Notes from the History of Madison Parish
Louisiana
By
William M. Murphy
Published
by the Louisiana Polytechnic Institute Department of Printing - November 1927
Madison
Coordinator's note: The late Mr. William M. Murphy of the Louisiana Bar and prominent
citizen of Madison Parish died in 1935 and is buried in Silver Cross Cemetery
at Tallulah. His wife, Minnie, was the author of several articles on Madison
Parish, including the Biography of
Rena Cox Boney and one on the 1927 flood that was published in
the August 1927 Atlantic Monthly. "Miss Minnie", as she was
affectionately known, died in 1957 and is also buried in Silver Cross Cemetery
at Tallulah. RPS dicksevier@gmail.com
PREFACE
This sketch was prepared at
the suggestion of the Tallulah Book Club, a body organized by a little band of
Madison Parish women in the year 1902, now grown into an important civic and
literary force in the parish, and affiliated with the Federation of Women's
Clubs of Louisiana.
The Social Science
Department of the Louisiana Polytechnic Institute has generously interested
itself in the essay to the extent of publishing it on their press, and
Professor David M. Amacker of that institution has been kind enough to make a
number of helpful suggestions on the form of the manuscript.
For this generosity and
interest both the College and Mr. Amacker have the grateful thanks of the
author.
FOREWORD
Almost unheralded in the
outer world, the people of the Delta, from its settlement to the flood of 1927,
have been visited with a peculiar poignancy by romance, adventure, tragedy. The
memory of the pioneers, men and women made of the stuff of empire-builders, who
cleared away the forest, dyked out the Mississippi and founded a cotton kingdom
in the alluvial plain is still cherished among their descendants; and tradition
is rich with their achievements.
To do full justice to this
stirring epic, to draw complete portraits of the vigorous personalities who
have contributed whether spectacularly or inconspicuously to the life of the
lower Mississippi Valley would require time and space beyond the command of a
busy man of affairs. The author has confined himself to the one Delta parish of
Madison, which he knows thoroughly, through residence there, participation in
its political life, access to its court records and personal acquaintance with
many of the later figures in its history. Limitations of space have indeed
prevented exhaustive treatment even in this restricted field.
President Wilson has wisely
said: "The history of a nation is only the history of its villages writ
large"; and one may confidently believe that the general reader as well as
the student of Mississippi Valley or of Louisiana history, political and
social, finding in these "Notes" the engaging story of a small
segment of the great valley will gain clearer insight into its history as a
whole and into a unique phase of American life.
D.
M. AMACKER. Louisiana Polytechnic Institute. Ruston, Louisiana
NOTES ON THE HISTORY OF MADISON PARISH
LOUISIANA
Five national flags have
floated over the territory lying within the bounds of Madison Parish; but we
cannot even conjecture how many aboriginal tribes during preceding ages may
have sojourned here or held its soil by their prowess in battle. We only know
that both the Ouachita and the Tensas tribes of Indians were found on or near
these grounds by the first white settlers; and that long ago, far before the
records of written history begin, other tribes or nations ruled its land;
people who must have been both numerous and industrious, since they could build
with such primitive tools or implements as they are thought to have used, the
remarkable "Indian Mounds" which stand as mute witnesses of the past
existence of unknown men and of unknown ages.
The daring Spanish explorer,
Fernando DeSoto, who came out upon the east bank of the Mississippi some
hundreds of miles north, probably near the present city of Memphis, was
undoubtedly the first white man to look upon the wooded shores of this parish,
as he floated southward on that stream to meet his death a little further down
its current.
Of the five flags that have
waved over the soil of Madison Parish, there first appeared the French fleur-de-lis,
white emblem of the Bourbons; then the Spanish banner, and next the French
Tricolor of Revolution and First Empire. The tricolor was in turn followed by
the Stars and Stripes, which was replaced for a time by the Stars and Bars of
the Southern Confederacy; and again came the Stars and Stripes as the standard
of a reunited people.
Geographically, the history
of the parish begins properly with the Louisiana Territory, that vast
indefinite area claimed by France and extending from the Alleghenies westward
to the Rockies and from the Gulf of Mexico to the region around the Great
Lakes. The Territory was divided in 1721 under Governor Bienville into nine
districts, one of which was called New Orleans, and embraced what we now know
as the State of Louisiana, including Madison Parish. But many legislative acts
affecting its territory were to be passed before Madison should be named and
bounded as it is today. By an Act of the Territorial Council of Orleans in
1805, its area was placed within the "County of Ouachita"; and by the
same legislative body, the southern part of it was taken from Ouachita and
added to "Concordia County" in 1809. In 1811, all that country lying
south of a point opposite Vicksburg, Mississippi, was given to Concordia, and
all north of this point running up the Mississippi River to the Arkansas line,
was made into a new county and named Warren.
In 1814 the Louisiana State
Legislature annihilated Warren County, giving its southern end to Concordia
Parish, and its northern end to Ouachita Parish, the law-making body at this
time abandoning the name of "county" and substituting for it the
designation of "parish" for such political sub-divisions. In 1832 a
strip eighteen miles wide now nearly all belonging to Madison was added to
Carroll, a newly created parish to the north.
But six years later in 1838,
a new parish was carved out. It began at Shipp's Bayou on the Mississippi River
and extended north to the Carroll line. Thence it extended west to Big Creek,
thus embracing some of the present parishes of Richland and Franklin. This
large new parish was named for a former president of the United States; and so
the Parish of Madison came into existence.
In 1839, a little slice was
removed from its northern end and given to Carroll, and all of the land west of
Bayou Macon was taken from it. In 1846, a strip three miles wide was cut from
the southern part of Carroll and attached to Madison. Neither patient seemed to
thrive under this last operation, for no more than one year elapsed before the wound
had to be reopened; in 1847, the Legislature clipped a little segment from the
northern extremity of Madison and grafted it back upon Carroll.
Fourteen years passed
without further interference with its boundaries. But in 1861 all of its lands
lying south of Bayou Vidal were taken from Madison and given to Tensas, leaving
to Madison the contour and area which it retains to the present time: it's
dimensions are roughly twenty-five miles north and south by thirty across from
east to west, thus embracing about four hundred thousand acres of land. Much of
that area it may be recorded is still covered by virgin forests of hardwood
timber, chiefly oak, red gum, ash, elm and cypress.
**********
The first parish seat was
established at Richmond, on the bank of Roundaway Bayou, some two miles south
of the present town of Tallulah. Richmond was an active little city until a
great hostile army marched its destructive way through the length of the
parish. Its battalions passed over Richmond's streets, applied the torch to its
buildings, and left not a house to mark the site of Madison's first capital.
Patriotic officials and
citizens had, in advance of the coming of Grant's army, removed from the court
house the public records and temporarily concealed them in the back country to
the west, thus saving from destruction the evidence of land titles, law suits,
marriages and other public documents and books. Later these records were stored
in a dwelling which still stands on the east bank of the bayou in the present
town of Tallulah, where they remained until the parish seat was removed in 1868
to the town of Delta. So that this residence, now occupied by Mrs. Lane, was
practically the seat of government for the Parish for a period of about five
years. The building and the residence, which stands on Crescent Plantation, are
now the only buildings in the parish that were in existence prior to the Civil
War.
The line of Railroad which traversed the parish from east to west was
built in the late 'fifties by the Vicksburg, Shreveport and Texas Railroad
Company and was the first railroad built in north Louisiana. To the reader it
may seem strange that the road was not run through Richmond, which was then the
largest and most important town in the parish or in this part of the country.
But that is another story--a
tale tinged with romance. Tradition has it that the line had been surveyed to
run through Richmond over a route most favorable for its construction; then the
chief engineer building the road, met a certain lady, a charming widow, the
possessor of large plantations; he was unmarried at the time. The railroad
running through Richmond would miss her plantations by a few miles; but if the
line could be changed a little to pass some miles to the north, it would
traverse her properties and greatly enhance their value. Could not the change
be considered? The matter could but receive the most serious consideration on
the part of the gallant engineer under the circumstances. True, if the line
were to be diverted, Richmond would feel the hurt, and likewise true that there
were no towns to be touched by the railroad if a new route were adopted. Yet
the wishes of so interesting a woman were not to be lightly ignored.
The survey through Richmond
was abandoned; the road was built on a line some miles further north running
across the widow's fertile fields and then her interest in the kind engineer
suddenly and permanently waned. At this turn of fortune the railroad man
apparently began harking back in memory to a former love; for when he established
a little station where the line crossed Brushy Bayou, he named that station for
the sweetheart of his younger days--Tallulah--and the town which grew
around it was destined in later years to become the parish seat.
*********
But to return to the earlier
period of the parish history. This part of Louisiana had been settled by people
coming from the older states, who began moving here in the latter half of the
eighteenth century while the Territory was under the dominion of Spain. The
influx was slow at that time, for we have records of a census taken in 1769 of
Ouachita, which, then embraced the present Madison parish, showing that there
were only 110 inhabitants in the whole district of Ouachita. Another
enumeration in 1788 showed 232 people, "about one half slaves."
Later, in 1806, Governor Claiborne made a report in which he said,
"Concordia is settled exclusively by Americans." Concordia included
what is now Madison.
Governor, Claiborne in the
same report deplored "the great loss and suffering in that part of the
country caused from the overflows of the Mississippi River." From this
comment we are reminded that dwellers in its alluvial lands have always lived
under the menace of the Father of Waters-as they do unto this day.
That "Americans"
were not considered to be desirable settlers, in the opinion of the Spanish
authorities ruling Louisiana at that time, because of their religious and
political views, is indicated by a report made upon the subject by the then incumbent
Roman Catholic Bishop of Louisiana, Don Luis de Pentalvert y Cardenas, who
expressed himself as follows:
"The
emigration from the western part of the United States and the toleration of our
government has introduced into this colony a gang of adventurers who have no
religion and acknowledge no God; and they have made much worse the morals of
our people.
"A
lodge of free masons has been formed in one of the suburbs of the city and
c6unts among its members officers of the garrison.
"Their
secret meetings, on fixed days on which they perform their functions as well as
other circumstances, gives to this association a suspicious and criminal
appearance.
"The
adventurers I speak of have scattered themselves over the Districts of
Attakapas, Opelousas, Ouachita and Natchitoches.
"They
employ Indians on their farms and have frequent conversations with them and
impress their minds with numerous maxiums in harmony with their own restless
and ambitious temper and with the customs of their own western countrymen.
"This
evil, in my opinion, can only be remedied by not permitting the slightest
American settlements to be made at the points already designated. The parishes
which were religiously disposed are losing their faith and their old
customs."
**********
Madison Parish, as a part of
the Territory of Orleans, later the State of Louisiana, has lived under the
celebrated "Black Code", a body of laws promulgated by Governor
Bienville, in the year 1774, and adopted principally to regulate the rights,
duties and punishment of slaves; it was continued under the Spanish domination,
and with modifications during the statehood of Louisiana until slavery was
abolished.
A brief mention of some of
its provisions may be of interest. A striking note of religious domination and
restraint imposed in favor of the Catholic creed, the only religion which it
recognized or tolerated, runs all through the Black Code; and though ostensibly
it was enacted for the control of the blacks, its framers seemed to be in haste
to cast the mantle of protection about the church, for its very first clause
declared that all Jews should be expelled from the colony.
Negroes
placed under the supervision of other than Catholics were to be confiscated.
Negroes
found working on Sunday or holidays were to be confiscated.
All
Negroes were to be buried in consecrated ground.
Negroes
were not to carry any kind of weapons or big sticks.
When
a slave was executed for crime, the state was to compensate the master for the
market value of the slave.
Negroes
were not to gather in crowds, even at weddings - a provision which no doubt
seemed to the darkies a very cruel one!
*********
While no great battles have
been fought on the soil of Madison Parish, there was a serious skirmish near Milliken's
Bend between the Confederate forces, composed of a detachment of Morrison's
Cavalry, and a body of Federal troops in the War Between the States. Toiling
armies have tramped over its surface and delved in its black loam. Grant and
Sherman landed their legions at Milliken's Bend; and, bent on the capture of
Vicksburg, sought to transport their forces by water below that city in order
to reach the east bank of the Mississippi and surround that beleaguered
stronghold. The guns from the cliffs of Vicksburg, however, threatened to make
the attempt so costly that other expedients had to be tried.
General Sherman sought to
turn the waters of the Mississippi into the channel of Walnut Bayou so that his
transports might pass along that stream and through other bayous which lead
into the river further south. To that end he tapped the river at a point called
Duckport with a canal running westward; but the Mississippi refused to be thus
diverted from its accustomed course and failed to furnish sufficient depth of
water for the desired effect. With some water running into this canal, a number
of war boats were being floated into it when the river began to fall, so
leaving the vessels stranded in the mud. Abandoned, their hulks fell away by
decay in the course of time.
The canal has since become
filled up by overflow deposits and is almost obliterated; in only a few places
its outlines can still be seen.
The traces of another and
greater undertaking of that kind remain to furrow the soil of the parish, as a
reminder of the Civil War. This is Grant's canal, dug near the town of Delta,
opposite Vicksburg.
When General Grant assumed
command of the forces operating against Vicksburg, he likewise tried to solve
the problem of getting his army, guns and supplies below that city by changing
the course of the Mississippi and floating them down through the new canal. To
that end he excavated an immense canal across the base of the peninsula of land
which projected from Delta on the west toward Vicksburg. At that period, the
tip of the peninsula was separated from this latter city only by the channel of
the river which was comparatively narrow there. Consequently vessels passing
down the Mississippi were directly under the Confederate guns.
Though Grant's canal was
made both wide and deep for its entire length of several miles, the big river,
again refusing to aid the gods of war, failed to supply enough water to float
his vessels, and the second attempt likewise came to naught. Grant was a
resourceful as well as a determined warrior, however, and, while apparently
diverting the foe with his efforts to change the stream of the Mississippi
River, he slipped his fleet of transports past the forts of Vicksburg in the
nighttime with few casualties.
The lines of this canal can
be plainly seen, and often, passing strangers stop to view it. At the time of
its building it was considered to be a mighty undertaking and attracted more
than nation-wide interest. Madison Parish thus holds within its bounds one of
the most Impressive relics of the great War Between the States.
What Grant and Sherman
failed to do with all their resources, the river did of its own might thirteen years
later, when in 1876 it cut for itself an opening through this point of land,
shifting its channel several miles to the west, and leaving a big section of
Madison Parish soil at the very front door of Vicksburg. This land, though
lying east of the river, is still in Madison, and causes sore trial to the law
officers of the parish because of the favored retreat which its willow
wilderness offers to bootleggers, distillers and other undesirables.
**********
While it may not be claimed
that the parish has produced statesmen of national reputation yet a family
resident there furnished an able United States Senator in the person of Hon.
James M. Downs. A Representative in Congress from this district, General Frank
Morey - though he was of northern birth and came south with the Federal army -
made his home in the parish for a number of years after his term in Congress.
He several times sought re-election, but this part of the state had by then
turned its back on the Republican party with which he was allied,
In addition Madison has had
her full share of other types of interesting characters, a few of whom should
be mentioned.
It is said that Bayou Macon,
the stream which forms the western limits of the parish, derives its name from
the leader of a robber band, which operated in and at times made its home in
the wooded fastnesses of the parish and preyed upon the stream of immigrants
journeying west from across the Mississippi River in the second quarter of the
last century.
Many of these home-seekers
were well-to-do planters and brought with them their slaves, live stock, money
and other property, thus affording attractive prey for Macon, whose habit it
was suddenly to appear from cane-brake or thicket at the head of his robber
crew, fall upon the unwary traveler and take liberal toll.
Tradition has it that
another important stream flowing through the parish, takes its name from a
bandit leader of that period, Robber Joe, whose real name and antecedents have
not been transmitted by authentic history. He was said to be a tall longhaired
swarthy villain with a following of cutthroats who took tribute from the
traveler and were the moving spirits of many a dark exploit. The name of Joe's
Bayou in the western part of the parish attests his renown.
Another picturesque character
of a somewhat different sort was Captain Joe Lee, whose activities in this
parish during the Civil War were outstanding. Captain Lee had been a member of
the celebrated Quantrell band of guerrillas, who operated in Missouri and
Kansas and some of whom had come further south as the war progressed. He and
others of the band reached this vicinity.
He commanded a troop of
independent guerrillas having headquarters in the parishes lying west of
Madison; and his activities were largely directed to raiding the camps and
straggling detachments of the Federal forces then occupying Madison parish. His
little following were daring and well mounted, and clad themselves in Federal
uniforms. This disguise enabled them to approach and surprise the enemy,
capturing horses, arms and prisoners, and shooting the foe who offered
resistance; but it made them liable to court martial and execution in case of
capture. They did not intend to be captured however, and as far as is known
none of them ever was. It is current tradition that in a night raid upon the
Federal camp at Milliken's Bend with intent to abduct General Grant, Captain
Lee almost succeeded in his undertaking.
By living witnesses who knew
Lee, he is described as a handsome man above six feet tall, in the early bloom
of manhood, with fine military bearing. At the close of the war he went to New
Mexico, where he became a well-to-do ranchman. Whether or not he is now living,
it is certain that he was alive not many years ago.
There lived in the parish
another man of more than passing interest, whose history is linked with the
locality: General Elias S. Dennis, a commander in Grant's army, who was
quartered in the Vicksburg area and came to Madison at the close of
hostilities.
Before the war General
Dennis was United States Marshal for the State of Kansas. This was a most
difficult position to fill in those days of violence and bloodshed arising from
political bitterness over the slavery question. Indeed, from its riots that
state had already gained the appellation of "Bloody Kansas".
Dennis was a tall man, with
pleasant, delicate features, and long hair worn in curls flowing over his
shoulders. He had already married the mother of Slade, a typical western
character, or at least now famous as such from the picture of him which Mark
Twain drew in his book "Roughing It"; and when the General took up
his home in the parish following the war, here again a kind widow so much
admired him that she willed to him her plantation. At her death, however, the
will was proved to be defective, and from it the General took nothing. He
married a prominent lady of the parish, who had also been widowed, and lived in
Madison for many years, being elected to the office of parish judge, and
afterwards to that of sheriff.
In his old age, he returned
to his native state of Illinois, and settled down to live with a son on a small
farm. There he died some thirty years ago.
Another character who
drifted into the parish with the Civil War, was a certain Captain Hawkes. No
one seemed to know where he came from nor anything of his history, and he never
spoke of his own past. He was a lawyer by profession, but enjoyed only a very
small practice; and was usually penniless and dressed in clothes that were
threadbare or torn. He was a testy little man, quick to take offense and to
resent affronts, real or imaginary. Rumor had it that he was of aristocratic
English family and this theory apparently found some support in the fact that
he kept and cherished a book of the British peerage.
The Captain, it was thought,
had never been married. He lived here and there with various families in the
parish, occasionally appearing at the parish seat mounted on a small pony which
he owned. Numerous race riots occurred in the state following the Civil War,
and Captain Hawkes' hobby was rioting. Wherever a riot took place, there
Captain Hawkes was sure to be found in the forefront of action. He was also
fond of duels and was an authority on the code duello; if not able to
participate as a principal, he would at least make an effort in any affair of
honor to act as a second.
He served in the Legislature
from the parish from 1888 to 1892 at a time when the Louisiana lottery was said
to be using money lavishly to control legislation in its behalf. He was opposed
to the lottery cause, and though impecunious, he was considered incorruptible.
Later he went to live in New Orleans, where some twenty-five years ago he was
run over by a wagon and killed.
In 1865 the name of a
Madison parish man came to be heralded throughout the United States owing to a
tragedy that arose in events of the civil war. The Confederate government
maintained at Andersonville, Georgia, a prison for captured Union soldiers.
Food, clothing and medicines became scarce; and at times it was not possible to
furnish these prisoners with the comforts or even the necessities of life. As a
result they became mutinous to such an extent that some were fired on by the
guards and killed.
After the Union forces took
Andersonville and its garrison, it was charged in the north that the prisoners
had been starved, cruelly treated and shot down without cause. A wave of
indignation swept over that part of the nation, and a hue and cry went up for
vengeance and for the punishment of all officials and other persons supposed to
have been responsible for conditions at the prison where, out of the 50,000
Union soldiers who had been confined there, about 13,000 had died.
A well known encyclopedia
gives the following, under the heading, "Andersonville, Ga.":
"After
the war, the superintendent of the prison, Henry Wirz, was tried by
court-martial, and on the 10th of November, 1865, was hanged, and
the revelations of the sufferings of the prisoners was one of the factors that
shaped public opinion regarding the south in the northern states after the
close of the Civil War."
So, upon this authority, a
citizen of Madison parish, by his conduct was thought to have been partly
responsible for the fateful policy enforced by the North upon the South during
reconstruction; for that Henry Wirz was the Dr. Henry Wirz who had enlisted
from the little town of Milliken's Bend in this parish, and whose neighbors
there knew him as a competent physician and an inoffensive man. Oddly enough it
was another of Madison's citizens, Major George C. Waddill, then a Confederate
officer, who had detailed Dr. Wirz for duty at the Andersonville prison.
The records in the
courthouse show that Worth, the celebrated Parisian costumer, at one time owned
a large tract of Madison parish land, transferred to him by the father of Miss
Cora Urquhart, who afterwards became Mrs. James Brown Potter and distinguished
herself on the stage in this country and in Europe. Tradition has it that Mr.
Urquhart deeded the land to Worth in liquidation of a large sum due to that
eminent couturier for wearing apparel furnished to Miss Urquhart. That lady, it
may be said in passing, is believed to have been born in the parish, on the
Araby plantation, then owned by her father.
Some years ago, President
Roosevelt, while on a hunting trip in an adjacent parish, stopped at Tallulah
and made an address to a large and appreciative audience. White as well as
colored citizens of the parish were present to hear him in great numbers.
**********
Whenever their country
called, Madison's sons have shouldered their guns and gone to war. She sent her
full quota of fighting men to aid the cause of the Confederacy: the Madison
infantry, composed of the best of the young manhood of the parish; and the
Madison Tips, a body so-called from the fact that they were recruited from
Irishmen working on the levees, many of whom came from County Tipperary. The
Tips were famous fighters and relished a melee for its own sake; when no enemy
could be found they fought each other, or accepted the gage of battle wherever
offered.
The present generation of
young men in like manner flocked to the standard of their country in the World
War, and most served in France. Some returned with official honors; some with
gassed and wounded bodies; others of them gave their lives.
**********
The United States Government
Experiment Station at Tallulah in Madison parish, is in some respects the only
one of its kind; and in any case is believed to be the largest of its kind in
the country.
Placed under the
Entomological Bureau of the Department of Agriculture, it directs its most
important efforts against the cotton boll weevil. It studies the insects'
habits and any means of lessening its ravages or of effecting its destruction.
Among the methods under trial is the application of poisons by aeroplane
dusting. A number of planes and a well appointed field are part of the
station's equipment. In its laboratories and fieldwork, a force of some one
hundred and twenty-five workers are employed during the cotton season.
Information about cotton pests and the condition and growth of the plant is
gathered from all over the south; and the data and advice contained in the
bulletins issued are the last word upon the subject and are looked for and
followed by the cotton interests of the whole country.
Now that the poultry
products of the country have attained such enormous proportions, exceeding in
annual value as they do either cattle or wheat production by some two hundred
million dollars, it may be pointed out as a further fact of interest in the
agricultural world that the hens of Madison parish are making records for
themselves in egg production. In a twelve-months egglaying contest conducted by
the State Agricultural Department, with fowls entered from all parts of the
state, the hens entered by Dr. R. L. Roberts of Tallulah, led all other
contestants, one of his White Leghorns having laid twenty-eight eggs in the
month of May, and one hundred and sixty-seven in seven months.
Samuel H. James, a son of
Madison parish, was a pioneer in pecan growing. Near Mounds, in the parish he
had planted about the year 1880, an orchard of 125 acres, which is believed to
have been the earliest attempt to cultivate improved varieties of pecans on a
commercial scale in Louisiana or elsewhere. His orchard and its products came
to be known all over the country and its success gave great impetus to improved
pecan culture.
**********
Though the parish has not
produced any literary figures of outstanding merit, it has furnished several
writers whose work is very commendable.
For example, Mr. S. H.
James, mentioned above in connection with pecan growing, wrote a book called
"A Woman of New Orleans", in which his characters were drawn from
living persons, apparently with too great vividness and accuracy, for upon
their earnest solicitation the book was suppressed. Afterwards, in 1890 he
published another book which he called "A Prince of Good Fellows."
Pointing out in the introduction of this book that "in 'A Woman of New
Orleans', the characters were taken from real life, a fact that caused no
little trouble," he proceeded to deny that the figures in the new book
were real persons, but admitted that some of them were based with modifications
upon certain persons in the parish. The older residents are able to recognize
several, for the whole scene of the action is laid in Madison, where people and
customs are depicted during the period from the great yellow fever visitation
of 1878 through the disastrous overflow of 1882. The novel is written in
excellent style and deserves very favorable criticism. A passage on page 145,
referring to the yellow fever pestilence of 1878 is quoted to demonstrate Mr.
James' powers of description:
"It is the last day of
November now, and no frost yet. Men and women have been praying for it for
weeks, just as those dying of thirst in the desert pray for flowing waters. But
their prayers have been in vain, and frost has delayed its arrival for more
than a month after its usual time of appearance; as if it, too, were desirous
of adding to the ruin that was upon us. One heavy frost would put an end to all
the suffering, and stop the fever but the frost will never come, it seems, and
men and women go on dying like so many flies-life has become so cheap!"
The pages of that book may
serve to recall to living men and women memories of the dread pestilence which
carried away so many of their friends and neighbors.
Mr. James was a class-mate
of Woodrow Wilson at the University of Virginia, and wrote the class essay,
published in the university magazine, for which he received a gold medal, Mr.
Wilson being among the unsuccessful competitors for the prized honor. He
attended the University of Heidelberg, and graduated in law at Tulane
University. He practiced law, edited his hometown paper and wrote books; but he
found his real métier in developing the pecan. He lived in this parish until
his death in 1924.
Miss Mississippi Morris,
another local writer, published among her productions, a novel, "Toward
the Gulf," a book which attracted attention by its graceful style as well
as its atavistic motif. Miss Morris lived on the "Bending Willows"
plantation along Willow Bayou, until her marriage with Mr. R. T. Buckner of New
Orleans.
Mrs. Jeanette Coltharp,
native of the parish, wrote a book entitled, "Burrill Coleman,
Colored," a well written narrative of some tragic happenings in the
community. Mrs. Coltharp was a Miss Downs, and a niece of former United States
Senator Downs of this state. Some years ago she went to Shreveport, where she
now resides.
**********
Sporadic cases of yellow
fever no doubt occurred in the parish in the earlier days of its history, but
it has suffered under four major visitations of that dread disease. In each of
the years1866, 1874, 1878 and 1905 an epidemic levied a tragic toll of lives.
That of 1905 was practically confined to the town of Tallulah and its vicinity.
Here it was of a virulent type; out of a total of seventy cases among the
whites there were eighteen deaths; among the negroes, there were five deaths
out of a hundred cases.
Conditions became so serious
as to attract the sympathy of the whole country toward the stricken community,
and a number of physicians and nurses from elsewhere volunteered their aid in
the treatment and care of the sick. Among the number were Dr. Chas. Chassaignac
of New Orleans, who organized the war on the pestilence, and Dr. C. C. Bass, of
the same city, both of whom nobly sacrificed their private and professional
affairs in order to devote themselves to the suffering community. Dr. Lomax
Anderson of Port Gibson, Mississippi contributed not alone his service but his
life, for here he contracted the fever and died from it.
Before the end of summer the
town became so generally infected that the health authorities ordered its
evacuation, and residents not ill with the fever were taken away on relief
trains which stopped outside the town to take them aboard, all normal train
service through the town having been long since suspended.
Here for the first time in
this country, a raging epidemic of yellow fever was completely stamped out
during the mosquito season of the year, and a clean bill of health given to the
town in the early autumn. This remarkable achievement was due to the scientific
application of the knowledge that the mosquito is the only carrier of the germ
of the disease.
There were numerous Tallulah
heroes and heroines in that trying time, whose unselfish devotion will always
be remembered by their fellow-citizens: Doctor Geo. H. Ogbourne, Doctor George
W. Gaines, and the many men and women in private life, who treated the sick,
nursed the dying and buried the dead, whether friend or stranger, with no
thought of reward except a sense of duty well done. And these are not
forgotten.
**********
The Mississippi River has
washed over alluvial Louisiana as far back as records go. We have already
mentioned the report of its damage made by Governor Claiborne in the year 1806,
in which he deplores the losses in North Louisiana from overflows.
The first great inundation
which occurred after levee building became general in the state was that of the
year 1882, which covered all the alluvial lands in the northern part of the
state and much of those further south. This calamitous event is often spoken of
yet by the older residents.
In April, 1912, the Alsatia
levee only three miles north of the parish line gave way, flooding all the low
lands south of that point and west of the Mississippi, with a sea of water from
one to fifteen feet in depth.
But the record breaking
flood and crowning disaster to the parish and to the state was that of 1927,
when the Cabin Teele levee a short distance from Milliken's Bend (for more on Milliken's Bend see "Curtains for the Bend") gave way on May 3. This disaster happened
at 2 o'clock p. m., and the Cabin Teele waters quickly united with the floods
pouring through the western part of the parish from breaks in the Arkansas
River levee system. The double volume rolled southward and added its mass to
the tide rushing in through breaks in the Central Louisiana levees. This great
overflow swept over the lowlands of Louisiana lying west of the river to a
greater depth and remained longer than any previous inundation in its history.
We have seen that the modest
little town of Milliken's Bend, whose site has long ago been eaten away by the
shifting Mississippi is connected with four events of historic interest:
Grant's
invading army landed there and established headquarters in the campaign against
Vicksburg.
There
a battle of the Civil War was fought.
The
town was the home of Henry Wirz, who was executed following the Civil War as
heretofore mentioned.
It
was the site of the initial crevasse in the levee system of the state in the
great 1927 flood disaster.
Fame enough, it would seem,
is thus afforded to that erstwhile unpretentious village.
Serious though the damage is
from the 1927 inundations, compensation will doubtless come out of it. The
country seems to have realized that only the National Government can control
the great river, and that it is the duty of that government to take, charge of
the hitherto insoluble problem.
When that policy becomes
operative and the floods no longer threaten, a day of prosperity will dawn for
Madison and the other alluvial parishes which will be reflected throughout the
whole state.
**********
The period from 1830 to 1860
saw the greatest influx of immigration into the parish, coming mainly from the
southeastern states and attracted by the fertile black lands of the Delta. The
newcomers cleared away the heavy forests and planted the "new ground"
in the favored crop then as now---cotton. They cleared all the lands fronting
the watercourses in the western part of the parish -such lands being the
highest and most desirable for cultivation in alluvial regions - to form a
continuous line of plantations along the banks of those streams. Wealth,
population, land values continued to increase until they reached their highest
peak about the year 1861, the zenith of Madison's prosperity.
Then came the destructive
Civil War, followed by the demoralizing Reconstruction period, with its era of
political misrule. Few buildings were left standing; there was no labor to
cultivate the fields; plantations lay abandoned. A large part of the acreage,
especially along the western bayous still lies fallow after the lapse of nearly
seven decades.
Nevertheless, great progress
has been made in recent years. Drainage canals have been dug, good roads
constructed, fine schoolhouses erected, herds of improved livestock have been
accumulated, and progressive farming methods have been adopted. A new era of
permanent prosperity has come, to be checked indeed by the flood of 1927, but
checked only for the moment. For many disasters here in the past have been overcome
by the courage and enterprise of these people, who drawing inspiration from the
splendid achievements of their forebears since the coming of the first
settlers, face the future with confident hope and unconquerable spirit.
APPENDIX
The
Origin of the "Parish" In Louisiana
Under French and Spanish
rule, a parish was a locality attached to or served by a local church or by a
priest, the term being used in an ecclesiastic sense, as in some countries, for
example England, at the present time. It is from this circumstance that the
local political subdivisions of Louisiana came to be called parishes, while
similar divisions in the other states are designated as counties. The
peculiarity is not however without an interesting legislative and political
history; for under the Territorial administration of Governor Claiborne and his
associates-"Americans" as the Creoles then called them - there was an
actual division of the Territory into counties; and only after Louisiana became
a state of the American Union was the designation of county dropped and that of
parish substituted.
It might be supposed that if
the "American" influence had been strong enough under Territorial
rule to cause the establishment of the country, the same influence would be yet
stronger to maintain that status after Louisiana became a state. Such however
was not the case.
Claiborne was Governor of
the Territory from 1803 until its admission into the Union. He filled the
position under appointment of the President of the United States. The law making
powers were vested in the Governor and "thirteen of the most fit and
discreet persons of the Territory", who were appointed annually by the
President. From this condition it will be readily inferred that the
"American" influence was potent in political affairs. Nevertheless
during the whole period of the Territorial government, and afterwards, there
was constant friction in political matters between the "American" and
"Creole" elements, owing to differences in political traditions as
well as religious beliefs and customs.
The Governor and the
legislative body being appointed by the President, the "Americans"
naturally were favored in the selection of officials; consequently they
controlled all departments of the government. The Creoles and colonists complained
that though largely in the majority as citizens and residents, they were to a
great extent, deprived of a voice in public affairs.
Judging from the record of
legislation on the subject, it would seem that the choice of the names
"county" or "parish" in districting the Territory (and
subsequently in districting the state) developed into a warmly contested issue.
Claiborne and his associates were accustomed to the "county" and used
that term in legislative and governmental matters, while the Creoles, who were
for the most part adherents of the Catholic Church and its customs, knew their
local church with its priest as the center of the ecclesiastical
"Parish". Their homes were in certain named parishes, the limits of
which, to be sure, might not be well defined geographically, and might not be
specifically, or at all, designated by legislative act. The citizen,
nevertheless, knew his parish and objected to seeing it obliterated and called
a county or made part of a county and so designated.
Apparently the struggle over
this question was waged at every session of the Council. Sometimes the
advocates of "county" won; sometimes those of the "parish".
At other sessions both names were used as if by compromise, in order that each
faction might have a taste of victory.
These suggestions seem to be
borne out by an examination of the early legislation. In 1805, for instance,
Governor Claiborne and the Council divided the Territory into twelve counties.
In 1807 when the people had acquired more voice in legislation, through an
elective House of Representatives acting with the council, those bodies jointly
designated nineteen parishes "for court going purposes". But while
parishes might exist for the purpose of forming court-going districts, the
county still existed as a political unit, and we find Chapter XXII of the Acts
of 1809 defining the limits of "Concordia County". In Chapter X, page
34 of the Acts of 1811, it is provided that this same Concordia County be
divided into two "parishes", to be known as Concordia and Warren
parishes. But the counties were not yet eliminated. In the Constitution of
1812, there is mention of several, including that of Orleans; though reference
is also made to the parishes of St. Bernard, St. Mary, St. Martin and
Plaquemine.
Since Louisiana soon
afterwards became a State and was governed by a legislature elected by its own
people, a large majority of whom were not "Americans", the word
"county" appeared no more in its legislative annals.
By an Act of the State
Legislature approved February 28, 1814, the boundaries of various parishes were
fixed. One of them, "Warren", (formerly embracing part of the
territory of the present Madison parish) was abolished, part of it being
annexed to Ouachita and the rest to Concordia. The contest was ended.
Parish boundaries have been
altered since, but the "parish" itself remains to distinguish the
local governmental district of Louisiana from that of the other forty-seven
states.
© 1999
Richard P. Sevier (dicksevier@gmail.com)