In
1720, twenty-one German families from the Rhine region of
Germany settled on the West Bank of the Mississippi river.
These families had suffered horribly during the Thirty Years
War and subsequent French Occupation, and had fled by the
thousands to the New World, enticed by promises of great wealth
promoted by John Law. These original German settlers were
given small plots of land by Mr. Law’s Company of the
Indies, a few primitive tools, and in return found hardships
in lieu of the promised great wealth.
In 1721, 330 German immigrants led by a Swedish officer named
Karl Friedrich D’Arensbourg, who worked for the Company
of the Indies, arrived in Louisiana. Mr. D’Arensbourg
was to play a vital role in the history of the German Coast
as well as that of New Orleans. In 1722, Germans from John
Law’s Arkansas Concession arrived in New Orleans demanding
passage to Europe. Due to a lack of ships and supplies, Louisiana
Governor Bienville persuaded them to remain, and they eventually
joined the other Germans along the banks of the River.
The
census of 1731, approximately 10 ½ years after the
establishment of the settlement, shows that there were no
farm animals in the settlement. This is evidence that the
first settlers endured hardships in farming, as the land which
was used for farming was all cleared by hand, and done under
the most primitive of conditions. In 1765 and 1766, the first
Acadians arrived in the area, and they too were given land
along the River, and joined the Germans in raising the fruits
and produce that was used to feed the city of New Orleans.
Besides the fruit and vegetables grown for the marketplace
in New Orleans, tobacco and indigo were grown on the German
Coast. Due to the large amount of swamp area containing many
cypress trees and a large number of live oak trees in the
area, lumber was also a thriving business venture.
By
1792 when Destrehan Plantation became the property of Jean
Noel Destrehan and his wife Marie Celeste Eleanor Robin deLogny,
the German Coast contained a rich mixture of Germans, French
Creoles, French Acadians and Free Blacks. During this decade,
both Ormond Plantation on the East Bank, and Homeplace on
the West Bank were built.
The lands along the German Coast are flat, and slope from
approximately 14 feet above natural sea level at the banks
of the Mississippi River, to approximately 1 foot above sea
level at the shore of Lake Pontchartrain. Because the last
4 to 5 miles of land toward the lake are flat, level swampland
that gives way to marsh as it approaches the lake, only 3
to 4 miles of land closest to the banks of the River was suitable
for cultivation. As a result, the first serious attempts at
levee building began around 1743. Though each land owner was
responsible for building and maintaining levees along his
property, these levees were usually only about 5 feet high
and the area suffered disastrous floods almost yearly.
In
1928, test pilings were driven, and a controlled outlet for
the flooding Mississippi River was created, aptly named the
Bonnet Carre Spillway. The Spillway was opened just in time,
for in January of 1937 one of the greatest of all recorded
floods started on its way down the Mississippi River. In February,
the Carrolton gauge registered 20 feet, and the spillway was
opened for the first time. The great levee experiment was
successful, and the area remained high and dry. Now, thanks
to the protection provided by the Bonnet Carre Spillway, River
flooding is virtually unknown in the Parish.
In
1803, Louisiana was sold to the United States in the largest
peacetime land acquisition in the history of the world. For
only $15 million dollars, the United States purchased most
of the land from the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico,
and straddling the continent from the Mississippi River to
the Rocky Mountains. The present boundaries of the state were
set, and Louisiana was admitted to the Union in 1812.
In 1853, a major yellow fever epidemic struck New Orleans
and its effects were felt along the German Coast. During this
time, the priest at the Little Red Church (so named for its
red roof that served as a distance marker for watermen on
their way to the Port of Orleans) was a Frenchman named father
Paret.
On the heels of the Yellow Fever Epidemic in 1861, Louisiana
seceded from the Union and joined the Confederacy. During
the War Between the States, St. Charles Parish was the scene
of several skirmishes, but no large battles were fought in
this area. By 1864, the area had two governors, one Confederate
and one Federal. The Federal Governor was Michael Hahn who
later founded Hahnville, now the seat of St. Charles Parish’s
local government.
By
the early 1900’s, industry started moving into the Parish.
In 1907, the first sawmill in the Parish opened in Taft, the
home of the Colonial Dairy Farm, one of the largest dairies
in the state. In 1908, the Louisiana Cypress Company began
to harvest cypress in the area. The Cousins Canal was dug,
and by 1912, over 100,000 feet of board lumber was floated
out of it.
With the discovery of oil at Jennings Field around the turn
of the century, a new area of economic opportunity opened
up along the German Coast. In 1914, Destrehan Plantation was
sold to the Mexican Petroleum Company and it became the first
of the River Road Plantations to change from an agricultural
to an industrial economic base. Through a series of buy-outs
and mergers, the house became the property of the American
Oil Company, and the "Big House" was deeded by AMOCO
to the River Road Historical Society for preservation.
With
the coming of the oil refineries, related industries also
located in the Parish. First, was an oil export terminal owned
by Cities Service Company, located in St. Rose in 1922, followed
in 1925 by General American Transportation Corporation and
Coatwise Petroleum in Good Hope.
Oil was discovered in St. Charles Parish in 1938 at Bayou
Des Allemands, Paradis in 1939, Lake Salvador in 1940 and
Bayou Couba in 1942. The 1950’s saw the opening of Monsanto
and Lion Oil Co. In Luling, Shell Chemical, Union Carbide
(Dow St. Charles Operations), Hooker Chemical (Occidental
Chemical), and the Bunge and St. Charles Grain elevators.
Although the old plantation homes are gone, their names live
on the location of the sites of many of these industries. |