Sunday, August 5, 2012

La Prairie des Femmes


La Prairie des Femmes (Women's Prairie) is a natural prairie in Saint Landry Parish, Louisiana that borders an oxbow-shaped swamp to the north, Bayou Bourbeau to the west, and Pointe Claire to the east. Prairie Laurent is to the north/northwest and la Prairie Basse to the south. The nearest town is Leonville, and the towns of Arnaudville (La Jonction) and historic Grand Coteau are nearby. Coulée des Marks runs through la Prairie des Femmes and creates a small cypress basin at the country intersection of Thomassee and Jules Lagrange roads at Le Pont des Marks, or Mark's Bridge.

Prairie des Femmes appears on detailed maps of the region as early as 1806, having been inhabited by French Creoles well before this time. The prairie was at the border of the Atakapas and Opelousa tribe's territories, so there was much Indian traffic through the area. Legend has that the area was a high land, a safe zone near the bayous where Native American women lived together while the men hunted or warred with neighboring tribes. Another story says that in Louisiana's historic flood of 1927 that woman and children were sent there from neighboring communities because of its safety. Another tale sites the area as a place where the widows of the soldiers of the Civil War settled to live the remainder of their lives in peace. The most likely story of the origin of the name Prairie des Femmes has two versions: One is that the natives inhabiting the prairie moved after a hunt, as was custom. A few of their old women were left at  the camp being too old to move. The other version is similar, but is more mysterious: that the braves went off one day on a hunt leaving the women and children and simply never came back.  The women left there were discovered by the French Creoles and Acadians who settled the area who called it La Prairie des Femmes.



3 comments :

  1. Prairie des Femmes was actually named for a fort that was built to house women and children during the civil war. Althought I am uncertain of the loaction's actual coordinates I do know it is located North of Fuselier Rd, East of Jules Lagrange Road and South West of Pointe Claire Hwy. The area is somewhere within 3 miles as the crow flys of my family home. We have found many artifacts while escavating a parcel of land bording a patch of woods. We have found Various items like dishware, utinsils, the metal component of a muzzle firmarm containing the firing mechanisms and trigger, grinding stones and many native american artifacts as well

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  2. Thank you for the amazing comment! I have also found a few ceramic shards here in the PDF, I live on the edge of the grand bois you mentioned... I have not heard of the fort! would love to hear more about it. I have also found the Prairie des Femmes clearly marked on maps that predate the Civil War by nearly a century. Please email me if you would ever like to visit! prairiedesfemmes@gmail.com

    Thank you again for your comment

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