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Grant Parish, Louisiana

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Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Grant Parish, Louisiana.

Grant was one of several new parishes created by the Reconstruction legislature in an attempt to build the Republican Party. Founded in 1869, it was named for U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant.

The gubernatorial election of 1872 was disputed, leading to both parties' certifying their slates of local officers. The election was finally settled in favor of the Republican candidates, but the decision was disputed in certain areas. As social tensions rose, Republican officials took their places at the courthouse in Colfax. They were defended by freedmen and state militia (mostly made up of freedmen), who feared a Democratic Party takeover of the parish. Amid widespread rumors, whites organized a militia and advanced on the courthouse on Easter Sunday, 1873. In the ensuing violence, three whites and 120-150 blacks were killed, including 50 that night who were held as prisoners. Leading 20th-century historians renamed the Colfax Riot, the original state designation, as the Colfax Massacre. The total number of freedmen deaths were never established because some of the bodies were thrown into the river and woods.

The white militia was led by Christopher Columbus Nash, a Confederate officer who had been a prisoner of war at Johnson's Island in Ohio. It consisted of veterans from Grant and neighboring parishes. The following year, Nash gathered many of the white militia members as the basis of the first chapter of the White League. Other chapters quickly grew up across the state. The White League's organized violence in support of the Democratic Party included widespread intimidation of black voters. The League was integral to white Democrats' regaining power in the state by 1876.

Adjacent Parishes

Towns, Villages & Communities

  • Aloha
  • Bentley
  • Colfax (Parish Seat)
  • Dry Prong
  • Fishville
  • Georgetown
  • Hargis
  • Montgomery
  • Oak Grove
  • Pollock
  • Prospect
  • Rock Hill
  • Selma
  • Verda

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Louisiana

Links

Wikipedia

Genealogy Trails

Kisatchie National Forest (part)

Red River Historian: Colfax

Genealogy Village

LAGHN

USGW Archives

The 1873 Colfax Massacre

National Register of Historic Places

LA Gen Web

New Horizons Genealogy



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