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Stories by author "edited by Kalie A. Dutra": 3

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: Sugar Production and its Impact on Slavery in the 19th Century 

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The Boré Plantation: Sugar Production and its Impact on Slavery in the 19th Century 

By Taylor Lindner, edited by Kalie A. Dutra & Kathryn O'Dwyer
Today’s Audubon Park was once the location of the Boré Plantation. In the late eighteenth century, Étienne de Boré converted his plantation crop from indigo to sugar cane due to significant financial struggles. This conversion was only made possible…

Sugar Granulation on the Boré Plantation

By Taylor Lindner, edited by Kalie A. Dutra & Kathryn O'Dwyer
In 1794, Étienne de Boré (1741-1820) forced enslaved men and women to convert his failing indigo fields into a sugar plantation. [4] This forced labor camp sat across the lower parts of today’s Audubon Park. The plantation history is memorialized…

Audubon Park’s Enslavement History

By Taylor Lindner, edited by Kalie A. Dutra & Kathryn O'Dwyer
Today, Audubon Park is a space dedicated to leisure in New Orleans. Every day, hundreds of New Orleans tourists and locals enjoy the public jogging path, lagoons, picnic shelters, golf course, playgrounds, and the Audubon Zoo. However, during the…
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This work is licensed by The Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at the University of New Orleans under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License.
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Funding for technical support provided by anonymous donors in memory of the Samuelson, Wolfson, and Fertel families.

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