired generations to add their unique
flavor to the world.
The tomb of Homer Plessy in St.
Louis Cemetery No. 1.
From the first fights
against oppression to the first notes of jazz.
Along the trail, tour stately plantations and
find out about the slaves' craftsmanship, ingenuity,
family life, and resistance.

Evergreen's complex of twenty-two
original slave cabins offers tremendous insight
into life and work on a plantation.
Discover the Cane River Creoles, descendants
of French settlers and enslaved African Americans
who intermingled on the isolated frontier of
Northwest Louisiana. Visit the battlefield where
African American troops took up arms to fight
against the Confederacy.

Learn about the life and works
of Arna Bontemps, whose boyhood memories of
Alexandria inspired many of his literary works.
Learn about Homer Plessy's refusal to move from
the "whites only" section of a Louisiana
rail car and the landmark U.S. Supreme Court
ruling that followed. Then walk the streets
where jazz was born and explore the roots of
this amazing musical form.
Discover the personalities
that led the way.
Share the story of Madam C. J. Walker, who rose
from a humble upbringing in rural Louisiana
to become America's first self-made female millionaire.

Visit the birthplace of Arna Bontemps, a leading
writer in the Harlem Renaissance. Find out about
P. B. S. Pinchback, who became America's first
black governor—in 1872! Pay tribute to
gospel legend and New Orleans native Mahalia
Jackson. Then take a ride to Grambling State
University, best known for the long and storied
career of head football coach Eddie Robinson,
one of the most respected and beloved coaches
in American history.
This is only the beginning.
If you love Louisiana for its food, music, and
fun, the African American Heritage Trail is
yet another great reason to visit. There is
so much more to see and do and explore.
Start your journey online at LouisianaTravel.com/AfricanAmericanHeritageTrail
Or call 1-800-47-GUMBO for your free Louisiana
Tour Guide.
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Sam Barnes Golf Art
Augusta, GA
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The African American
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Her Legacy
by M. Mikell Johnson
Foreword by
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