Louisiana’s Deadliest Storm: The Great Storm of 1893
Schedule
Thu Feb 20 2025 at 05:30 pm to 07:00 pm
UTC-06:00Location
320 E. Main Street, New Iberia, LA, United States, Louisiana 70560 | New Iberia, LA
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Dr. John P. Doucet joins us to discuss how hurricanes have shaped settlement patterns across South Louisiana. The great 1893 hurricane at Cheniere Caminanda, which killed more than 2,000 people and caused mass devastation, remains the deadliest storm in Louisiana’s history. The program will begin with a light reception with lecture to follow at 6 PM.
Unable to attend in person? Register for the livestream here: https://savingplaces-org.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_yY5v_HdLQq6TE6jlkmtc5Q.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Born and raised in the coastal marshes of Bayou Lafourche, Dr. John P. Doucet is a genetics researcher and professor at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, Louisiana, where he serves as Dean of the College of Sciences and Technology and McIlhenny Professor of Human and Environmental Genetics. In addition to science and technical writings, he is the author of 13 Cajun culture plays, two books of poetry, and a monthly column on coastal culture and science for Point of Vue magazine (Houma, Louisiana). His article, “A River Ran Through It,” appearing in Louisiana Folklore Miscellany Vol. 29 (2019), is a personal history of his hometown, the wetlands village of Golden Meadow, Louisiana. His award-winning play, “Tant que Duera la Terre,” is a dramatization of life on the Louisiana Coast during the Great Cheniere Hurricane of 1893.
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Where is it happening?
320 E. Main Street, New Iberia, LA, United States, Louisiana 70560Event Location & Nearby Stays: