Morrisonville, Louisiana Explained

Morrisonville
Settlement Type:Former town
Pushpin Map:Louisiana#USA
Pushpin Label:Morrisonville
Pushpin Label Position:left
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Louisiana##Location in the United States
Coordinates:30.3222°N -91.2247°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Louisiana
Subdivision Type2:Parish
Subdivision Name2:Iberville Parish, Louisiana
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1870s
Founder:Former slaves
Unit Pref:Imperial
Timezone:Central
Utc Offset:-6
Timezone Dst:CDT
Utc Offset Dst:-5

Morrisonville was a small town in Iberville Parish, Louisiana, United States that was contaminated with industrial pollution from a nearby Dow Chemical Company vinyl chloride factory.[1] The town's residents — predominantly African American — were relocated in 1990 to Morrisonville Estates in Iberville Parish and Morrisonville Acres in West Baton Rouge Parish by Dow.[2]

History

The community had been founded during the 1870s by former slaves freed from a plantation near Plaquemine.

A chemical factory producing vinyl chloride was set up on land adjoining the community by the Dow Chemical Company in 1958. Initially there was a green belt separating the factory from the town, but the plant bought land from the town in 1959 and then expanded to cover 1400acres,[3] filling all the intervening space, so much so that the plant's loudspeaker announcements could be heard inside people's houses.

Pollution and relocation

In the 1980s and 1990s, chemical pollution was discovered in the town's wells. To avoid lawsuits, Dow decided to buy up the town and move its residents away to create a buffer zone around the factory. In 1989, just before the release of a federal report into toxic emissions from the factory, Dow announced that it was going to buy up all the homes and land in Morrisonville, and that if the residents refused their property would be worthless.

Although about twenty families refused to move at first, by 1993 the town was eventually abandoned. All that now remains is the graveyard of the former Nazarene Baptist Church and an open-sided prayer site, built of wood, provided by Dow for family members who return to visit the graves.

The residents were transferred to newly built homes at Morrison Acres, but many died before they could settle in. The large number of petrochemical plants producing PVC in the surrounding area, an 80miles stretch between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, first led to it being known as the 'Chemical Corridor' and later as Cancer Alley, and many other communities in the area have been similarly affected by groundwater pollution and other toxic emissions.[3] [4]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Facts of Environmental Racism. Natural Resources Defense Council. November 13, 2013.
  2. Book: Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline. J. Timmons. Roberts. Melissa M.. Toffolon-Weiss. 2001. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. 48. 9780521669009.
  3. Book: Merchant, Carolyn. American environmental history: an introduction. 203–204. Columbia University Press. New York. 2007. 9780231140355.
  4. Web site: Touring Cancer Alley. Hartford Web Publishing. Juanita Marie. Holland. June 21, 2001. February 11, 2010.