What's happening in Louisiana's historic town of St. Francisville; where time slows just enough to enjoy the simple pleasures and unique treasures. Essays, blurbs, observations and photos from a small southern town with charm, history and friendship.
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
Fall Photo Opportunities
- October, 2007
While the birds are still heading south, there's plenty good photo opportunities around St. Francisville, Louisiana. Grap your camera equipment, book a room in this Bed & Breakfast Community and enjoy.
Photos by ptWalsh, taken just north of St. Francisville, La. - home to the Audubon Country BirdFest, held annually. March 30, 31 & April 1, 2007 - Information
Sunday, October 29, 2006
Local Receives National Award
2006 TAKE PRIDE IN AMERICA® NATIONAL AWARD
Executive Director Michelle Cangelosi named James 'Larry' Keith as a recipient of the 2006 Take Pride in America National Award in the Individual category. Twenty-eight individuals and groups will be honored for their outstanding volunteer efforts on Federal, state and local public lands at an awards ceremony to be held September 14 at the Department of the Interior in Washington, DC.
"It's quite an honor to be selected for a National award for doing something I like to do. It makes me proud to live in a country that offers the opportunity to volunteer. I would encourage others to volunteer to help maintain these natural resources and to be pro-active in looking for volunteer opportunities that you like to do," James 'Larry' Keith said.
The Take Pride in America National Awards are given annually and this year's winners were selected from nominations representing individuals, groups and projects in 32 different states. The judges, representatives of government agencies within the Department of the Interior, scored the applications based upon the scope of their work, the measurable impact of their results, their collaborative partnership and their demonstration of the mission of Take Pride.
"These Take Pride award winners embody the mission of Take Pride by accepting responsibility and taking action to enhance our public lands," Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne said. "It is through their stewardship that they are creating a lasting legacy within their community."
"The nominations were outstanding, as we learned more about the hard work and generous donation of time by volunteers across our country. This is an exciting time of year because we can celebrate and thank volunteers for their service to our public lands," Cangelosi said. "It is an honor to invite James Keith to Washington, DC to be recognized for his continued commitment to our parks, refuges and recreation areas."
James 'Larry' Keith was selected as one of this year's award winners because of his dedicated volunteer service at the three National Wildlife Refuges managed under the Central Louisiana National Wildlife Refuge Complex in Marksville, Louisiana, but especially for his volunteer service at Cat Island National Wildlife Refuge, located in St. Francisville, Louisiana.
Take Pride in America, an initiative of the U.S. Department of the Interior, is a nationwide partnership program which inspires Americans to volunteer in caring for their public lands. Their goal is to instill an active sense of ownership and responsibility in every citizen for natural, cultural and historic resources, and to support and recognize the efforts of those who volunteer for public lands. Through a web-based search engine, Take Pride offers a database for short-term and long-term volunteer projects on public lands, as well as assistance for project planning. Additionally, Take Pride rewards exceptional volunteer service by individuals and groups with awards and appreciation certificates. For more information, visit www.TakePride.gov.
Sunday, October 15, 2006
West Feliciana Tour of Homes
P. O. Box 517
St. Francisville, LA 70775
For immediate release
Contact: Virginia Smith, 225/635-6162, email vrsmith@bsf.net
West Feliciana Tour of Homes
The tenth annual Friends of the West Feliciana Library Tour of Homes will be held Sunday, December 3, 2006 between 12 noon and 5 p.m. during Christmas in the Country. Four homes will be on tour: one in Beauchamp Estates off Audubon Lane, one in Plantation Oaks off Highway 61 near River Bend Nuclear Plant, and two in The Bluffs Resort and County Club.
Tickets for the tour are $15 per person and may be purchased in advance and on the day of the tour at the West Feliciana Parish Library, 11865 Ferdinand Street, in St. Francisville. All proceeds from the tour are used for library projects. For more information, call the library at 225/635-3364.
Lisa and Tony Horn’s traditional southern home in Beauchamp Estates features interior brick walls and massive wooden beams in the kitchen. The living area of the house has 12 foot ceilings and looks out over the pool and lake. The house was built by the owners in 2003.
Nine Oaks, the home of Camille and Scott Thibodeaux in Plantation Oaks, sits on 2.5 acres nestled among nine old live oak trees, overlooking a small pond on the rear of the property. The French country style, six bedroom home has over 4,000 square feet plus a studio over the garage and features an eclectic mix of old and new construction details. The home was completed in 2006.
Virginia and Peyton Crawford’s 2-story European design home in The Bluffs overlooks the 9th hole of the golf course and has a spectacular view of the unique split fairway. The home is fronted with columns and is accented by a bowed ironwork baluster and copper awning.
Jackie and Mike Creed’s home on the 15th hole of The Bluffs golf course overlooks a creek that meanders along the edge of the beautifully landscaped yard. The exterior of the traditional home is old St. Louis brick and natural stucco. The traditional style is carried into the interior of the house with a brick arch in the foyer and wood and brick floors.
Heritage in the Hills
by Anne Butler
As temperatures moderate and fall frosts the falling leaves with brilliant color, it's the perfect time for a road trip, and that's just what is offered by the first annual "Louisiana Main to Main, A Cultural Road Show" the whole month of November. Hosted by designated Main Street Communities across the state, the event is an opportunity for each little town to highlight its uniqueness. The program also gives visitors the chance to travel through some of the most picturesque sections of the state and enjoy special coordinated events and activities in each area. There will be food and music festivals, antiques fairs, art and crafts shows, living history demonstrations, performances, exhibits, car shows, bike tours, hayrides, parades, agricultural shows, museum days, historic house tours, game-day tailgating, and miles-long trade days as each community shows off its special creative and natural assets for the enjoyment of the whole family.
Designed to promote the revitalization of small-town historic commercial districts, Louisiana Main Street is a program of the State Office of Historic Preservation in the Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism. Important all the time, the program is particularly essential in post-hurricane economic development in the little Louisiana communities adversely impacted by last year's storms. Louisiana's Main Street communities include Springhill, Minden, Ruston, Bastrop, Columbia, Winnsboro, Natchitoches, Opelousas, St. Francisville, New Roads, Clinton, Bogalusa, Hammond, Ponchatoula, Denham Springs, Eunice, Crowley, Abbeville, St. Martinville, Plaquemine, New Iberia, Franklin, Morgan City and Houma. As different as these small towns are one from the other in many ways, they are nevertheless united by their common goals of combining historic and cultural preservation with present-day economic viability, and they love to show off the results of their hard work and successful programs.
The lovely little Mississippi River town of St. Francisville is calling its Main To Main program "Heritage in the Hills" and has planned a weekend full of events and exhibits highlighting the rich diversity of the heritage and culture of this scenic unspoiled region in the Tunica Hills. From archaeological finds and antebellum homesteading skills to contemporary musical performances and art exhibits, the wide variety of offerings mirrors the diverse influences that shaped the history of this part of plantation country. On Friday, November 3, a reception at the Historical Society Museum on Ferdinand St. from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. features an exhibit of archaeological findings unearthed during the construction of a new courthouse annex in historic downtown St. Francisville. There will also be musical entertainment by Root 61 at Magnolia Café.
Saturday, November 4, centrally located oak-shaded Parker Memorial Park showcases the works of a wide variety of regional artists and craftspersons at Art in the Park from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., as well as live music in the bandstand by the Backyard Blues 11am-1pm and Fugitive Poets from 2 to 4 p.m. Throughout the day the Historical Society Museum will continue its exhibit of historical archaeologic artifacts. The wonderfully eclectic little shops of St. Francisville offer spectacular holiday shopping specials throughout the day on Saturday as well. Each shop is unique, filled with everything from antiques and collectibles to clothing and decorative pieces for home and garden; visitors should not miss a single one along Commerce, Ferdinand and Royal Streets. The Friends of the Library are hosting a Book Sale at the Masonic Hall on Prosperity & Ferdinand Sts.
St. Francisville throughout the 19th century was the commercial center for Louisiana's rich English plantation country, and a number of the outlying antebellum homes join the downtown Main Street section in celebrating the heritage of the region. Saturday from 9 to 4, Rosedown State Historic Site showcases the practical plantation arts of the antebellum era, with demonstrations of leatherworking, calligraphy, spinning, basketry, down-hearth cooking in the outside kitchen and the use of the carpenter's shaving horse. There will also be an antebellum dance class conducted under the magnificent oak alley leading to this splendid 1830's Greek Revival structure surrounded by 28 acres of formal gardens.
On Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Audubon State Historic Site joins Rosedown in demonstrating old-fashioned skills by presenting a typical 19th-century day at the plantation, with costumed park rangers making candles and soap, cooking on the open hearth, and explaining the use of black powder weaponry during the Civil War. Center of this historic site is the three-story West Indies-style Oakley House where artist-naturalist John James Audubon tutored the young daughter of the family and painted a number of his famous bird studies in 1821.
"Heritage in the Hills" T-Shirt
Another real highlight of Saturday's activities is called "Music at the Mansions." The St. Francisville area has been blessed with a large number of extant antebellum plantation homes. Four of the most historic restored mansions host live performances of indigenous 19th-century music, as well as tours through rooms beautifully furnished with fine antiques; tickets should be purchased at West Feliciana Historical Society Museum and Visitor Center on Ferdinand St. At Butler Greenwood Plantation, dating from the 1790's and still occupied by descendants of the original family, the exuberant New Magnolia Baptist Church Choir performs under the live oaks from 10 a.m. to noon. The Cottage Plantation, also dating from the 1790's with its unmatched collection of surviving original outbuildings, features the amazing Gospel Wonders from noon to 2 p.m. Greenwood Plantation, magnificent Greek Revival columned home that burned and was lovingly rebuilt, will have Bill Caldwell -Music of the Old South from 2 to 4 p.m. and at Rosedown State Historic Site the popular vintage dancers whirl through waltzes and quadrilles in authentic antebellum costumes to the accompaniment of period music.
Saturday afternoon from 1 to 4 p.m. , Birdman Books and Coffee House in downtown St. Francisville hosts an opening reception for artist Paul Schnexnayder, followed by a live musical performance by Karuna's Spoon beginning at 7 p.m. From 8pm. Que Pasa Mexican restaurant overlooking the Mississippi River has music by the New Original House Band. Beginning at 8 p.m., the popular band Run Jane Run performs at Cypress Grill. Many of the activities and demonstrations are free of charge; the ticket purchased for "Music at the Mansions" covers the other musical events.
Sunday-November 5 starts with the Friends of the Library Book Sale from 11am-2pm at the Masonic Hall on Prosperity and Ferdinand Sts.
Information on Heritage in the Hills is available by telephoning Laurie Walsh, St. Francisville's dynamic and dedicated Main Street Director, at 225-635-3873 or 225-635-4224; for information on other Main Street community programs this same weekend, contact Louisiana Main to Main Coordinator Leon Steele at 225-342-8160. Information on St. Francisville and West Feliciana Parish; http://www.stfrancisville.us/, http://www.stfrancisville.net/, or http://www.stfrancisvilleovernight.com/; or telephone (225) 635-4224 or 635-3873.
High resolution photos for media use, email Patrick Walsh pat@bluegoosemedia.com or BlueGooseMedia.com