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Wallace, LA - April 11, 2016

4/11/2016

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Today was our last full day in Louisiana. Sarah had mentioned that she wanted to visit a plantation. Most of the plantation tours down there paint a picture of a genteel pre Civil War white South. Slavery is glossed over if it is mentioned at all. I was really not interested in that.
Over the weekend, my colleague Ann posted an article about Whitney Plantation (http://www.whitneyplantation.com). It was not a “chandelier tour” like the others. It was actually a memorial to the people who were enslaved at the plantation and throughout Louisiana. That sounded like something I could appreciate.
We left the hotel and headed over to Wallace. It took about an hour and a half to get there. It was about 10:45 when we arrived. The next tour was at 11:00, so we purchased our tickets and waited for the tour to begin. Our tour guide was wonderful. She was a wealth of information.
Our first stop was the Antioch Baptist Church. The church had been moved to the property from another location in Louisiana. It was originally named Anti-Yoke Baptist Church. The members were anti-slavery, thus the name anti-yoke. At some point they came across the word Antioch in the Bible and decided to rename the church.
Inside the church were clay statues of African-American children. The reason for the statues was explained in a video we watched in the church. In the 1930’s Franklin Delano Roosevelt started the Federal Writer’s Project as part of the WPA (Works Progress Administration).
The writers went all over the country writing down stories. It was a precursor to the current Story Corps project. In the South, they talked with many former enslaved people. It had been about 50 years since emancipation, so most of the people who were still alive had been children or teenagers at that time. The clay statues represented children from the plantation whose voices told the story.
Our fabulous tour guide
Antioch Baptist Church
Two windows from the church

From the church, we went to three memorials on the grounds. The first memorial is the Wall of Honor. It has the names of the individuals who had been enslaved on the Whitney Plantation. Most of them only had first names. They also put the tribe of origin if known and what the individual’s job was on the plantation.
The second memorial is called
Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall. It is a memorial to all of the individuals enslaved in Louisiana. The names came from the Louisiana Slave Database built by historian Gwendolyn Midlo Hall. She is quite an individual. (As an aside, she did part of her graduate work at the University of Michigan.)
The final memorial was called the Field of Angels. It is a memorial to children in Louisiana who died enslaved. The memorial is watched over by a statue of an African angel holding a baby.
Outside the Field of Angels there are two sculptures, Middle Passage and Hallelujah by sculptor Ken Smith. Hallelujah is a man with arms up stretched. It is a depiction of emancipation Smith donated the statue to the Slavery Museum in Fredericksburg, VA. The museum then commissioned the other piece, Middle Passage, which depicts people being pulled into the vortex of slavery.
Because of financial problems, the museum never opened, and the Hallelujah statue sat on the property surrounded by weeds. Smith donated Hallelujah and Middle Passage to the Whitney Plantation. The Plantation has commissioned him to do more pieces on the property.

The Wall of Honor
The Wall of Honor
Quote from Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall
Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall
Field of Angels
The angel
Middle Passage
Hallelujah
After the memorials, we went on to tour the actual plantation. First we stopped at a row of huge cast iron pots. These were used to cook down the juice from the sugar cane. They started with a very large pot, as it cooked down, they moved it to smaller pots until there was nothing left but sugar crystals. When this process was going on after harvest, they fires and the pots ran 24 hours a day. It was extremely hot and dangerous work. People lost limbs and their lives to the fires.
Next we stopped at the slave quarters. The houses (shacks) are not original to the property. They were brought in from another plantation, but they were actual slave quarters. Each house was set up like a duplex with a single chimney and a fireplace on each side sharing the chimney. They were sparse. If the enslaved person was lucky, they had a bed with rope lattice holding up the thin mattress. Most just had a pallet on the floor.
We saw a reproduction of a cell where individuals would have been kept until they were sold. It was a reproduction, but it was built by abolitionists to show the deplorable conditions to people in the north.
Cast Iron sugar cane juice pots
Slave quarters
Children
Rope bed
Another rope bed
A pallet for sleeping
Row of slave quarters
Reproduction cell
Plantation manager's house
The next building was the kitchen for the plantation. It was a small building separate from the big house. That was not unusual in the south. You did not want the kitchen attached to the house, because it would heat up the house in the summer and there was always a risk of fire.
The Whitney Plantation was unusual in several ways. First, a woman, Marie Azélie Haydel, ran the plantation during its most profitable years. She managed to purchase the plantation at auction after her husband and later his brother died. Another unusual thing about the plantation is related to the kitchen. Marie had cooks prepare food for the enslaved people. Earlier, the enslaved people had to cook their own food, but Marie got tired of having to rebuild slave quarters that burned down because the enslaved people had to cook their own food.
The kitchen building
Crocks on the porch of the kitchen
The cooking hearth
Cooking utensils on the table
Stand alone cabinet
Mortar and pestle
​Finally, we went into the big house. This is what most people want to see when they go on a plantation tour. It was certainly interesting to see how the people in the big house lived compared to the people in the slave quarters. There were a couple of things that were interesting thing to me. One was a utensil on the table that was used to nip sugar. The sugar was not refined the way it is now. It was put on the table in clumps. When you wanted sugar in your coffee or tea, you used the sugar nipper to cut off some from the clump. The other interesting thing was the large crock buried in the floor. This was used for refrigeration.
The big house from the back
Painting over the mantel
Sugar nipper
Crock buried for refrigeration
Another angle
More crocks
After the tour, I talked to the guide for a few minutes. I told her I appreciated the way she talked about enslaved people rather than calling them slaves. She told me she thought of slavery as the condition they were in, not what they were. I told her my thought was that saying “enslaved people” gave them back some the dignity that was stripped from them by being bought and sold.
There is so much more I could say about the Whitney Plantation. It was an amazing experience. Do yourself a favor. Go to Wallace, LA and take the tour. 
​

We left the Whitney Plantation after the tour and headed back to Baton Rouge. On the way, we stopped for lunch in Sorrento at the Cajun Village Coffee House. I had gumbo (it came with potato salad!!). Kate had a roast beef po-boy, and Sarah had vegetarian red beans and rice (no sausage). We had beignets and Cafe Au Lait for dessert.
When we got to the hotel in Baton Rouge, we were pretty tired. We rested for awhile and then went to dinner at Don’s Seafood. I had the stuffed eggplant. Sarah had Don’s Cajun Shrimp Pasta, and Kate had red beans and catfish. It was not the best meal we had, but it was still very good.
Picture
Drive-Thru daiquiris - only in Louisiana
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    Robin ROberts

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