20 Louisiana Plantations: Telling The Truth Behind The Big Houses

These 20 Louisiana plantations reveal the truth behind the big houses — stories of enslaved people whose lives, labor, and resilience built the state.

1. Whitney Plantation — St. John the Baptist Parish

Enslaved people: ~100

Known for: The only Louisiana plantation museum fully dedicated to the lives of the enslaved; unmatched archival records.

2. Evergreen Plantation — St. John the Baptist Parish

Enslaved people: ~103

Known for: The best-preserved slave quarters in the United States, with 22 original cabins.

3. Oak Alley Plantation — St. James Parish

Enslaved people: 110–120

Known for: The iconic oak-lined avenue and large-scale sugar production.

4. Laura (Duparc) Plantation — St. James Parish

Enslaved people: 60–70

Known for: Exceptionally detailed Creole slave narratives and family records, including the stories of enslaved women.

5. Destrehan Plantation — St. Charles Parish

Enslaved people: ~200

Known for: Its connection to the 1811 German Coast Slave Revolt and the trials that followed.

6. Houmas House — Ascension Parish

Enslaved people: 150–300

Known for: One of the wealthiest sugar plantations in Louisiana, often called the “Sugar Palace.”

7. Nottoway Plantation — Iberville Parish

Enslaved people: 150+

Known for: The largest surviving plantation home in the South; a symbol of luxury made possible by enslaved labor.

8. Ashland–Belle Helene Plantation — Ascension Parish

Enslaved people: ~150

Known for: Its monumental Greek Revival mansion and extensive sugar operations.

9. Magnolia Plantation — Natchitoches Parish

Enslaved people: 70–90

Known for: Preserved slave quarters; part of Cane River Creole National Historical Park.

10. Oakland Plantation — Natchitoches Parish

Enslaved people: 100+

Known for: Multi-generational enslaved families; one of the best-documented Creole plantations in the state.

11. Rosedown Plantation — West Feliciana Parish

Enslaved people: 150–450

Known for: One of the wealthiest antebellum estates, built and sustained by a massive enslaved workforce.

12. Greenwood Plantation — West Feliciana Parish

Enslaved people: ~150

Known for: Cotton wealth and its distinctive columned architecture.

13. Butler–Greenwood Plantation — West Feliciana Parish

Enslaved people: 50–75

Known for: Extensive family papers documenting Creole domestic slavery.

14. Madewood Plantation — Assumption Parish

Enslaved people: 100–120

Known for: Sugar production and its striking Greek Revival mansion.

15. Shadows-on-the-Teche — Iberia Parish

Enslaved people: ~80

Known for: Plantation diaries that detail the daily labor of the enslaved; sugar cultivation.

16. Belle Grove Plantation — Iberville Parish

Enslaved people: ~150

Known for: Once one of Louisiana’s largest plantations; destroyed by fire in 1952.

17. Live Oak Plantation — East Baton Rouge Parish

Enslaved people: 60–80

Known for: Sugar and livestock operations; a rural enslaved community.

18. Bocage Plantation — Ascension Parish

Enslaved people: 60–70

Known for: Classic Creole architectural style and sugar production.

19. Fairview Plantation — St. Charles Parish

Enslaved people: ~100

Known for: Sugar cultivation and ties to prominent Creole families.

20. Columbia Plantation (Columbia Hall) — West Baton Rouge Parish

Enslaved people: 80–100

Known for: A major sugar-producing plantation along the Mississippi River corridor.

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