Lake Providence, Louisiana Explained

Lake Providence, Louisiana
Settlement Type:Town
Image Map1:Louisiana in United States (US48).svg
Map Caption1:Location of Louisiana in the United States
Coordinates:32.8053°N -91.1794°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Louisiana
Subdivision Type2:Parish
Subdivision Name2:East Carroll
Established Title:Founded
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Bobby Amacker
Unit Pref:Imperial
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:9.36
Area Total Sq Mi:3.62
Area Land Km2:9.31
Area Land Sq Mi:3.60
Area Water Km2:0.05
Area Water Sq Mi:0.02
Elevation Ft:105
Population As Of:2020
Population Total:3587
Population Density Km2:385.28
Population Density Sq Mi:997.77
Timezone1:CST
Utc Offset1:-6
Timezone1 Dst:CDT
Utc Offset1 Dst:-5
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Postal Code:71254
Area Code:318
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:22-41400
Blank2 Name Sec2:Wikimedia Commons
Website:Town of Lake Providence

Lake Providence is a town in, and the parish seat of, East Carroll Parish in northeastern Louisiana.[2] The population was 5,104 at the 2000 census and declined by 21.8 percent to 3,991 in 2010. The town's poverty rate is approximately 55 percent; the average median household income is $16,500, and the average age is 31.[3]

The town shares its name with the oxbow lake of the Mississippi River, also called Lake Providence. This area was historically developed as cotton plantations before and after the Civil War, and remains largely rural. The Union Army developed a supply depot near the lake during the Civil War, and its camp was crowded with refugee slaves seeking their freedom. The town grew larger at this site.

History

In the late 18th century goods such as animal pelts, indigo, and cotton were transported on the Mississippi River by people commonly known as longboat men, named for the type of craft that carried the goods. These were eventually replaced by steamboats. Thieves and pirates raided the longboats, killing the crew and selling the goods. Bunch's Bend is named for a pirate who would raid the boats at this place, where they had to maneuver the bend in the river. If the longboat men made it past Bunch's Bend without being robbed, they would say they, "made it to Providence."

The trading town of Providence developed at the bend. It later was renamed as Lake Providence when the town was moved to its current location surrounding a natural oxbow lake. The Lake Providence area first opened for European-American settlement in the late 1830s, after the federal government enforced Indian Removal to Indian Territory further west of the Mississippi River, and extinguished their land titles. Settlers drained the cypress swamps along the Mississippi River and used enslaved African Americans to clear the land for cultivation.

Civil War

By the start of the American Civil War in 1861, the region consisted mostly of large cotton plantations along the river, which were worked by thousands of slave laborers.

The town of Lake Providence developed after the arrival of the Union Army in the spring of 1862. Under the direction of General Ulysses S. Grant, the area by Lake Providence was established as a supply depot and base of operations for the Vicksburg Campaign. The soldiers dug a canal between the Mississippi River and Lake Providence. The area was called "Soldiers' Rest". Grant subsequently moved his troops south for temporary residence at Winter Quarters south of Newellton in Tensas Parish. As slaves crowded into the camp at Lake Providence to gain freedom from surrounding plantations, the population quickly soared from a few hundred to several thousand. What began as a simple military supply camp quickly transformed into a city with a large population of African-American refugees.

By the time Vicksburg, Mississippi fell to the Union in 1863, most planters in the Lake Providence area had fled, and their plantations lay empty. The Union Army determined that they should be productive again.

20th century

After white Democrats regained power in the state legislature after the Reconstruction Era, they worked to reimpose white supremacy. Many blacks worked as sharecroppers or tenant farmers in the region. In 1898, Louisiana, like other southern states, enacted a new constitution, designed to maintain Democratic Party dominance and forestall any alliances such as the Populist-Republican alliance that had won seats in the 1890s. They included provisions that raised barriers to voter registration and elections, effectively disfranchising most blacks despite their constitutional 15th Amendment right to vote. Their exclusion from the political system made them second-class citizens.

The civil rights movement of the post-World War II period from the 1940s through the 1960s brought efforts of a new generation to make constitutional rights more equitable. Until 1962, no African Americans had been allowed to register to vote in Lake Providence or East Carroll Parish in forty years when U.S. District Judge Edwin Ford Hunter, Jr., based in Lake Charles in the far southwestern corner of the state, personally registered twenty-eight African Americans in Lake Providence under a provision of the Civil Rights Act of 1960, which had been signed into law by U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Hunter was challenged by Louisiana 6th Judicial District Judge Frank Voelker Sr., who was based in Lake Providence, in a dispute over the powers of the national government. The case attracted national attention, as the civil rights movement highlighted the constitutional infringement of the rights of African Americans in the South.[4]

Following national Democratic support for the passage of civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s, most African Americans allied with that party. With a majority African-American electorate, Lake Providence voters in the 21st century continue to support Democratic Party candidates. Conservative whites tended to leave the Democratic Party after the 1960s, and have overwhelmingly joined the Republican Party. In the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections, East Carroll Parish voted handily for Democrat Barack H. Obama of Illinois, rather than his Republican opponents, John McCain of Arizona and Mitt Romney of Massachusetts.[5] [6]

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 3.6sqmi, of which 3.6sqmi is land and 0.04sqmi (0.55%) is water. The existing boundaries of the town constitute the third location of the community. Lake Providence is located adjacent to the Mississippi River. Prior to the building of the current levee system by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the meandering river would overflow its bank and take valuable lands. It was such flooding that the lake of Lake Providence was created and the town was washed away by the river. Each time the town was taken by the river, the citizens moved.

Historian John D. Winters describes Lake Providence as "a beautiful oxbow lake some six miles (10 km) long, an old Mississippi river bed with an outlet through Baxter Bayou into Bayou Macon and thus into the Tensas, Ouachita, Black, and Red rivers.[7]

Climate

Demographics

Lake Providence racial composition as of 2020[8] !Race!Num.!Perc.
White (non-Hispanic)59716.64%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic)2,88380.37%
Asian40.11%
Other/Mixed732.04%
Hispanic or Latino300.84%
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 3,587 people, 1,221 households, and 695 families residing in the town.

Education

Public schools operated by the East Carroll Parish School Board include Southside Elementary School (PK-5), Lake Providence Junior High School (grades 6–8), and Lake Providence Senior High School (9-12). The private school Briarfield Academy is grades PK to 12.

Representation in other media

Several episodes of the 1959 NBC television series Riverboat, starring Darren McGavin, deal with pirates on the Mississippi River or the shipment of cotton. It is set in the middle 19th century, rather than the 18th.

Notable people

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. March 20, 2022.
  2. Web site: Find a County. June 7, 2011. National Association of Counties.
  3. Web site: Quick Facts. louisiana-demographics.com. May 20, 2013.
  4. "State Judge Restrains Federal Judge's Order", Sumter Daily Item, Sumter, South Carolina, July 21, 1962, p. 1
  5. Web site: East Carroll Parish presidential election returns, November 4, 2008. staticresults.sos.la.govlaccessdate=November 19, 2012.
  6. Web site: East Carroll Parish presidential election returns, November 6, 2012. staticresults.sos.la.gov. November 19, 2012.
  7. Winters, p. 176
  8. Web site: Explore Census Data. December 19, 2021. data.census.gov.
  9. [Henry E. Chambers]
  10. News: William Denis Brown, III. Monroe News-Star, March 9, 2012. July 13, 2013.
  11. Encyclopedia: KERR, Joseph, (1765 - 1837) . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress . March 7, 2014.
  12. Web site: Groneman . Bill . KERR, JOSEPH . Texas State Historical Association . June 15, 2010 .
  13. John Henry Scott, with Cleo Scott Brown, Witness to the Truth: My Struggle for Human Rights in Louisiana, University of South Carolina Press, 2003
  14. News: David Voelker, 'one of the great saints of the recovery,' dies at 60. New Orleans Times-Picayune. June 2, 2013. dead. https://archive.today/20130620194906/http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2013/05/david_voelker_lra_chairman_and.h. June 20, 2013.
  15. Web site: East Carroll Parish, Louisiana, Genealogy, August 24, 2010. eastcarrollparishlouisianagenealogy.blogspot.com. May 31, 2013.
  16. Frederick W. Williamson and George T. Goodman, eds. Eastern Louisiana: A History of the Watershed of the Ouachita River and the Florida Parishes, 3 vols. (Monroe: Historical Record Association, 1939), pp. 770–773
  17. Web site: WILMANS, EDITH EUNICE THERREL. tshaonline.org. September 14, 2015.