St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana explained

County:St. John the Baptist Parish
State:Louisiana
Ex Image:San Francisco Plantation House-043.JPG
Ex Image Size:300px
Motto:"Heart of the River Parishes"
Founded Year:1807
Seat Wl:Edgard
Largest City Wl:LaPlace
City Type:community
Population As Of:2020
Population Total:42477
Area Total Sq Mi:348
Area Land Sq Mi:213
Area Water Sq Mi:135
Area Percentage:39
Population Density Sq Mi:199.42
Time Zone:Central
Web:www.sjbparish.com
Named For:St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Edgard, built 1772
District:2nd
District2:6th

St. John the Baptist Parish (SJBP, French: Paroisse de Saint-Jean-Baptiste) is a parish located in the U.S. state of Louisiana. At the 2020 census, the population was 42,477.[1] The parish seat is Edgard,[2] an unincorporated area, and the largest city is LaPlace, which is also unincorporated.

St. John the Baptist Parish was established in 1807 as one of the original 19 parishes of the Territory of Orleans, which became the state of Louisiana.[3]

St. John the Baptist Parish is part of the New Orleans–Metairie metropolitan statistical area.

This was considered part of the German Coast in the 18th and 19th centuries, named for numerous German immigrants who settled along the Mississippi River here in the 1720s. On January 8, 1811, the largest slave insurrection in US history, known as the German Coast Uprising, started here. It was short-lived, but more than 200 slaves gathered from plantations along the river and marched through St. Charles Parish toward New Orleans. This is part of the Sugarland or sugar parishes, which were devoted to sugar cane cultivation. Planters held large numbers of enslaved African Americans as workers before the Civil War. Many freedmen stayed in the area after emancipation because of their ties to family and associates. They worked as tenant farmers, and numerous freedmen stayed in the area to work on these plantations afterward.

The parish includes three nationally significant examples of 19th-century plantation architecture: Evergreen Plantation, the Whitney Plantation Historic District, and San Francisco Plantation House.

History

Present-day St. John the Baptist Parish includes the third permanent settlement in what is now the state of Louisiana, after Natchitoches (1714) and New Orleans (1718). It was considered part of the German Coast. The area was settled in the early 1720s by a group of German Catholic colonists.[4] Many families established settlements close to the Mississippi River in the areas now known as Lucy, Garyville, and Reserve. The area was under the French regime until 1763, when France ceded Louisiana to Spain after losing the Seven Years' War to Great Britain (this was known as the French and Indian War on the North American front).

At the beginning of the Spanish colonial period, many Acadians, people of French descent, began arriving in south Louisiana due to being expelled by the British from what is now Nova Scotia and eastern Canada. The British took over French territory in Canada and in North America east of the Mississippi River. The first Acadian village in Louisiana was established in what is now Wallace. The German and French cultures thrived alongside one another, but French came to be the dominant language. They developed a culture known as Cajun.

In 1769, Acadians who settled in the area began a search for land to build a church. The governing Spanish authority at the time approved the request, and the land was expropriated on February 21, 1770. The first church stood in the same location as the modern St. John the Baptist Church. The new church carried the same name as the original chapel of the German Coast settlement.

The first pastor was Spanish Capuchin Father Bernardo de Limpach. The first church records note a marriage between Antoine Manz and Sibylla Bischof in 1772. The first church survived until being swept away by floodwaters in 1821.[5] [6]

The early settlers in the area received land grants from the Spanish or French royal governments, depending upon which country ruled the territory at the time of application. The French style of property allotments was made up of narrow frontage on the river so that each plantation had access for transportation of goods to and from New Orleans and world markets. The main house and supporting outbuildings were constructed near the river. The remaining property extended away from the river deeply into the wetlands, where land was cleared for cultivation of sugar cane.

For decades into the 19th century, most transportation was done by boat, mainly on the bayous and lakes of the area, but via the Mississippi River as well. St. John, with its fertile land being nine feet above sea level, proved to be an excellent settlement for farming and agriculture. In the late 18th century, planters began to invest more in labor-intensive sugar cane cultivation and processing, increasing their demand for slave labor. Sugar production meant prosperity for the planters and New Orleans. Planters held large numbers of enslaved African Americans. The sugar and cotton parishes all had Black majorities of population before the Civil War.

With the sugar wealth, some wealthy planters built elaborate houses and outbuildings. Three survive in St. John parish; each is recognized for its national architectural and historic significance. On the west bank are the major complex of house and outbuildings designated as the Whitney Plantation Historic District and the National Historic Landmark (NHL) of Evergreen Plantation. San Francisco Plantation House, also a designated NHL, is on the east bank.

San Francisco and Evergreen plantations are open to the public for tours. The Whitney plantation house is planned for renovation. Whitney and Evergreen plantations are both included among the first 26 sites on the Louisiana African American Heritage Trail.

In January 1811, the German Coast Uprising started in this parish. It was the largest slave insurrection in US history, but it was short-lived. The slaves killed two whites, but suffered 96 deaths among their forces at the hands of the militia and in executions after quick trials afterward. They attacked five plantations and burned three houses to the ground. A major leader was Charles Deslondes, a mulatto (mixed-race) slave brought by a planter from Saint-Domingue in the late 18th century. He and his followers were influenced by the ideals and promises of the French and Haitian revolutions. France ended slavery on Saint-Domingue after its own Revolution, but tried to reimpose it. Slaves and free people of color rebelled, gaining independence after huge losses among French regular forces sent by Napoleon to retake the island.

Deslondes gathered more than 200 slaves from plantations along the way, marching downriver into St. Charles Parish toward New Orleans before meeting much resistance. Unable to get the arms they had planned on, the slaves were defeated by the well-armed informal and territorial militias. During these confrontations and even more by summary executions after brief trials, Deslondes and ninety-five slaves were killed. Decades before the American Civil War and emancipation, the actions of these people expressed African Americans' deep desire for freedom.[7]

As the number of white families in the settlement increased, they wanted education for their children. Before the Civil War, typically planters would hire tutors, often college graduates from the North, who would live with the family for an extended period of time, typically two years. The tutor would teach all of the planter's children, and sometimes the family would arrange for other neighborhood children to join the classes as well. There was no public education.

In 1869, following the Civil War, families wanting French instruction founded private schools to continue their culture. The Anglo-Americans had imposed English as the official language. The Reconstruction legislature, with both African American and white representatives, established the first public schools in the state during this period. It took time for the state to arrange adequate funding for public education. In the segregated system, education for Black children was less well funded and lagged behind that for whites. The first high schools at Edgard and Reserve were not built until 1909. Students traveled to the schools by horse-drawn buses or by train.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the parish has a total area of, of which are land and (39%) are water.[8] It is the third-smallest parish in Louisiana by land area and fifth-smallest by total area.

St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana is located on the Mississippi River approximately 130miles upriver from the Gulf of Mexico and 30miles upriver from the City of New Orleans. The area, known as the River Region, has an abundance of natural resources and a mild "Sunbelt" climate. The average monthly temperature in New Orleans ranges from 55.1F in January to 83.7F in July, and rainfall averages 53.2inches per year with monthly averages running from 2.52inches in October to 7.17inches in July. The New Orleans/River Region contains a good supply of raw materials, which has helped Louisiana maintain a high rank in the United States in the production of natural gas, petroleum, sulfur, salt, and fur pelts. High silica sands, lime, clays, timber, seafood, and various agricultural products are also produced in abundance.

St. John the Baptist Parish is bisected by the Mississippi River. Though the River separates the Parish into northern and southern parts, the former is still referred to as the "east bank" and the latter as the "west bank," referring to the direction of the river as it reaches the Gulf of Mexico. The Mississippi provides an important transportation corridor which supports the heavy industry located in the area.

St. John the Baptist Parish is bordered by St. Charles Parish and Lake Pontchartrain to the east, Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Maurepas to the north, Lafourche Parish and Lac des Allemands to the south, and St. James Parish to the west. It is one of four parishes which comprise the "River Parishes;" St. John Parish is the heart of the "River Parishes."

This section of the state, also consisting of St. James, Ascension, and St. Charles Parishes, makes up the area along the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Since the mid-20th century, when the oil industry developed from resources found here, all of these parishes are home to at least one major chemical- and/or petroleum-processing facility. The industry is the major source of employment in the region but it has had adverse environmental effects. St. John the Baptist parish has the highest rate of environmental cancer of any census tract in the United States.[9]

Much of the parish is either open water or wetlands. The wetlands are currently protected by federal law and development is limited to what is permitted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and/or the Federal Wildlife and Fisheries Department.

Higher ground in the parish is found in an alluvial plain which generally borders the Mississippi River on both sides. Soil deposits from the Mississippi's annual flooding created a rich and fertile area which has historically been intensively farmed (sugar cane, soybeans, feed corn, and occasional cotton). This fact, and the natural transportation corridor supplied by the river, resulted in the creation of numerous plantations and farms along the lower Mississippi Valley.

Many of these plantations were large tracts of land with modest or average-sized homes and outbuildings found on the higher ground. Several, however, were improved with palatial mansions. Three of the larger homes have survived in St. John Parish, as noted in the History above.

The higher ground along the banks was used to grow crops, while the wetlands were valued for their abundant timber, hunting and fishing. For years development in the River Parishes was limited to those areas that were naturally higher and less prone to flooding. Until the existing levees and pump systems were built, however, few places were truly safe from high water. Even today, most of the parish is considered a flood hazard area according to FEMA Flood Maps.[10]

Adjacent parishes

Communities

St. John the Baptist Parish has no incorporated areas.

Census-designated places

Unincorporated communities

Ghost Towns

Demographics

St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana – Racial and ethnic composition
!Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic)!Pop 2000[11] !Pop 2010[12] ![13] !% 2000!% 2010!
White alone (NH)21,94618,374style='background: #ffffe6; 13,34850.99%40.01%style='background: #ffffe6; 31.42%
Black or African American alone (NH)19,20424,405style='background: #ffffe6; 24,07644.61%53.14%style='background: #ffffe6; 56.68%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH)100116style='background: #ffffe6; 1050.23%0.25%style='background: #ffffe6; 0.25%
Asian alone (NH)222312style='background: #ffffe6; 3140.52%0.68%style='background: #ffffe6; 0.74%
Pacific Islander alone (NH)1021style='background: #ffffe6; 70.02%0.05%style='background: #ffffe6; 0.02%
Some Other Race alone (NH)3151style='background: #ffffe6; 1400.07%0.11%style='background: #ffffe6; 0.33%
Mixed Race or Multi-Racial (NH)301470style='background: #ffffe6; 1,1960.70%1.02%style='background: #ffffe6; 2.82%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)1,2302,175style='background: #ffffe6; 3,2912.86%4.74%style='background: #ffffe6; 7.75%
Total43,04445,294style='background: #ffffe6; 42,477100.00%100.00%style='background: #ffffe6; 100.00%

The 2019 census estimates determined 42,242 people lived in the parish.[14] The racial and ethnic makeup of the parish was 56.5% Black and African American, 38.2% non-Hispanic white, 1.1% Asian, 2.7% some other race, and 1.5% multiracial; of the population, 6.1% were Hispanic and Latin American of any race. Among the population, Spanish was the second most-spoken language as of 2019; approximately 4.0% of the parish population were foreign-born. French ancestry was the largest heritage among the parish population (9.7%).

In 2019, there were 15,720 households living in 17,778 housing units. There were also 3,758 businesses operating in the parish, with the majority being minority-owned. The parish had an employment rate of 56.2% in 2019, and 78.5% of the population lived in owner-occupied units. The median home value was $153,900, and median gross rent was $933. The median household income was $57,429; males had a median income of $53,849 versus $36,476 for females. An estimated 24.8% of the population lived at or below the poverty line.

By the publication of the 2020 United States census, there were 42,477 people, 15,270 households, and 11,104 families residing in the parish.[15] Among the parish population, 56.68% of the population were Black and African American, 31.42% non-Hispanic white, 0.25% Native American, 0.74% Asian, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 3.15% multiracial or some other race, and 7.75% Hispanic or Latin American of any race. The increase in Hispanic or Latinos and other non-White Americans has been attributed to a nationwide demographic shift.[16] [17]

According to the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020, with Christianity being the predominant religion, Roman Catholics numbered 15,068 adherents—remaining the historically largest single Christian denomination for the parish.[18] Non- or inter-denominational churches spread among the independent congregationalist, Bible, and United and Uniting churches were the second largest Christian group, numbering 7,230; the increase in non/inter-denominational Protestant Christianity reflected increasing ecumenical trends throughout the state.

Government

Parish Administration Administrators
Parish President Jaclyn S. Hotard
Sheriff Michael K. Tregre
Coroner Dr. Christy Montegut
Assessor Lucien J. Gauff, III
School Board Superintendent Dr. Lynette Hookfin
Parish Council Councilmembers
Council Chairman Lennix Madere, Jr.
Council Vice-chair Kurt Becnel
Council Seat At Large, Division A Lennix Madere, Jr.
Council Seat At Large, Division B Michael Wright
Council Seat District I Kurt Becnel
Council Seat District II Warren "Bosco" Torres Jr.
Council Seat District III Tammy Houston
Council Seat District IV Tyra Duhe-Griffin
Council Seat District V Robert J. Arcuri
Council Seat District VI Tonia Schnyder
Council Seat District VII Thomas A. Malik
40th Judicial District Parish Judicial Leaders
Judge of Division "A" Madeline Jasmine
Judge of Division "B" Nghana Lewis
Judge of Division "C" Sterling Snowdy
5th Circuit Court of Appeal, Judge of Division "H" Jude Gravois
District Attorney Bridget A. Dinvaut
Clerk of Court Eliana DeFrancesch
Senators & Representatives Names Notes
State Senator Troy Brown D-2 D
State Senator Gary Smith D-19 D
State Representative Randal L. Gaines D-57 D
State Representative Clay Schexnayder D-81 R
State Representative Gregory A. Miller D-56 R
U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy R
U.S. Senator John Kennedy R
U.S.Representative Garret Graves 6th District R
U.S.Representative Troy Carter 2nd District D
Parish School Board Board Members
Board President Albert Burl, III
Board Vice President Patrick H. Sanders
District I Charo Holden
District II Albert Burl, III
District III Gerald J. Keller, Ph.D.
District IV Patrick H. Sanders
District V Sherry DeFrancesch
District VI Keith Jones
District VII Phillip Johnson
District VIII Russ Wise
District IX Shawn Wallace
District X Nia Mitchell
District XI Clarence Triche

St. John the Baptist Parish leans heavily towards the Democratic Party. It has not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan in 1984, and before that voted Republican only three other times in the 20th century: for Warren G. Harding in 1920, when Acadian voters broke with President Woodrow Wilson over various issues,[19] for Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956, when he flipped the state as a whole, and for Richard Nixon in 1972, when he won all but one parish in Louisiana. It also supported the third-party bid of George Wallace in 1968.

Prior to passage of the 1898 constitution, which almost completely disenfranchised black voters and made Louisiana an effective one-party state, St. John the Baptist Parish generally voted Republican.[20] In fact, it did so in every presidential election from 1872 until 1896.

At the state level, the parish is also heavily Democratic. St. John the Baptist was Governor John Bel Edwards' second strongest in the 2019 election, giving him 74% of the vote.

Education

The St. John the Baptist Parish School Board operates 10 public schools within the parish, the Archdiocese of New Orleans oversees 5 religious schools within the parish and there are 2 privately run schools within the parish.

Public Schools City/Town 2013-2014 Letter Grade (SPS) Change from 2012 to 2013 grade
Laplace Elementary/Middle School LaPlace B (89.0) +2.90
Garyville-Mt. Airy Math and Science Magnet School Garyville/Mt. Airy C (73.7) -0.50
Fifth Ward Elementary School Reserve C (71.5) +3.50
East St. John Elementary/Middle School Reserve C (79.4) +3.20
Emily C. Watkins Elementary/Middle School LaPlace C (80.6) +14.30
John L. Ory Communications Magnet School LaPlace A (106.7)-2.50
Lake Pontchartrain Elementary/Middle School LaPlace D (61.3) -11.30
West St. John Elementary/Middle School Edgard D (62.8) +1.90
East St. John High School Reserve C (75.8) N/A
West St. John High School Edgard B (98.6) +6.90
http://www.louisianabelieves.com/data/reportcards/2013/
Religious Schools City/Town
Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Elementary/Middle School LaPlace
St. Joan of Arc Catholic Elementary/Middle School LaPlace
St. Peter's Catholic Elementary/Middle School Reserve
Our Lady of Grace Catholic Elementary/Middle School Reserve
St. Charles Catholic High School LaPlace
St. Timothy's Episcopal School LaPlace
Private Schools City/Town
Reserve Christian Elementary/Middle School Reserve
Reserve

It is in the service area of Delgado Community College.[21]

National Guard

The 1084th Transportation Company of the 165th CSS Battalion of the Louisiana National Guard resides in Reserve, Louisiana.

Transportation

Major highways

East Bank - The primary artery on the east bank of St. John Parish is Airline Highway (U.S. Highway 61). This five-lane, asphalt-paved road was once the predominant route linking Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Though it is still heavily traveled, much of the New Orleans-Baton Rouge traffic has been diverted to Interstate 10, located in the northern part of the parish. Interstate 10, a divided, controlled-access highway, has two interchanges in St. John Parish; one at Belle Terre Boulevard and the second at U.S. Highway 51/Interstate 55, both in LaPlace. Both Belle Terre Boulevard and Highway 51 intersect Airline Highway approximately 3.5miles south of Interstate 10.

Interstate 55, a north–south route leading to Jackson, Mississippi, and beyond, intersects Interstate 10 in the northeastern sector of LaPlace. A third Interstate 10 interchange exists just west of the St. John Parish line near Gramercy (St. James Parish).

River Road, also known as Jefferson Highway or Louisiana Highway 44, is a two-lane, asphalt-paved, winding highway which parallels the Mississippi River. Most of the heavy industry in the parish fronts on this road.

West Bank - Most of the development on the west bank lies along Louisiana Highway 18 (the Great River Road), a two-lane, asphalt-paved highway which parallels the Mississippi River similarly to Highway 44 on the east bank. In addition to Louisiana 18, the west bank has Louisiana Highway 3127 or the River Parishes Highway, which is roughly equivalent to the east bank's Airline Highway in that it follows the Mississippi. It is not as winding nor as populated as River Road. Highway 3127 leads to Donaldsonville upriver from St. John Parish. It is home of the "Sunshine Bridge" over the Mississippi River in Ascension Parish. This road has little development on either side and is generally surrounded by wetlands in St. John Parish.

Veterans Memorial Bridge or Gramercy Bridge - (Louisiana Highway 3213) This bridge originates on the east bank of St. James Parish near Gramercy/Lutcher and has access to I-10 and Airline Highway via Louisiana Highway 641. The foot of the bridge on the west bank is in St. John Parish near Wallace, with a tie-in to Louisiana Highway 3127 that opened June 18, 2008. The opening of this bridge has spurred the development hoped for along the west bank of St. John Parish. (The bridge is known as the "Bridge to Nowhere.")

Access to the west bank of St. John Parish is also provided by a ferry crossing at Reserve/Edgard and by the Hale Boggs Memorial Bridge over the Mississippi in St. Charles Parish.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: QuickFacts: St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. August 12, 2021. U.S. Census Bureau.
  2. Web site: Find a County. June 7, 2011. National Association of Counties.
  3. Web site: St. John the Baptist Parish. Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism. September 6, 2014.
  4. https://scphistory.org/first-families/ First Families – The Pioneers
  5. https://clarionherald.org/news/tricentennial-thursday-st-john-the-baptist-edgard-among-oldest-parishes Tricentennial Thursday: St. John the Baptist, Edgard, among oldest parishes
  6. Brooke Robichaux: St. John the Baptist Church commemorates 100 years, lobservateur.com, October 28, 2020
  7. Adam Rothman, Slave Country: American Expansion and the Origins of the Deep South, pp. 106-117, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007 paperback
  8. Web site: 2010 Census Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. September 1, 2014. August 22, 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130928155956/http://www.census.gov/geo/maps-data/data/docs/gazetteer/counties_list_22.txt. September 28, 2013.
  9. https://theintercept.imgix.net/wp-uploads/sites/1/2019/02/AirPollutionList12-1550942329.jpg?auto=compress%2Cformat&q=90
  10. Web site: Flood Insurance Rate Map: St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana (November 4, 2010). https://web.archive.org/web/20111117205800/http://sjbparish.com/pdfs/floodmaps/22095CIND0A.pdf . November 17, 2011 . live. March 6, 2018.
  11. Web site: P004 Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2000: DEC Summary File 1 – St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. United States Census Bureau.
  12. Web site: P2 Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2010: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. United States Census Bureau.
  13. Web site: P2 Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. United States Census Bureau.
  14. Web site: Geography Profile: St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. August 2, 2021. data.census.gov.
  15. Web site: Explore Census Data. December 28, 2021. data.census.gov.
  16. Web site: The Chance That Two People Chosen at Random Are of Different Race or Ethnicity Groups Has Increased Since 2010. February 16, 2022. Census.gov.
  17. Web site: August 13, 2021. US's white population declines for first time ever, 2020 census finds. February 16, 2022. the Guardian. en.
  18. Web site: Maps and data files for 2020 U.S. Religion Census Religious Statistics & Demographics . January 17, 2023 . www.usreligioncensus.org.
  19. See Howard, Perry H.; Political Tendencies in Louisiana, 1812-1952 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1957), p. 144, also maps on pp. 145 and 151.
  20. [Kevin Phillips (political commentator)|Phillips, Kevin P.]
  21. Web site: Our Colleges. Louisiana's Technical and Community Colleges. June 3, 2021.