Cane River Creole Nat'l
Historic Park
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Many of the plantation’s outbuildings also date to the first half of the nineteenth century—among them are two pigeonniers (dovecotes), an overseers’ house, a massive roofed log corn crib, a carriage house, a mule barn that was originally a smokehouse, a carpenter’s shop, and cabins. |
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By the early 1800s, cotton was becoming Bermuda’s main cash crop, the labor of a growing slave community fueling its expansion. The Prud’hommes stayed in the forefront agriculturally, experimenting with crops, equipment, and techniques as much of the antebellum South moved toward a one-crop economy. |
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Oakland Plantation |
Magnolia Plantation
| Melrose Plantation
| Other Plantations
Badin-Roque House
| Misc Sites and Churches
| Natchitoches Historic District
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Official NPS website of Cane River Creole National Historic Park
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