Adrienne LaCour - Four Corners Series


Information


Size:14 interviews on 16 recordings


Time period covered: 1920 - 1993


Dates of interviews: 1993


Principle Interviewers: Adrienne LaCour


Finding Aids: Abstracts, indexes


Audio Availability: MP3


Processing Status: 85% of interviews are cataloged (12 of 14)


Access Restrictions: See individual abstracts


Description: Interviews for this series were conducted by Adrienne LaCour as part of the research for her MA thesis in landscape architecture at LSU. Interviews focused on the experience of both blacks and whites on sugarcane farms at Four Corners, an unincorporated community south of Franklin, Louisiana, and near New Iberia, Louisiana. LaCour was interested in land use patterns and community history in the predominately African-American community of Four Corners.

The topics of the interviews include life of workers on plantations, recollections of grandparents who were slaves, growing and processing of sugar cane, foods grown for self-subsistence, and horse and buggy transportation. Interviewees discuss South Coast and other plantations of the Four Corners area, plantation stores and debt peonage, recreational activities including gambling and baseball, Sunday visiting, and dancing. Other topics include the impact of World War Two, various religious beliefs, burial and birth traditions, and natural remedies for childhood illnesses.


Interview Abstracts


Elnora Robinson Colbert


Louis Comeaux


Joseph Davis


Stanley Gootee


Betty Hines


Moses Hines & Charlotte Hines Alfred


Willie Jackson


Shirley & Reed Landry


Irma Polidore Lewis


Noland Lockett


Leonard Martin


Shirley McLean


Emma Dell Peters


Faren Serrette


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