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New Roads, Louisiana
City of New Roads
Location of New Roads in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana.
Location of New Roads in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana.
Location of Louisiana in the United States
Location of Louisiana in the United States
Country United States
State Louisiana
Parish Pointe Coupee
Area
 • Total 4.58 sq mi (11.87 km2)
 • Land 4.58 sq mi (11.87 km2)
 • Water 0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)
Elevation
30 ft (9 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total 4,549
 • Density 992.80/sq mi (383.29/km2)
Time zone UTC-6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP code
70760
Area code(s) 225
GNIS feature ID 2404366
FIPS code 22-55105
Website https://newroads.net

New Roads (historically French: Poste-de-Pointe-Coupée) is a city in and the parish seat of Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, United States. The center of population of Louisiana was located in New Roads in 2000. The population was 4,831 at the 2010 census, down from 4,966 in 2000. The city's ZIP code is 70760. It is part of the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Statistical Area.

History

Le Poste de Pointe Coupée (“The Pointe Coupee Post”) is one of the oldest communities in the Mississippi River Valley established by European colonists. The trading post was founded in the 1720s by settlers from France. It was located upstream from the point crossed by explorers, immediately above but not circled by False River. The name referred to the area along the Mississippi River northeast of what is now New Roads.

The post was initially settled by native French, as well as French-speaking Creoles born in the colony. Additional ethnic French settlers migrated down from Fort de Chartres, Illinois. The colonists imported numerous African slaves from the French West Indies (Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint-Domingue), and many directly from Africa, as workers for the plantations. Historian Gwendolyn Midlo Hall discovered extensive French and Spanish documentation of the early slave trade, which provided more information than is usually available as to the ethnicity and names of individual slaves, all in the court house at New Roads. Using this and other research, she has produced "The Louisiana Slave Database and the Louisiana Free Database: 1719–1820," which is searchable on line.

Commandants of Pointe Coupee (1729–1762)

  • 1729: Chevalier Henri du Loubois
  • 1731: Jean Baptiste François Tisserand de Moncharvaux
  • 1734–38: Claude Joseph de Favrot
  • 1738–1742: Jean Louis Richard de la Houssaye
  • 1742–1744: Claude Joseph de Favrot
  • 1744–1753: Jean Joseph Delfau de Pontalba, a relative by marriage of Micaela Almonester, Baroness de Pontalba, the New Orleans native who in the mid-19th century built the Pontalba Buildings and redesigned Jackson Square.
  • 1753: Chevalier Morlière
  • 1753–1756: Francois Artaud
  • 1756–1759: Pierre Benoist, Sieur Payen de Noyan de Chavoy
  • 1759–1762: Jean Louis Richard de la Houssaye

Spanish rule

After Great Britain defeated France in the Seven Years' War (also known as the French and Indian War in North America), France ceded this territory to Spain. About 1776, the Spanish built a Chemin Neuf, French for "New Road," connecting the Mississippi River with False River, a 22-mile (35 km) long oxbow lake and formerly the main channel of the Mississippi.

In 1791, the Mina (an African people) slave uprising, the Mina Conspiracy, started on the estate of Widow Provillar in the New Roads vicinity. Three years later, there was another area slave revolt near Point Coupee, called the Pointe Coupée Conspiracy.

Louisiana Purchase

In 1803 the United States made the Louisiana Purchase, and the territory became part of the United States. In-migration of American settlers increased, changing Louisiana culture.

In 1822, Catherine Dispau (a free woman of color called "La Fille Gougis") made a four or six block subdivision out of her False River plantation. This was located at the terminus of a "new road" linking False River with the older Mississippi River settlement to the north. This is the area now bounded by West Main, New Roads, West Second and St. Mary Streets. The latter was named for St. Mary's Catholic Church, founded in 1823. The community was referred to variously as the "village of St. Mary" or Chemin Neuf.

The founding of the church helped the community develop. In 1847, New Roads was named as the seat of Pointe Coupée Parish, and a courthouse was built. Between these "strong celestial poles," the Main Street business district developed. After the abandonment of the competing parish port of Waterloo during 1882–84 due to flooding, New Roads became the major commercial port and city of Pointe Coupée Parish. The railroad reached the city in 1898–99, bringing much industrial development.

The official name of the community changed frequently during the years after Louisiana became part of the United States. The first post office was established in 1858 as "False River," but it was discontinued in 1861. When the town was incorporated by the state legislature in 1875, it was named "New Roads." But, in 1878, when the post office reopened, it was named "St. Mary's." In 1879, the city and post office name was changed to New Roads. The old incorporation fell into disuse. The city was reincorporated in 1892, and received its charter two years later. Several names were proposed, among them "St. Mary" and "Rose Lake." But "New Roads" was finally chosen, although it was often misspelled "New Rhodes."

New Roads was spared any major battles during the Civil War. There were periodic raids and the Union Army briefly encamped in the Place de la Croix, the public square in front of St. Mary's. On January 31, 1865, toward the end of the war, five squadrons of Union cavalry marched into New Roads. They found five Confederate officers under the command of Colonel John S. Scott hiding in closets, under houses, and in a hole.

Scott and his guerrilla forces had operated around Morganza, trading for black market supplies from Union forces in control of Baton Rouge. Union officials exchanged food, clothing, and other necessities for cotton smuggled by Scott's men.

Since its founding, New Roads has been the hub of an agricultural community that cultivated commodity crops of sugar cane, cotton, and pecans, among others. Today, the economy is also based on industry, retail stores, restaurants, and lodging enterprises, five banks, and modern health care and nursing facilities.

Modern attractions

New Roads hosts the oldest Mardi Gras celebration in Louisiana outside of New Orleans each Shrove Tuesday. This parade, started by the Carnival Club, was founded by a French-Spanish Creole named James Mortimer Boudreaux, more commonly known as "Jimmy Boudreaux." He is buried in St. Mary's Catholic Church cemetery. The town's first recorded Mardi Gras ball was staged in 1881, and its first-known parade rolled in 1897. Today, as many as 80,000 people converge on the hospitable Creole town for family-friendly parades. New Roads' parades are civic events, open to public participation. The Community Center Carnival parade, founded in 1922 and the state's oldest outside New Orleans, rolls at 11 a.m. The New Roads Lions Carnival parade, founded in 1941 and which is staged as a charitable fundraiser, rolls at 1:30 p.m.

New Roads' narrow, tree-lined streets include outstanding examples of 19th-century Creole and Victorian architecture, particularly along Main Street, Poydras Street, Pennsylvania Avenue, and North Carolina Avenue. Visitor attractions include Satterfield's Riverwalk and Restaurant, the Pointe Coupee Parish Courthouse and Gen. John Archer LeJeune Monument, St. Mary's Catholic Church and Cemetery, the Julien Poydras Monument and Museum (old Poydras High School), Morrison Parkway located next to False River, and numerous fine dining and shopping opportunities as well as beautiful views and boating on False River.

The city is home to Rosenwald Elementary, Catholic High School of Pointe Coupee, Catholic Elementary of Pointe Coupee, and False River Academy.

The Jumonville-Memorial Technical Institute, located in New Roads, is named for the late State Senator J. E. Jumonville, Sr., of Ventress.

Geography

New Roads is located at 30°41′47″N 91°26′20″W / 30.69639°N 91.43889°W / 30.69639; -91.43889 (30.696305, -91.438980) and has an elevation of 30 feet (9.1 m).

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 4.6 square miles (12 km2), all land.

Gradually sloping from a high of 36 feet (11 m) above sea level on Main Street immediately adjacent to False River to a low of 25 feet (7.6 m) along Portage Canal in the north, the city lies on a Mississippi River flood-plain but has never flooded to any great extent since 1912. Levee breaks or "crevasses" on the Mississippi River to the north and east overbanked False River and submerged all of New Roads in 1867, 1882 and 1884. The 1882 flood was the most severe, with four feet of water standing in Main Street during the height of the crisis. During the floods of 1912 and 1927, however, the southern portion of the town, including the main business district, remained dry, as the flood waters to the north and east were held back by the Texas & Pacific Railroad embankment.

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1900 770
1910 1,352 75.6%
1920 1,294 −4.3%
1930 1,473 13.8%
1940 2,255 53.1%
1950 2,818 25.0%
1960 3,965 40.7%
1970 3,945 −0.5%
1980 3,924 −0.5%
1990 5,303 35.1%
2000 4,966 −6.4%
2010 4,831 −2.7%
2020 4,549 −5.8%
U.S. Decennial Census

2020 census

New Roads racial composition
Race Number Percentage
White (non-Hispanic) 1,749 38.45%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 2,592 56.98%
Native American 2 0.04%
Asian 42 0.92%
Pacific Islander 1 0.02%
Other/Mixed 104 2.29%
Hispanic or Latino 59 1.3%

As of the 2020 United States census, there were 4,549 people, 1,692 households, and 1,034 families residing in the city.

Notable people

  • Hewitt Leonidas Bouanchaud, politician, served as Lieutenant Governor and state House Speaker
  • Brian J. Costello, humanitarian and author of more than two dozen books on Louisiana and European history, culture and religion, is a native and lifelong resident of New Roads
  • Shelton Fabre, 4th bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Houma–Thibodaux
  • Ernest J. Gaines, African-American fiction writer, writer-in-residence at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette
  • Jonas Gaines, baseball pitcher in the Negro leagues
  • J. Thomas Jewell, member of the Louisiana House of Representatives, 1936–1968; House Speaker, 1960–1964; resided in New Roads
  • John Archer LeJeune, Lieutenant General of the United States Marines, was born in 1867 at Raccourci-Old River, approximately 25 miles north of New Roads. Marine Camp LeJeune in North Carolina is named in his honor, and statues representing him are located there and on the grounds of the Pointe Coupee Parish Courthouse in New Roads.
  • Catherine D. Kimball, former chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, former New Roads resident, retired in Ventress
  • Clyde Kimball, former member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for Pointe Coupee and West Baton Rouge parishes; husband of Catherine Kimball
  • DeLesseps Story Morrison, former New Orleans Mayor, was born in New Roads.
  • Julien Poydras, a merchant, planter, poet, statesman, banker, and philanthropist, helped to establish the state's first public schools in Pointe Coupee Parish in the early 19th century. He endowed a trust fund to provide impoverished brides with dowries in Pointe Coupee and West Baton Rouge parishes.
  • Albin Provosty, district attorney and from 1912 to 1920 a member of the Louisiana State Senate, publisher of The Pointe Coupee Banner
  • Patrick Queen Middle linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens

See also

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