Bastrop, Louisiana Bastrop, Louisiana North Entrance, Bastrop, LA, City Hall IMG 2822.JPG North entrance to Bastrop City Hall, designed by small-town architect Hugh G.

Location of Bastrop in Louisiana Location of Louisiana in the United States Bastrop is the biggest city in and the church seat of Morehouse Parish, Louisiana. The populace was 11,365 at the 2010 census, a decline of 1,623 from the 12,988 tabulation of 2000.

The populace of Bastrop is 73 percent African American. It is the principal town/city of and is encompassed in the Bastrop, Louisiana Micropolitan Statistical Area, which is encompassed in the Monroe-Bastrop, Louisiana Combined Statistical Area.

2.2 Poultry plant shutdowns affect Bastrop 8.10 Bastrop High School Prayer Controversy Bastrop was established by the Baron de Bastrop (born Felipe Enrique Neri), a Dutch businessman accused as an embezzler.

Afterwards, he moved to Texas, where he claimed to oppose the sale of Louisiana to the United States, and became a minor government official.

Bastrop formally incorporated in 1857, and is the commercial and industrialized center of Morehouse Parish.

In the 19th century, it was notable as the edge of the great north Louisiana swamp, but more favorable terrain resulted in the antebellum rail line connecting to Monroe, Louisiana, further to the south.

Bastrop was a Confederate stronghold amid the American Civil War until January 1865, when 3,000 cavalrymen led by Colonel E.D.

Landing first in southeastern Arkansas, Osband and his men began foraging for supplies into Louisiana and established command posts at Bastrop.

Mc - Neill was camped near Oak Ridge in Morehouse Parish with 800 men, he sent a brigade into the area.

During the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, Bastrop was the site of a relief camp for refugees.

Bastrop is also the church seat of Morehouse Parish and is inside an region marketed to tourists as the Sportsman's Paradise Region of Louisiana.

Bastrop is home to the Snyder Museum and Creative Arts Center, homed in the about 1929 home of a small-town family.

The Bastrop region economy is largely based on forestry, cotton and rice farming, and potato shipping.

Barham's Drugs on the courthouse square in Bastrop was formerly owned and directed by Henry Alfred Barham, Jr.

Barham, originally educated in home financial and business trends at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, was the first woman pharmacist in Morehouse Parish and a graduate of the pharmacy school at the University of Louisiana at Monroe.

She was a two-term member of the Morehouse Parish School Board. Alfred Barham was an older brother of Mack Barham, a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, and a distant cousin of State Senators Robert J.

On November 21, 2008, International Paper Company, the biggest area employer, announced the cessation of operations of its Bastrop mill.

Clarence Hawkins, then the Bastrop mayor, predicted that the impact of the closure would be felt throughout northeastern Louisiana and southern Arkansas because employees and suppliers come from all over the region. Then Governor Bobby Jindal deployed a Louisiana Work Force Commission team to open an knowledge center in Bastrop.

Three months after the announcement of the International Paper foundry closing, Pilgrim's Pride, a poultry company, confirmed the closure of operations in close-by Arcadia in Bienville Parish, Athens in Claiborne Parish, Choudrant in Lincoln Parish, and Farmerville in Union Parish.

Eisenstadt (born 1954), an financial and business trends professor at the University of Louisiana at Monroe, told The Shreveport Times that the closures, unlike previous exits of State Farm Insurance and International Paper, will have a excessive impact on lower-income workers: "This is our biggest employer of low- to medium-skilled workers.

Then Bastrop Mayor Clarence Hawkins estimated about five hundred, or nearly half of the Pilgrim's Pride refining plant workers in Farmerville commuted from Bastrop, many in vans running on a regular schedule. With Louisiana state assistance, Foster Farms did procure the former Pilgrim's Pride company, which also closed plants in Farmerville, Louisiana, and El Dorado, Arkansas.

CEO Chuck Davis traveled to Morehouse Parish, Louisiana to announce plans to build a wood pellet facility in Bastrop and a storage-and-shipping facility at the Port of Greater Baton Rouge.

The universal was instead of and the plant was commissioned in 2015 adding 79 new direct jobs, with 64 of the jobs positioned at the Bastrop wood pellet facility.

Morehouse Parish School Board - 700 City of Bastrop - 175 Bastrop is positioned at 32 46 40 N 91 54 54 W (32.777855, 91.914944). It is situated at the crossroads of U.S.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 8.9 square miles (23 km2), all of it land.

As of the 2010 census Bastrop had a populace of 11,365.

1023rd Engineer Company (Vertical) of the 528th Engineer Battalion of the 225th Engineer Brigade is positioned in Bastrop.

Bastrop is governed by a mayor and board of aldermen.

Hawkins had been the first black to serve in the top municipal position in Bastrop history. Jones will seek to attract new lesser industries to Bastrop to fill part of the void left by the method in 2008 of the International Paper mill. De - Blieux, a former state senator from Baton Rouge who spent his later years in the Bastrop area, was among the first white politicians in Louisiana to support the civil rights agenda.

The Bastrop City Hall and Police Station were designed by native son Hugh G.

Bastrop and Morehouse Parish are served by a daily newspaper, the Bastrop Daily Enterprise.

The Morehouse Parish School Board operates all enhance schools inside the City of Bastrop and Morehouse Parish.

Bastrop High School Bastrop Learning Academy - an Alternative School for students that prepares them for Career and Workforce Training Prairie View Academy - the only Private School in Bastrop and Morehouse Parish serving grades Pre - K 3 through 12th Prairie View Academy Morehouse Parish Library in Bastrop The City of Bastrop is home to two enhance libraries.

Louisiana Delta Community College (Bastrop Campus & Bastrop Airport Campus) The City of Bastrop offers its people and church with two campuses of its Region Community and Technical College System.

Next to to the City's and Parish Main Airport which is the Morehouse Memorial Airport.

University of Louisiana at Monroe(about 20 miles; Monroe, LA; FT enrollment: 8,526) Louisiana Delta Community College (Main ground about 20 miles; Monroe, LA; FT enrollment: 2,587) Northeast Louisiana Technical College Delta Ouachita Main Campus (about 23 miles; West Monroe, LA; FT enrollment: 1,536) Louisiana Tech University (about 60 miles; Ruston, LA; FT enrollment: 11,271) Bastrop High School was the scene of controversy in 2011 over the utterance of a Christian prayer at the annual graduation exercises.

Bastrop High School Prayer Controversy In 2011, graduating senior Damon Fowler objected to prayer at the Bastrop High School graduation exercises, claiming a looming violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana asked the school not to include a prayer in the May 20 graduation. At the Thursday evening rehearsal for the graduation, senior Sarah Barlow encompassed a prayer that explicitly mentioned Jesus Christ, and amid the graduation, student Laci Mattice led citizens in the Lord's Prayer before a moment of silence.

Historic First United Methodist Church dates to 1826 in Bastrop; the current downtown sanctuary was instead of in 1924.

First Baptist Church of Bastrop The unusually configured First Church of God in Bastrop is positioned athwart the street from the Morehouse Parish Library.

Farmers Market in Bastrop Central Fire Station in Bastrop Bastrop has two chapters of Louisiana Technical College.

Bastrop welcome sign Keith Babb, KNOE-TV personality before to 1971; principal auctioneer of American Quarter Horse, reared in Bastrop Caldwell, Louisiana educator, was Morehouse Parish school superintendent from 1915 to 1922.

Stump Edington, Major League Baseball player who died in Bastrop David 'Bo' Ginn, state senator from Morehouse Parish from 1980 to 1988 Sam Hanna, Sr., journal publisher began his journalism longterm position at the Bastrop Daily Enterprise.

Ed Head, Major League Baseball player who died in Bastrop.

The Hemphills, Eight-time winning GMA Dove Award winners; established former gospel music singing group in Bastrop in 1967 William Kennon Henderson, Jr., founder of airways broadcast KWKH in Shreveport, Louisiana, was born in Bastrop in 1880. Mable John, Motown Records singer, was born in Bastrop.

Sam Little, member of Louisiana House of Representatives from Bastrop from 2008 to 2012 Calvin Natt, National Basketball Association player who was born in Monroe, but attended Bastrop High School, later NLU and was an NBA All-Star with the Denver Nuggets.

Rueben Randle, LSU Tigers football, Wide Receiver, and led Bastrop High School to a State Championship, was drafted by the New York Giants in the 2012 draft John Wesley Ryles, Country singer was born in Bastrop in 1950.

Talance Sawyer, was also born in Bastrop and later played for the Minnesota Vikings.

Pat Williams, NFL player who was born in Bastrop and played for the Minnesota Vikings.

"Bastrop (city), Louisiana".

Winters, The Civil War in Louisiana, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1963, ISBN 0-8071-0834-0, pp.

Greg Hilburn, "Bastrop foundry closes; 550 lose jobs" Archived August 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine., Monroe News Star, November 22, 2008, p.

Greg Hilburn, "Jindal: Bastrop is a top before ity: State will do all it can to prop up community" Archived August 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine., Monroe News Star, November 25, 2008 2010 census report for Bastrop, Louisiana Matthew Hamilton, "Alford-Olive unseats Hawkins in Bastrop upset", Monroe News-Star, April 5, 2009 "Cole Avery, "New Bastrop mayor sets goals for first term"".

Louisiana Historical Association, A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography (lahistory.org).

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bastrop, Louisiana.

City of Bastrop Bastrop Progress Community Progress Site for Bastrop, LA Bastrop Daily Enterprise Municipalities and communities of Morehouse Parish, Louisiana, United States Parish seats of Louisiana

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Cities in Louisiana - Parish seats in Louisiana - Cities in Morehouse Parish, Louisiana - 1857 establishments in Louisiana