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Pigeonnier
and plantation store within the Whitney Plantation Historic District
Courtesy of the Louisiana Division of Historic Preservation
Historic
district buildings including the Whitney Plantation Main House,
plantation store, and French Creole barn
Courtesy of the Louisiana Division of Historic Preservation |
The Whitney Plantation Historic
District is located on a 3,000-foot stretch of the famous, historic River
Road in St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana. Aside from the raised
Creole main house, originally erected in 1803, the district contains an
overseer's house, a rare French Creole barn, a manager's house, a plantation
store, a two story tall pigeonnier (structures used by upper-class French
for housing pigeons), and the 1884 Creole and Greek revival style Mialaret
House, as well as other sites of historic interest. The Creole mansion
and dependencies are grouped in a cluster, which forms the focal point
of the district. Sugarcane and rice were the principal crops during the
historic period, and Whitney's fields are still planted in cane. The district's
plantation house is architecturally important statewide as one of Louisiana's
most important examples of Creole architecture. Nationally, the art produced
within the Whitney Plantation House, including the wall murals dating
between 1836 and 1839, are important. Whitney's surviving French Creole
barn is the last example known to survive in the State.
The plantation that came to be known as Whitney appears to have been
founded by Ambrose Haydel. A German, Haydel immigrated to Louisiana
with his mother and siblings in 1721 and married shortly thereafter.
Ambrose Haydel and his wife may have lived on the Whitney land tract
as early as 1750. By the end of the 18th century, Haydel's sons, Jean
Jacques, and Nicholas, owned adjoining plantations which included and
expanded upon their father's original holdings. It was apparently Jean
Jacques who built the Whitney main house around 1790 and expanded it
around 1803. In 1820, he sold the property to his sons Jean Jacques,
Jr., and Marcellin. Marcellin eventually gained total control of the
rest of the family's land, and commissioned the 1836-1839 remodeling.
The plantation remained in the family's hands until it was sold to a
Northerner, Bradish Johnson, after the Civil War. It was Johnson who
actually named the property Whitney in honor of his grandson, Harry
Payne Whitney.
The Whitney Plantation Historic District is located of Hwy. 18
in Wallace. All of the buildings within the district are privately owned,
and not open to the public.
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