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Restored Mission Control alive 50 years after Apollo

HOUSTON (AP) — Gone is the haze of cigarette, cigar and pipe smoke. Gone are the coffee, soda and pizza stains. With only a few exceptions, NASA’s Apollo-era Mission Control has been restored to the way it looked 50 years ago when two men landed on the moon.
It gets the stamp of approval from retired flight director Gene Kranz, a man for whom failure — or even a minor oversight — is never an option.
Seated at the console where he ruled over Apollo 11, Apollo 13 and so many other astronaut missions, Kranz pointed out that a phone was missing behind him. And he said the air vents used to be black from all the smoke, not sparkly clean like they are now.
Those couple of details aside, Kranz could close, then open his eyes, and transport himself back to July 20, 1969, and Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s momentous moon landing.
“When I sit down here and I’m in the chair at the console ... I hear these words, ‘Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed,’” Kranz said during a sneak preview at NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
With all the empty seats, the room reminds him of a shift change when flight controllers would hit the restroom.
“It’s just nice to see the thing come alive again,” said Kranz, who titled his autobiography, “Failure is Not an Option.”
Friday’s grand opening — just three weeks shy of the 50th anniversary of humanity’s first otherworldly footsteps — culminates years of work and millions in donations. It opens to the public Monday.
Meticulously recreated down to the tan carpeting, gray-green wallpaper, white ceiling panels, woven-cushioned seats, amber glass ashtrays and retro coffee cups, Project Apollo’s Mission Operations Control Room never looked — or smelled — so good.
The goal was “to capture the look and feel of July of ‘69,” said NASA’s restoration project manager Jim Thornton.
“The place is designated a National Historic Landmark,” he said. “It’s not for the brick and mortar of the building, it’s for the amazing feats that happened inside of the building.”
Johnson’s historic preservation officer, Sandra Tetley, strove for accuracy. Her quest began in 2013, after the room had fallen into neglect. It was last used for space shuttle flights in the 1990s, then abandoned and opened to tourists.
The restoration effort finally got traction in 2017. The room was closed, and construction began. More than $5 million was raised, most of it donations. The city of Webster across the street kicked in $3.5 million.
Tetley and her team interviewed flight controllers and directors now in their 70s and 80s. They pored through old pictures and brought in specialists in paint, wallpaper, carpeting, electricity and upholstery. Original swatches of carpet and wallpaper and an original ceiling tile turned up.
Intent on authenticity, they scoured eBay and vintage shops for ashtrays and cups and turned to 3D-laser printing to recreate lids for the back-of-the-seat ashtrays in the glassed-in visitors’ section overlooking the control room. Old binders for reams of paper were collected. Seat cushions were handwoven. Ceiling tiles were hand stamped.
Carpeting was custom ordered with special tufting and extra yarn, then cut into 28-inch squares. The restoration team wanted a lived-in look for the carpet and chose a shade reflecting years of nicotine discoloring.
And yes, Kranz got his missing rotary-dial wall phone.
“I fought for everything,” Tetley said. “But we’re getting everything we want to make it just completely historically accurate.”
The green consoles were trucked to the Cosmosphere museum in Hutchinson, Kansas, for months of rehab. Cigarette butts were dug out of the consoles, along with gum wrappers and papers.
Modern LED lights and flat screens were installed to bring the consoles alive with images and flashing buttons; big screens up front will show key footage from the Apollo 11 mission.
“We’re using technology to make it look old, basically,” Tetley explained. LEDs also replaced the original overhead fluorescent lights that had faded the mission medallions on the walls.
With the International Space Station’s Mission Control running 24/7 one floor down and work for future moonshots going on all around, Thornton said it was challenging to create a museum. But the painstaking work paid off. Some Apollo flight controllers were so moved at seeing the restored room that they teared up.
“Then we know that we’ve done it right,” Tetley said.
There’s one artifact, though, that doesn’t fit July 1969. Following their 1970 aborted moon-landing mission, Apollo 13’s Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert presented a mirror from their spacecraft to Kranz and the rest of the control team. Ever since, the mirror had hung on a plaque above the room’s water fountain “to ‘reflect the image’ of the people in Mission Control who got us back!” Removed during the restoration, it’s now back in its original spot.
Kranz, 85, still looms large in the hot seat, where he oversaw the Eagle’s landing.
“It was just absolutely our day, our time, our place,” he said.
The flight controllers meet every year to celebrate the day, although their numbers are dwindling.
They’re proud to have helped resuscitate their Mission Control: “Part of our legacy we’re going to leave for the next generation.”

Man tired of dating game is ready to throw in the towel

DEAR ABBY: In the last few years I have had a string of failed relationships. Nothing bad happened, and there were no fights or arguments. The ladies tell me I’m great and an amazing person. Yet they don’t want to be in a relationship, or they cheat or lie to me. I’m a very open, understanding guy. I believe communication is key to success in any relationship, and that together, there isn’t much a couple can’t overcome. It seems many women come from abusive relationships or just plain toxic ones, and they are scared because I don’t exhibit any of ...

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St. Mary population takes another hit

A parishwide economic slump continues to make an impact on St. Mary Parish’s population.
By mid-2018, the parish’s population had shrunk by nearly 5,000 people since the 2010 Census, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s mid-year population estimates.
St. Mary started the decade with 54,650 people, according to the 2010 Census. The population declined to 49,774 by mid-2018, according to the annual estimate, which is based on factors such as school enrollment.
The biggest population losers were some of the parish’s biggest incorporated places.
Morgan City’s population fell from 12,404 in 2010 to 10,918 in 2018, a decrease of 12 percent.
Franklin’s population dropped from 7,660 nine years ago to 6,768 in 2018, a decline of 11.4 percent.
Berwick started the decade with 4,946 people, only 54 short of the number needed to move from town to city status. By 2018, the population had fallen to 4,471, a decline of 9.6 percent.
Patterson has fared better, dropping from 6,112 to 5,839, or 4.5 percent, 2010-18.
Baldwin’s population dropped from 2,436 to 2,244, a decrease of 7.9 percent
For six decades, St. Mary’s population has fluctuated along with the oil economy.
After declining through the Depression and war years, the parish’s population exploded after offshore oil production began in earnest. The number of people here grew from about 35,000 in 1950 to more than 64,000 in 1980, according to the decennial counts.
But unstable oil prices have taken their toll in St. Mary. The population dropped to 53,000 by 2000.
More recently, the plummet in crude oil prices and the shift of industry focus from offshore to onshore production caused more tremors in the local economy.
In Morgan City, more than two-thirds of the decade’s population loss has occurred since 2014, when oil dropped from near $105 per barrel to less than $40. More than three-quarters of Berwick’s population loss occurred in the same period.
And during that time, more than one St. Mary job in every five has disappeared.
Local governments have struggled with declining tax revenues in that time. The St. Mary Parish School Board closed two schools, M.D. Shannon and J.A. Hernandez elementary schools, to cope with declining enrollment.
Statewide, the estimated population in mid-2018 was 4,659,972, up 2.8 percent from 2010.
The nation’s population grew by 6 percent to more than 327 million 2010-18.
The Census Bureau reports that the nation’s population continues to grow older. The median age — the value that separates the youngest half from the oldest half — grew by a full year to 38.2.
This story has been corrected to fix a typographical error. The parish's estimated population in mid-2018 was 49,774, a loss of nearly 5,000 residents.

Louisiana Spotlight: Health care bill was headache for governor

BATON ROUGE — Legislation promoted as a path to creating state-level health care protections for Louisiana residents if the federal health law is overturned put Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards in a no-win political situation.
If he vetoed the bill championed by Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry, Edwards would be scrapping the only measure that reached his desk to respond to the pending federal litigation threatening the Affordable Care Act. Edwards also would be giving Landry a new way to trash-talk him and accuse him of petty politics in an election year when both the governor and attorney general are on the ballot.
If he signed the bill, Edwards would be handing Landry the ability to claim victory on an issue about which the governor wants to appear proactive. That victory would come after Landry signed Louisiana onto the lawsuit seeking to jettison the federal health overhaul, the court challenge prompting the need for a state-level fix. Plus, Edwards would be signing legislation he described as a “fig leaf” that doesn’t fix anything.
But the governor has taken the position that he always signs or vetoes bills, never allowing them to become law without his signature.
So Edwards signed the Landry-backed bill into law, burying it in a list of bill signings released on a Friday evening — and now he’ll try to work around it, creating a task force to study additional responses to the litigation.
Whether the law, sponsored by Republican Sen. Fred Mills of St. Martin Parish, has any real impact remains to be seen. And it may never be needed, if the federal lawsuit winding its way through the courts isn’t successful.
The law starts Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon’s office working on ways to create a high-risk pool to help Louisiana residents with preexisting conditions access insurance if the federal law is thrown out. But such a creation requires more legislative approvals and doesn’t yet have financing to pay for any plan developed.
Under the law championed by former President Barack Obama, the federal government gives Louisiana consumers hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies to help pay for the insurance coverage and preexisting condition protections.
Landry and Donelon say they’re hopeful Congress would help states with financing if those federal subsidies disappear. Edwards notes such promises from Washington haven’t been made.
Meanwhile, the Landry-backed law also wouldn’t help the 460,000 people added to Medicaid who would lose coverage if the Medicaid expansion program authorized under the federal law is scrapped.
The legislation became the latest dust-up between Edwards and Landry, who never shy away from a clash with each other. House Republicans allied with Landry ensured a separate Edwards-backed bill seeking to enact state-level health insurance protections was killed. It, too, had no financing source.
Landry said Edwards’ signing of his bill, which passed with near-unanimous support from lawmakers, was a “historic day.”
“Louisiana has now become the country’s leader in protecting patients with preexisting conditions,” Landry said in a statement.
Edwards had a different take.
“Studying a high-risk pool is not a replacement for the Affordable Care Act,” he said before he made his signing decision. “There is no way that that is a replacement of anything. It is at best a fig leaf designed to prevent embarrassment.”
His spokeswoman Christina Stephens said the governor later signed the bill because it “doesn’t do any harm.”
The Democratic Governors Association didn’t do Edwards any favors in the effort to draw little attention — or compliments — to the bill, however, when it released a Twitter post Tuesday praising Edwards for signing “legislation to protect health insurance coverage for Louisianians if the Affordable Care Act is overturned.”
The organization, supporting Edwards in his bid for a second term, seemed clueless that it was praising a Republican-led effort that the governor tried to kill.
Republicans, including Landry, seized on the tweet, using it as another round of publicity for the legislation’s passage and calling it outrageous Democrats would try to take credit for something Edwards didn’t support.
The Edwards-created task force to study state-level response options if the federal health law is overturned holds its first meeting July 17.
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Wheel House for July 1

SACRED HEART
Thrift Store, corner of Second Street and South Railroad, Morgan City, holding a 50 cent sale on all items from 8:30-11 a.m. Wednesday, July 3 and 10, and Thursday, July 11. Store closed July 4. All proceeds help people in need.

ST. MARY SOCCER
Online registration continues until June 30. Face-to-face registration at Morgan City High School from 5-7 p.m. July 8-9. For info email stmarysoccerassociation@gmail.com.

VACATION BIBLE
School at First Baptist Church, 1915 Victor II Blvd., Morgan City, 9 a.m. to noon, July 22-26. Children aged 5-13 invited. For info call 985-384-5920.

Feast of Assumption event celebrates history, faith

Itinerary for Centennial Eucharistic Boat Procession on Bayou Teche Thursday, Aug. 15 (Feast of the Assumption of Mary) 8 a.m. Holy Mass in French with Bishop John Douglas Deshotel, D.D. at St. Leo the Great Church, Leonville <p> 9 a.m. Procession from St. Leo’s to Leonville boat landing <p> 9:30 a.m. Boat Procession departs 10:20 a.m. Arrive at Arnaudville and disembark for Rosary and Benediction <p> 11:45 a.m. Arrive at Cecilia and disembark for Rosary and Benediction <p> 1:35 p.m. Arrive at Breaux Bridge and disembark for Rosary and Benediction <p> 3:15 p.m. Arrive at Parks and disembark for Rosary and Benediction <p> 4:45 p.m. Flotilla arrives at St. Martinville; Procession to Notre Dame de Perpetuel Secours for Benediction <p> 5 p.m. Procession from Notre Dame to St. Martin de Tours Church for Benediction <p> 5:30 p.m. Procession down Main Street to Our Lady of Sorrows Chapel for Solemn Vespers & Final Benediction <p> 6 p.m. Solemn Vespers and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament <p> Confessions will be available at all stops in Mobile Units along the Procession <p>

The fifth annual Eucharistic Procession down Bayou Teche will take place Aug. 15.
The date is important for Roman Catholics as it is the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, patroness of the Acadian people and of Acadiana. It is also a day that marks the 254th anniversary of the arrival of French-Canadian immigrants who brought the Catholic faith to Acadiana after enduring great trials and suffering.
The Rev. Michael Champagne, CJC, organizer of the event, notes that “having a Eucharistic Procession by boat on the waters of the Teche rather than by foot in the streets makes a lot of sense.
"Fête-Dieu du Teche on the Feast of the Assumption recalls our rich Acadian history and, in a way, re-enacts the journey made by the Acadians 250 years ago.”
The Acadians were persecuted for their Catholic faith and sent into exile from Nova Scotia. Many ended up settling in Louisiana. Champagne said having a boat procession with the Blessed Sacrament and a statue of the Assumption involving priests, religious and laity is basically what happened in 1765.
“In order to serve the Acadian settlers in the Attakapas district, the Rev. Jean-Louis de Civrey accompanied the Acadians on their journey down the Bayou Teche. Civrey became the first resident priest. In his records, Civrey refers to his new home as “la Nouvelle Acadie” and his new parish “l’Église des Attakapas (Attakapas Church)” and later, “lÉglise St-Martin de Tours (St. Martin de Tours Church).
“It is believed that St. Martinville is named after the church. Having the Catholic priest accompany the Acadians on their journey to Acadiana is indicative of our ancestors’ great allegiance to their Catholic faith, especially the Eucharist and Our Lady. Fête-Dieu du Teche today relives that original experience of the Acadians.”
Hundreds will travel by boat to celebrate this occasion in honoring the Blessed Sacrament and Acadian heritage. Last year the event was held on the Vermilion river to help celebrate the centennial of the Diocese of Lafayette. Thousands traveled from throughout Louisiana and beyond to participate in the event.
Many participated in the Eucharistic Procession by boat and others traveling by car and gathering along the banks of the bayou at the various stops. The Rev. Jeremy Zipple, SJ, traveled from New York to do a documentary on the Fête in 2017. He recounts, “I found the whole thing incredibly moving. It was beautiful to see an entire town coming together for prayer. It’s a sense of communal identity we just don’t see much anymore in the Western world.”
Bishop John Douglas Deshotel, D.D., a native son of Acadiana and the current bishop of the Diocese of Lafayette, will begin this year’s event by celebrating the Mass of the Assumption in French at St. Leo the Great Church in Leonville at 8 am.
The Acadian flag, both Canadian and Louisiana Acadian, highlights the centrality of Our Lady of the Assumption for the Acadian people.
The gold star on a white field represents “Our Lady of the Assumption,” patroness of the Acadians. When the first settlers departed France for the New World, the Virgin Mary was highly revered. It was a period of great devotion to the Virgin. The King of France, Louis XIII, and Pope Pius XI declared the Virgin Mary the patroness of the kingdom, (patronne de Royaume) and patroness saint of all the Acadians in Canada, Louisiana and elsewhere.
On Aug. 15, 1638, France and her colonies were consecrated to Mary under the title “Our Lady of the Assumption.”
Bishop Douglas Deshotel, who will begin the day with a French Mass of the Assumption at St. Leo the Great in Leonville, said, “I have been edified by the devotion and participation of so many priests, deacons, religious and lay faithful. I think such a public Eucharistic celebration is an excellent manifestation of the new evangelization that we so desperately need.”
Bishop Glen Provost, a native son of the Diocese of Lafayette and bishop of Lafayette’s daughter diocese, the Diocese of Lake Charles, reflecting on Fête-Dieu du Teche says, “Let us remember that the Acadians and French who first settled in our area were Catholic, and in the case of the Acadians were expelled from Nova Scotia primarily because they were Catholic. It is our history we remember. It is our faith we celebrate. It is our Lord we adore and worship.” Champagne adds, “We need a day that is a true ‘feast day,’ in the old sense of the word — a holiday that’s truly a Holy Day … where we can really, all day long, have a feast day. Such is our celebration Fête-Dieu du Teche!” I
In his homily at St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church last year Bishop Provost quoted Lafayette’s second bishop, Bishop Maurice Schexnayder who predicted, “The waters of the Teche will be drained to the ground before the people of Acadiana lose their Catholic Faith.” Such a large throng of faithful gathering on the Feast of the Assumption for Fête-Dieu du Teche points to the veracity of the bishop’s prophecy.

Radio logs for July 1

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.

Friday, June 28

8:53 a.m. Bowman Street between Sixth Street and Federal Avenue; Frequent patrol.

9:11 a.m. 900 block of David Drive; Complaint.

9:24 a.m. 600 block of Egle Street; Warrant check.

9:46 a.m. 500 block of Aucoin Street; Warrant check.

10:34 a.m. 7800 block of La. 182; Suspicious person.

11:23 a.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Assistance.

12:52 p.m. 6400 block of La. 182; Accident.

1:26 p.m. 1100 block of Federal Avenue; Tree branch in road.

2:11 p.m. Federal Avenue and Julia Street; Suspicious vehicle.

3:52 p.m. La. 70/ U.S. 90 Junction; Stalled vehicle.

4:20 p.m. Shaw Drive; Info for previous case.

8:56 p.m. 1000 block of Onstead Street; Disturbance.

9:18 p.m. 300 block of Second Street; Complaint.

9:57 p.m. 500 block of Orange Street; Disturbance.

10:13 p.m. 1200 block of Railroad Avenue; Medical.

10:36 p.m. 1400 block of Youngs Road; Suspicious vehicle.

10:48 p.m. 600 block of Egle Street; Complaint.

Saturday, June 29

1:28 a.m. 1000 block of Front Street; Fire.

4:33 a.m. 1000 block of Second Street; Complaint.

9:32 a.m. Lake End Park; Animal complaint.

10:29 a.m. Teche Regional Medical Center; Accident.

10:31 a.m. 2100 block of Maple Street; Complaint.

10:41 a.m. 700 block of Brashear Avenue; Accident.

12:12 p.m. Sixth and Louisiana streets; Loud music.

1:06 p.m. 1100 block of Levee Road; Theft.

1:16 p.m. 6300 block of La. 182; Fight.

1:23 p.m. 700 block of Everett Street; Medical emergency.

1:36 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Animal complaint.

1:52 p.m. Cypress Trailer Park; Loud music.

2:31 p.m. 6200 block of La. 182; Assistance.

3:51 p.m. 900 block of Marguerite Street; Complaint.

4:50 p.m. 700 block of General Hodges Street; Complaint.

10:49 p.m. Veteran’s Boulevard; Suspicious vehicle.

11:09 p.m. 1000 block of Eighth Street; Complaint.

11:28 p.m. 1600 block of Federal Avenue; Medical.

11:36 p.m. 2500 block of Elm Street; Complaint.

Sunday, June 30

12:01 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Alarm.

12:34 a.m. 600 block of Greenwood Street; 911 hang up.

1:58 a.m. 300 block of Garber Street; Medical.

3:34 a.m. 500 block of Leona Street; Medical.

2:13 p.m. 200 block of Belanger Street; Fight.

3:28 p.m. 700 block of Duke Street; Complaint.

3:37 p.m. 3000 block of Carrol Drive; Animal complaint.

4:08 p.m. 2000 block of Maple Street; Medical emergency.

5:02 p.m. Berwick; Assistance.

5:38 p.m. 900 block of Florence Street; Removal of subject.

5:40 p.m. 900 block of Martin Luther King Boulevard; Alarm.

Fundraiser shows need for kidney disease research

For Melissa Naquin, the importance of trying to find a cure to chronic kidney disease is all too real as doctors try to save the kidney she donated to her 13-year-old daughter, Alyse.

Naquin, who lives in Lafayette, attended NephCure Kidney International’s inaugural Boogie on the Bayou fundraiser Saturday at Gros’ Marina in support of her daughter.

NephCure is a nonprofit dedicated to accelerating research for effective treatments for rare forms of nephrotic syndrome and to provide education and support that will improve the lives of those affected by these protein-spilling kidney diseases, according to its website.

Donna Phenald, NephCure’s community fundraising coordinator in Louisiana, is a cousin of Leroy Gros, who owns Gros’ Marina. Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser served as honorary chairman of this year’s event. Organizers sold food, had live and silent auctions, and Ryan Foret & Foret Tradition performed during the benefit.

Nephrotic syndrome is not a disease itself, but rather a set of signs and symptoms that result from damage in the kidney’s filtering, the organization says. A properly functioning kidney filters waste and toxins from the blood.

Naquin is headed to New Orleans this week to try to determine how to save the kidney she gave her daughter, Alyse, in December 2018.

“Without us raising money, none of these cures can be found. None of these studies can be performed,” Naquin said.

Alyse was diagnosed in May 2017 with nephrotic syndrome and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, known as FSGS, a cause of nephrotic syndrome. FSGS attacks the kidney’s filtering units causing serious scarring, which leads to permanent kidney damage and even failure, according to NephCure.

Her disease quickly progressed, and Alyse went through peritoneal dialysis. A month after Alyse’s kidney transplant, the disease reoccurred with the new kidney.

Naquin stayed with her daughter in New Orleans trying to reverse the disease without any progress. On May 1, Alyse went to Delaware to begin a clinical trial in which NephCure is involved.

Last week, the family found out that the clinical trial was unsuccessful for Alyse, who was the only trial participant that didn’t go into remission.

“But because of NephCure, there are other things that we can try,” Naquin said.

The family is going back to New Orleans to try to determine what to do next to save the transplanted kidney.

NephCure is pushing to create a bionic kidney that Naquin says would probably be Alyse’s best option. Her disease could not attack a bionic kidney unlike it can with a regular kidney, Melissa Naquin said.

A bionic kidney is as small as a pacemaker and can do the functions of a kidney. Individuals with bionic kidneys would be able to live the rest of their lives without needing dialysis, she said.

Nathan Roy, 33, of Baton Rouge, was diagnosed with FSGS when he was 12 years old, and his father learned about NephCure shortly after the organization started. For many years, Roy didn’t want to talk about the disease. But in recent years, he’s decided to be more open about his story and proactive in supporting efforts to find a cure.

About 9,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with these rare chronic kidney diseases each year, and more than half are children, Roy said.

“The defining moment with me getting involved was seeing a child that should’ve been in kindergarten on dialysis from this disease,” he said.

Roy has had three kidney transplants and the disease came back each time. He’s spent about 16 years on dialysis and has dialysis every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. He’s able to work part-time on Tuesdays and Thursdays and spends many of his weekends volunteering for NephCure.

Another fundraiser attendee with chronic kidney disease was Lane Bordelon, 14, of White Castle. He was diagnosed with nephrotic syndrome at age 3. He was on steroids for a couple of years until doctors found the right medicine to keep him in remission. He stayed in remission for five years before he relapsed, his mother, Christina Bordelon, said.

A new doctor then diagnosed Lane with FSGS and his family learned about NephCure. But another doctor later determined that Lane didn’t have FSGS and had minimal change disease, the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome in children where there’s little or no change to the kidney’s filtering units and no kidney scarring, NephCure’s website says.

Even though Lane didn’t have FSGS, his family has continued to support NephCure, because “FSGS is an absolutely horrible disease,” his mother said.

To learn more about nephrotic syndrome, FSGS and NephCure Kidney International, visit nephcure.org.

The Killings of Jules Darden and Oliver Paul

(Editor’s Note: This is not a news story; nor is it a feature story. It is a recollection of a time the author did not live, but the events of that time have been handed down via oral tradition and outside documentation of the Chitimacha People. It is a snapshot of an era long forgotten by most, held close to the heart by a few.)
Dr. Mark Raymond Harrington was born in 1882.
He was an anthropologist and archaeologist most renowned as the curator of archaeology for the Southwest Museum from 1928-1964, and is regarded as a pioneer in Native American studies. He died in 1971.
Known as “M.R.” by his closest friends and associates, Harrington’s thousands of papers include a brief discussion on the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana at The Society of American Indians conference the week of Oct. 2-7, 1912, at Ohio State University.
Titled “Grievances of the Chitimacha Indians Living Near Charenton, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana,” Harrington’s remarks were delivered at the behest of a formerly powerful indigenous people “very much disturbed over some recent murders of members of their tribe by white men who were never brought to justice.”
***
Oddly enough, it took a hobby of mine 23 years ago to resurrect the memory of my grandmother, Faye Rogers Stouff, wife of Emile Anatole Stouff, at her kitchen table, drinking coffee and telling me about our people.
In 1840, a young Indian man set out to build a home on Bayou Teche just outside of Charenton.
His name was Alexander Darden, and he was my ancestral uncle. He built, with the help of other tribal members, a three-room house that was, at times, home to two or three families.
This was 122 years after the war between my ancestors and the French that lasted from 1706 to 1718. After the truce was made, the Chitimacha—who once were the most powerful tribe in the state, occupying nearly a third of its lower reaches—virtually vanished from any historical record until the late 1800s.
I live in that home today, though much altered over the nearly 180 years hence; it has been added to, renovated, restored, raised, roofed and fussed over. A portrait of Alexander hangs on the wall inside.
In 1883, Albert S. Gatschet visited the tribe on behalf of the U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology, and those long-secluded indigenous people emerged from a cultural blackout of more than a century.
***
Harrington said in 1912, “The murderers were not even arrested; consequently the Indians go about their work in fear of their lives.”
The professor was not one to mince words. The Indians wished to move away from such a darkness that had come upon them to “raise their children without the feeling that they were bringing them up only for some drunken white men to kill.” The Chitimacha asked Harrington to “lay the facts before some officer of the government” to prompt an investigation.
“I took evidence in (two cases) from Benjamin Paul, the Chitimacha Chief, and from Christine Paul, his wife, (and) from Delphine Stouff, a Chitimacha woman, and Octave Stouff, her white husband.”
Of the two cases Harrington was asked to relay to officials, the first was on Christmas Day, 1901. He called it “the cold-blooded slaughter of and Indian woman and two Indian men, entirely innocent of wrong-doing, in their yard…by three white men.”
The second was, he said, “the murder of an Indian in a barroom at Charenton, at the hands of white men, identity not known” on Feb. 23, 1908.
***
Sometimes, when I make my drive to work, or divert on my way home to pick up a few groceries at Raintree Market, I am reminded that beyond the well-lit course of Ralph Darden Memorial Parkway and the tall red spire of the casino that has brought prosperity to a people who just over a century ago hid away in the swamps to survive annihilation, I think of those long ago crimes.
Christmas Eve, 1901. I recall Christmas Eves through the eyes of a child, gazing at the presents under the tree, the smell of mom’s exquisite dinner, my grandparents with us at the table. But Oliver Paul and Jules Darden, on the day before Christ’s birth, could not have known what lay ahead.
This is history, scrutinized with full consideration of the people who relayed it to Harrington. It is today shrouded in the mists of time. Stories, as are their nature, are seen through the eyes of witnesses, or from the mouths of others. It is human nature that we take the sides of those like us, and eschew the perception of the other. There are names in these stories that, out of respect, shall not be written, except for those who were acting in an official capacity of that day and place. Of the dead, their honor is in their naming.
***
Harrington continued in his speech to the conference, “Gabriel Mora, an Indian, had been drinking a little and got into a fight with a Negro at Charenton, no harm resulting to either combatant. Jules Darden, another Indian, took Mora home and went back (to Charenton) to buy something for Christmas.
“When he was in Charenton he was accosted by Alfred Pecot, a deputy sheriff, who demanded to know what he had been doing. Darden replied that he had not been doing anything…as he had not been mixed up in the fight. The deputy tried to strike him, but the Indian held the officer off. While they were scuffling, the crowd attacked the Indian, threw him down and beat him severely. Darden would have been killed if it had not been for his sister, Delphine Stouff, who dragged him unconscious away from the crowd.
“The deputy wanted to shoot her, but someone in the crowd persuaded him to refrain.”
It was Christmas morning that the deputy, Alfred Pecot, accompanied by two other men, returned to the house of the Paul family. They called out Oliver Paul, an Indian, who had nothing to do with the fight, Harrington said.
Three of the Paul men went to the gate to meet the arrivals, unarmed, while the others had guns. “They found that the white(s) wanted to arrest the boy Oliver, but would not tell what he was charged with and had no warrant to show.”
Oliver came from the house and denied that he had done anything wrong. The deputy drew his handcuffs and ordered the boy to come to him. Frightened by the guns and handcuffs, Oliver fled.
“The boy turned and started to run back to the house, when he was fired upon by all three whites and instantly killed,” Harrington relayed. “Three Winchester balls penetrated his body.”
His father cried, “You have killed my boy!” and the white men knocked him down with their guns and began to beat him, when the old man’s daughter, Jules Darden’s wife, ran out and tried to stop them. They shot her in the head and she died shortly thereafter.”
What followed could have been much worse, but Harrington reports that “when Jules heard his wife’s scream he fired at the white (man) from the window with a shotgun. The whites left in a hurry and gathered a mob in Charenton to come back and massacre all the Indians.” However, local priests intervened and stopped the bulk of the violence.
The sheriff came the next day and arrested the Indian men involved, held them in jail on charges of resisting an officer, and they were later released. The murderers, Harrington said, were never arrested.
Of Jules, his miseries were not over. On Feb. 22, 1908, he went to the barroom. Harrington wrote that he “never went armed, and had always borne a good reputation. At 11 o’clock that night, two colored boys, one 12 years old, the other 14, brought back his body in a wagon, fairly cut to pieces, thirteen cuts on his body and his skull crushed. Although he was still alive when brought in, he died shortly after.”
The case did go before the St. Mary Parish Grand Jury, which returned a “no true bill.”
***
Regrettably, there are no known photos of Jules Darden or Oliver Paul.
The Paul home still stands, just down the road from mine, constructed within the same approximate time period and style of the era. I pass it every day, to and from work, or elsewhere. There is little to no word of what other members of the tribe did, or did not do, what they felt or how they reacted, other than Harrington’s description of their plea to move elsewhere, which was obviously never accomplished.
The tribe’s fortunes were never rosy, but they did improve with the assistance of an unexpected source: Tabasco.
Sisters Sarah McIlhenny and Mary Bradford learned about the majestic baskets crafted just a couple dozen miles from the salt dome on Avery Island near New Iberia, and embarked on a mission to not only empower Chitimacha women, but also provide revenue.
Those baskets were sold by art dealers and shops in cities far and wide. Moreso, when the sheriff ordered tax sales of the Indians’ scant acreage of land, which they were still unable to pay, the sisters stepped in and paid the taxes, and further, used their clout to have Congress put the property into federal trust protection.
My grandmother told me this story when I was far too young to understand the ramifications, the meaning of it. It stuck with me for a long, long time, but the passing of years tucked it away somewhere in the far reaches of my memory, seldom touched.
Then there was that hobby I mentioned.
I’ve many hobbies, one of which is metal detecting. It was something I picked up back in the mid-1990s and eventually gave up in the early 2000s until just a few months ago. I have been searching my property, found a few decent coins, mostly iron and junk.
But in my front yard, the first time I was detecting, I unearthed the history of what has been related here.
Within a space perhaps 20x20 feet square I dug 10 bullets, ranging from round “musket” type to rifle and pistol rounds, all concentrated in that area. I had completely forgotten about my discovery all these years later. But last week, I unearthed another small caliber lead slug in the same area.
It all came back to me then. My grandmother, weaving a traditional Chitimacha basket, the steaming coffee cup on the table, the stories she told me…including the deaths of Jules Darden and Oliver Paul.
Certainly, the evidence is circumstantial. Yet, the events my grandmother related largely coincide with what Harrington was told so long ago. In her telling and in my mind’s eye, there was a gunfight, and there were Indian men beyond the gate between the house and the old dirt road, perhaps sheltered behind a tree or some long-ago outbuilding, and 11 bullets bear witness to a time when there were no laws to protect the people living on that bend of Bayou Teche. The bang of percussion caps, perhaps old muzzleloaders, small caliber arms, still resound in the crisp, cool air of Christmas, 1901 and February, 1908.
These are but two stories, there are most certainly more. They float, sometimes, into our presence, because the Indian lived in circular time, wherein the past will now-and-then return to the present, and all things circle back to where they began.
And in their telling, there is a message that I hope we descendants of those who died will also bear close to the heart:
“We are still here.”

Bear refuge may block drainage

With recent flooding issues in the Garden Center and Franklin area, St. Mary Parish Councilman Dale Rogers says there may be an issue with drainage south of US 90.
Rogers told the parish council Wednesday that he met with local officials, recently and that “the water from the north side of US 90 can’t get to the south quick enough to get it out.”
Rogers added, “The biggest issue is that once the water gets past US 90 on the south side, the farmers are digging drainage canals and ditches to move the water south. When it hits the Bayou Teche National Refuge, the bear refuge, it stops. We have no right-of-ways, we have no permitting opportunities, as of now, to go in that area and create some ditches to get the water south. So they’re actually causing a big, big issue when we have a big rainfall and start seeing parts of Garden City and Franklin flooding. It’s because the water gets stopped at the bear refuge.” He said Chief Administrative Officer Henry “Bo” LaGrange will organize meetings with US Wildlife & Fisheries.
“We need to pay attention to that, and these land owners that are selling their properties to the state to create a bear refuge, that’s fine, that’s great, but they have to allow us right-of-ways or permit opportunities to have drainage facilities go in there and get the water south,” Rogers said.
LaGrange said the meeting will include drainage district, parish officials, DOTD and others “to discuss the cross drains on highway 90. The second meeting is with US Fish & Wildlife…to discuss what requirements to allow the drainage district or farmers north of the refuge to open up the ditches.”

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