| By
Carl A. Brasseaux
Louisiana's African-American
population is highly diverse, but three groups are most historically significant:
Creoles of Color, blacks whose ancestors traveled to Louisiana from the East
Coast, and Haitian immigrants.
Creoles
of Color are generally descended from free persons of color--blacks
who were free before the Civil War. Free persons of color, in turn, were usually
descendants of Louisiana's first African slaves who had entered into common
law marriages with white planters. Upon the dissolution of these liaisons,
the planters often freed their mistresses and children and provided them with
land, money, livestock, and, sometimes, slaves. Following the Civil War, the
former free people of color began to identify themselves as Creoles--much
to the horror of the white Creoles. The community, which has retained this
identity to the present, is currently enjoying a cultural renaissance, which
has seen the flowering of Zydeco
music.
African-Americans whose ancestors lived along the East Coast
constitute a large majority of Louisiana's African-American population. Shortly
after the Louisiana Purchase (1803), the United States Congress banned the
importation of foreign slaves into Louisiana. As a consequence, Louisiana
slave dealers were forced to acquire slaves from elsewhere in the United States.
Between 1805 and 1860, slaves making their way to the New Orleans slave markets
were drawn primarily from the surplus slave populations of Virginia and the
Carolinas. These slaves were sent to New Orleans from steamboat ports on the
Ohio and Tennessee rivers, giving rise to the term "being sold down the
river." In Louisiana (particularly southern Louisiana), the Virginia
and Carolina slaves were distinguished from their native-born counterparts
by language and religion. Unlike slaves born in Louisiana during the colonial
era, the newcomers spoke English and were Protestants. The descendants of
these slaves took Anglo surnames (such as Mitchell, Jones, and Handy) in the
1870 census to distinguish themselves from their former French-speaking owners.
Haitian
immigrants have established a significant community in New Orleans over the
past two centuries. These emigrants from Hispañola are by no means the
first to reach Louisiana. During a six-month period in 1809, approximately
10,000 refugees from Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti) arrived at New Orleans,
doubling the Crescent City's population. Approximately one-third of the refugees
were free persons of color and an additional one-third were slaves (primarily
domestics). The vast majority of these refugees established themselves permanently
in the Crescent City.
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