Baton Rouge, Louisiana "Baton Rouge"

Baton Rouge .

Baton Rouge, Louisiana City of Baton Rouge Long Memorial in the State Capitol Gardens, the Varsity Theatre near LSU, and the Louisiana State Capitol in downtown Baton Rouge.

Long Memorial in the State Capitol Gardens, the Varsity Theatre near LSU, and the Louisiana State Capitol in downtown Baton Rouge.

Flag of Baton Rouge, Louisiana Flag Official seal of Baton Rouge, Louisiana Location in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana and the state of Louisiana Location in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana and the state of Louisiana Baton Rouge is positioned in the US Baton Rouge - Baton Rouge Parish East Baton Rouge Parish Baton Rouge (/ b t n ru / bat- n roozh; French for "Red Stick", French: Baton-Rouge [b t u ] ( listen)) is the capital of the U.S.

It forms the church seat of East Baton Rouge Parish and is positioned on the easterly bank of the Mississippi River.

As the Capital city, Baton Rouge is the political core for Louisiana, and is the second-largest town/city in the state after New Orleans, with an estimated populace of 228,590 in 2015. The urbane region surrounding the city, known as Greater Baton Rouge, is also the second-largest in Louisiana, with a populace of 830,480 citizens as of 2015. The urban region has around 594,309 inhabitants.

Baton Rouge is a primary industrial, petrochemical, medical, research, motion picture, and burgeoning technology center of the American South.

The Port of Greater Baton Rouge is the tenth biggest in the United States in terms of tonnage shipped, and is the farthest upstream Mississippi River port capable of handling Panamax ships. The Baton Rouge region owes its historical importance to its strategic site upon the Istrouma Bluff, the first natural bluff upriver from the Mississippi River Delta.

It was ruled by seven different governments: French, British, and Spanish in the colonial era, West Floridian, United States territory and state, Confederate, and United States again.

Main articles: History of Baton Rouge and Timeline of Baton Rouge, Louisiana Human surroundingion in the Baton Rouge region has been dated to 12000 6500 BC based on evidence found along the Mississippi, Comite, and Amite rivers. Earthwork mounds were assembled by hunter-gatherer societies in the Middle Archaic period, from roughly the 4th millennium BC. The Proto-Muskogean language divided into its descendant languages by about 1000 BC; a cultural boundary between either side of Mobile Bay and the Black Warrior River began to appear between about 1200 BC and 500 BC, a reconstructioncalled the Middle "Gulf Formational Stage".

Pierre Le Moyne, Sieur d'Iberville, titled Baton Rouge and lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas in the early French colonial era.

The French name le baton rouge ("the red stick") is the translation of a native term rendered as Istrouma, possibly a corruption of the Choctaw iti humma ("red pole"); Andre-Joseph Penicaut, a carpenter traveling with d'Iberville, presented the first full-length account of the expedition in 1723.

From there [Manchacq] we went five leagues higher and found very high banks called ecorts in that region, and in savage called Istrouma which means red stick [baton rouge], as at this place there is a post painted red that the savages have sunk there to mark the territory line between the two nations, namely: the territory of the Bayagoulas which they were leaving and the territory of another country thirty leagues upstream from the baton rouge titled the Oumas.

The settlement of Baton Rouge by Europeans began in 1721 when a military post was established by French colonists.

Since European settlement, Baton Rouge has been governed by France, Britain, Spain, Louisiana, the Republic of West Florida, the Confederate States, and the United States.

Baton Rouge was incorporated in 1817.

The site has been used by the Spanish, French, British, Confederate States Army, and United States Army and was part of the short-lived Republic of West Florida. In 1951, ownership of the barracks was transferred to the State of Louisiana, and in 1976 it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1846, the state council designated Baton Rouge Louisiana's new capital to replace "sinful" New Orleans.

The architect James Dakin was hired to design the Capitol building in Baton Rouge, with assembly beginning in late 1847. Rather than mimic the federal Capitol in Washington, as many other states had done, he designed a capitol in Neo-Gothic, complete with turrets and crenellations, and stained glass, which overlooks the Mississippi.

Map of Baton Rouge in 1863 By the outbreak of the Civil War, the populace of Baton Rouge was nearly 5,500.

Breckinridge (the former Vice President of the United States) and Daniel Ruggles tried in vain to recapture Baton Rouge.

When the Bourbon Democrats regained power in 1882, they returned the state government to Baton Rouge, where it has since remained.

In his 1893 guidebook, Karl Baedeker described Baton Rouge as "the Capital of Louisiana, a quaint old place with 10,378 inhabitants, on a bluff above the Mississippi". In the 1950s and 1960s, Baton Rouge experienced a boom in the petrochemical industry, causing the town/city to grew away from the initial center.

A building boom that began in the 1990s continued into the 2000s, amid which Baton Rouge was one of the fastest-growing metros/cities in the South in terms of technology, and Metropolitan Baton Rouge was one of the quickest burgeoning urbane areas in the U.S.

(under 1 million), with 602,894 in 2000 and 802,484 citizens as of the 2010 census. Baton Rouge's populace temporarily surged after Hurricane Katrina (2005), as it accepted as many as 200,000 displaced residents.

Baton Rouge as viewed from the International Space Station in May 2011, looking west.

Baton Rouge is positioned on the banks of the Mississippi River in southeastern Louisiana. According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 79.1 square miles (204.9 km2), of which 76.8 square miles (198.9 km2) is territory and 2.2 square miles (5.7 km2) (2.81%) is water.

Baton Rouge is the third southmost capital town/city in the continental United States, after Austin, Texas, and Tallahassee, Florida.

Main article: List of tallest buildings in Baton Rouge Downtown Baton Rouge Downtown Baton Rouge from the observation deck of the Louisiana State Capitol Baton Rouge's tallest buildings are: Marriott Hotel Baton Rouge 22 224 ft (68 m) Main article: Neighborhoods of Baton Rouge Baton Rouge has many neighborhoods both inside and outside the town/city limits: South Baton Rouge Baton Rouge has a humid subtropical climate (Koppen Cfa), with mild winters, hot and humid summers, moderate to heavy rainfall, and the possibility of damaging winds and tornadoes yearlong.

With sizeable precipitation, Baton Rouge is fifth on the list of wettest metros/cities in the United States.

Snow in the Baton Rouge region is usually rare, although it snowed in three consecutive years recently: on December 11, 2008, on December 4, 2009 and on February 12, 2010.

The annual average temperature for Baton Rouge is 67.5 F (19.7 C) while the average temperature for January is 51.21 F (10.67 C) and August is 80.54 F (26.97 C).

Baton Rouge's adjacency to the Gulf of Mexico exposes the urbane region to hurricanes.

On September 1, 2008, Hurricane Gustav hit the town/city and would turn into the worst hurricane ever to hit the Baton Rouge area.

Climate data for Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Metropolitan Airport), 1981 2010 normals Baton Rouge National Cemetery Map of ethnic distribution in Baton Rouge, 2010 U.S.

Baton Rouge appreciates a strong economy that has helped the town/city be ranked as one of the "Top 10 Places for Young Adults" in 2010 by Portfolio Magazine and one of the top 20 metros/cities in North America for economic strength by Brookings. In 2009, the town/city was ranked as the 9th best place in the nation to start a new company by CNN. Lamar Advertising Company has its command posts in Baton Rouge. Baton Rouge is the furthest inland port on the Mississippi River that can accommodate ocean-going tankers and cargo carriers.

The ships transfer their cargo (grain, crude, cars, containers) at Baton Rouge onto rails and pipelines (to travel east-west) or barges (to travel north).

Baton Rouge's biggest industry is petrochemical manufacturing and manufacturing.

Exxon - Mobil's Baton Rouge Refinery complex is the fourth-largest petroleum refinery in the country; it is the world's tenth largest.

Baton Rouge also has rail, highway, pipeline, and deep water access. Dow Chemical Company has a large plant in Iberville Parish near Plaquemine, 17 miles (27 km) south of Baton Rouge. Nan - Ya Technology Corporation has a large facility in North Baton Rouge that makes PVC and CPVC pipes.

As well as being the state capital and church seat, the town/city is the home of Louisiana State University.

One of the biggest single employers in Baton Rouge is the state government, which recently merged all chapters of state government downtown at the "Capitol Park" complex. Long, helped by an emerging medical corridor at Essen Lane/Summa Avenue/Bluebonnet Boulevard, are positioning Baton Rouge to eventually support a medical precinct similar to the Texas Medical Center.

LSU and Tulane have both announced plans to construct satellite medical campuses in Baton Rouge to partner with Our Lady of the Lake Medical Center and Baton Rouge General Medical Center, in the order given. Louisiana State University's Pennington Biomedical Research Center, which conducts clinical and biological research, also contributes to research-related employment in the region around the Baton Rouge medical district.

In September 2013 the Baton Rouge Film Commission reported that the trade had brought more than $90 million into the small-town economy in 2013. Baton Rouge's biggest manufacturing facility is the Celtic Media Centre, opened in 2006 by a small-town group in collaboration with Raleigh Studios of Los Angeles; Raleigh dropped its involvement in 2014. 3 East Baton Rouge Parish Public Schools 6,250 5 City of Baton Rouge - Parish of East Baton Rouge 4,612 6 Exxon - Mobil Chemical - Baton Rouge Refinery 4,213 10 Baton Rouge General Medical Center 2,000 Baton Rouge is the middle ground of South Louisiana cultures, having a mix of Cajun and Creole Catholics and Baptists of the Florida Parishes and South Mississippi.

Baton Rouge is a college town/city with Baton Rouge Community College, Louisiana State University, Our Lady of the Lake College, and Southern University whose students make up some 20% of the town/city population.

This contributes to Baton Rouge's unique culture and its range of heritage. Baton Rouge River Center in Downtown Baton Rouge has an expanding visual arts scene, which is centered downtown.

Several lesser art arcades, including the Baton Rouge Gallery, offering a range of small-town art, are scattered throughout the city.

The show ran in Baton Rouge before going to Fringe, and featured movement, acrobatics, and aerial silk. The Baton Rouge Little Theater offers a diverse selection of live theatre performances.

Opera Louisiane is Baton Rouge's only experienced opera company.

The Baton Rouge Ballet Theatre is Baton Rouge's experienced dance company.

The Nutcracker A Tale from the Bayou sets the familiar holiday classic in 19th-century Louisiana and has turn into a Baton Rouge holiday tradition.

Performing venues include the Baton Rouge River Center, Baton Rouge River Center Theatre for the Performing Arts, which seats approximately 1,900, the Manship Theatre, which is positioned in the Shaw Center for the Arts and seats 350, and the Reilly Theater, which is home to Swine Palace, a non-profit experienced theater business associated with the Louisiana State University Department of Theatre.

The Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra has been in service since 1947 and presently performs at the River Center Music Hall downtown. Today, there are over 60 concerts annually performed by the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra directed by Timothy Muffitt and David Torns. The BRSO's educational component, the Louisiana Youth Orchestra, made its debut in 1984 and presently includes almost 180 musicians under the age of 20. Every year Baton Rouge hosts many Mardi Gras parades, the biggest one being held in historic Spanish Town.

Other celebrations include the biannual Restaurant Week, Greater Baton Rouge State Fair, Festfor - All, Louisiana Earth Day, Mardi Gras season, the Wearin' of the Green St.

In 2014, Baton Rouge was chosen to host the Miss USA Pageant.

It took over downtown Baton Rouge as Nia Sanchez, Miss Nevada USA, took home the crown, with Miss Louisiana USA Brittany Guidry coming close to the win with the third runner-up spot and fourth overall.

Baton Rouge was also the site of the 2005 Miss Teen USA Pageant.

"The sense of improve that Baton Rouge has is incredibly inspiring. " Baton Rouge hosted Miss USA again on July 12, 2015, won by actress and Miss Oklahoma USA Olivia Jordan.

The State Library of Louisiana is in Baton Rouge.

The East Baton Rouge Parish Library System has 14 small-town libraries with one chief library and 13 improve libraries.

The Baton Rouge Metropolitan Council appoints the seven member board and then the board appoints a Director.

The Louisiana State Archives' Main Research Library is positioned in Baton Rouge as well.

Louisiana State University and the Louisiana State University Law Center have libraries on their respective Baton Rouge Campuses.

Southern University and A&M College and the Southern University Law Center have libraries on their respective Baton Rouge Campuses.

See also: Points of Interest of Baton Rouge There are many architectural points of interest in Baton Rouge, ranging from antebellum to modern.

The neo-gothic Old Louisiana State Capitol was assembled in the 1890s as the first state home in Baton Rouge and was later replaced by the 450 feet (137 m) tall, art-deco New Louisiana State Capitol which was the tallest building in the South when it was completed.

Several examples of undivided and intact buildings are downtown, including the Capitol Park Museum. A number of structures, including the Baton Rouge River Center, Louisiana State Library, LSU Student Union, Louisiana Naval Museum, Bluebonnet Swamp Interpretive Center, Louisiana Arts and Sciences Center, Louisiana State Archive and Research Library, and the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, were designed by small-town architect John Desmond. The Pentagon Barracks Museum and Visitors Center is positioned inside the barracks complex and the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad Company Depot, presently homes the Louisiana Art and Science Museum. College sports play a primary part in the culture of Baton Rouge.

Baton Rouge has had multiple minor-league baseball teams, soccer teams, indoor football teams, a basketball team and a hockey team.

The Baton Rouge Rugby Football Club or Baton Rouge Redfish 7, which began playing in 1977, has won various conference championships.

Currently, the team competes in the Deep South Rugby Football Union. It also has an Australian rules football team, the Baton Rouge Tigers, which began playing in 2004 and competes in the USAFL.

Nottoway Plantation positioned near White Castle, 26 miles (42 km) south of Baton Rouge Baton Rouge has an extensive park compilation run through BREC (the Recreation & Park Commission for the Parish of East Baton Rouge).

The Baton Rouge Zoo is run through BREC and includes 1800+ species. The City of Baton Rouge and the Parish of East Baton Rouge has been run by a merged government since 1947, which combined the City of Baton Rouge government with the non-urban areas of the church, allowing citizens outside the limits of the City of Baton Rouge to use town/city services.

Although the town/city and church have a merged government, this differs slightly from a traditional merged city-county government, as the metros/cities of Zachary, Baker, and Central operate their own individual town/city governments inside East Baton Rouge Parish.

Under this system, Baton Rouge has the uncommon office of "Mayor-President", which consolidates the executive offices of "Mayor of Baton Rouge" and "President of East Baton Rouge Parish".

Sharon Weston Broome, the current Mayor-President of Baton Rouge since January 2017.

The current Mayor-President of Baton Rouge is Sharon Weston Broome, a former Louisiana State Legislator.

A map of East Baton Rouge Parish districts When the town/city and church combined government, the town/city and church councils merged to form the East Baton Rouge Parish Metropolitan Council.

The Metro Council is the legislative branch of the Baton Rouge's government and is made up of 12 precinct council members, with one member being propel to serve as Mayor-President pro tempore.

The Council makes policies for the following: the City and Parish General Funds, all districts created by the Council, the Greater Baton Rouge Airport District, the Public Transportation Commission, the East Baton Rouge Parish Sewerage Control Commission and the Greater Baton Rouge Parking Authority. Main article: Education in Baton Rouge Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, generally known as Louisiana State University or LSU, is a public, coeducational college that is the flagship ground of the Louisiana State University System.

Our Lady of the Lake College is an autonomous Catholic institution also in the Baton Rouge medical precinct that has programs in nursing, community sciences, humanities, behavioral sciences, and arts and sciences.

It has an associated hospital, Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center. Tulane University is also opening a satellite medical school at Baton Rouge General's Mid City Campus in 2011. Southeastern Louisiana University School of Nursing is positioned in the medical precinct on Essen Lane in Baton Rouge.

Baton Rouge Community College Library Baton Rouge Community College is an open-admission, two-year post-secondary enhance community college, established on June 28, 1995.

The University of Phoenix has a ground in Baton Rouge on Acadian Thruway near I-10.

East Baton Rouge Parish Public Schools operates major and secondary schools serving the city.

The town/city of Baton Rouge is also home to 15 charter schools with a total enrollment of 3800 pupils. One of the latest includes the Mentorship Academy in downtown Baton Rouge, which leverages its locale downtown to establish internship opportunities with small-town businesses as well as furnish a high tech classroom surrounding to focus on a digital animation curriculum. The East Baton Rouge Parish School System is the second biggest enhance school fitness in the state and contains nine U.S.

The East Baton Rouge Parish Public Schools serve East Baton Rouge Parish and has 90 schools with 56 elementary schools, 16 middle schools and 18 high schools. Prior to October 1991, Baton Rouge also had an evening newspaper, The State-Times at that time, the morning paper was known as "The Morning Advocate." Other publications include: The Daily Reveille, The Southern Review, 225 magazine, DIG, Greater Baton Rouge Business Report, in - Register magazine, 10/12 magazine, Country Roads magazine, 225 - Alive, Healthcare Journal of Baton Rouge, Southern University Digest, and The South Baton Rouge Journal.

Other newspapers in East Baton Rouge Parish include the Central City News and The Zachary Post.

Greater Baton Rouge region is well served by tv and radio.

Baton Rouge also offer small-town Government-access tv (GATV) only channels on Cox Cable.

Most of the Baton Rouge area's high-speed internet, broadband, and fiber optic communications are provided by Eatel, AT&T Inc., Charter Communications, or Cox Communications. In 2006, Cox Communications linked its Lafayette, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans markets with fiber optic infrastructure.

In 2010, Baton Rouge started a market push to turn into a test town/city for Google's new super high speed fiber optic line known as Geaux - Fi - BR. Baton Rouge is served by a several hospitals and clinics: Baton Rouge General Medical Center Mid-City Campus 3600 Florida Boulevard Baton Rouge General Medical Center Bluebonnet Campus 8585 Picardy Avenue Water: Baton Rouge Water Company, City of Baker, City of Zachary Sewer: City of Baker, City of Zachary, East Baton Rouge Parish Baton Rouge is home station to the Army National Guard 769th Engineer Battalion, which recently had units deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Baton Rouge is also home to 3rd Battalion, 23rd Marine Regiment (3/23) is a reserve infantry battalion in the United States Marine Corps positioned throughout the Midwestern United States consisting of approximately 800 Marines and Sailors.

The Port of Baton Rouge is the ninth biggest in the United States in terms of tonnage shipped, and is the farthest upstream Mississippi River port capable of handling Panamax ships. Baton Rouge has three Interstate highways: I-10, I-12 (Republic of West Florida Parkway), and I-110 (Martin Luther King Jr.

It passes Bluebonnet Blvd and the Mall of Louisiana at exit 162, and leaves Baton Rouge after interchanges with Siegen Lane and Highland Road.

It passes through Downtown, North Baton Rouge, and Baton Rouge Metro Airport before ending at Scenic Highway.

Baton Rouge has two US highways, along with their Business counterparts: Airline Highway (US 61) and Florida Boulevard.

At this interchange, US 190 turns east to follow Florida Blvd through Northeast Baton Rouge, exiting the town/city at the Amite River.

US 61 enters Baton Rouge as Scenic Highway until it reaches Airline Highway (US 190).

According to the 2008 INRIX National Traffic Scorecard, which rates the top 100 congested urbane areas in the U.S., Baton Rouge is the 33rd-most-congested metro region in the country.

According to the Scorecard, Baton Rouge was the only region out of all 100 to show an increase in congestion from 2007 to 2008 (+6%).

In 2007, ten citizens died in traffic accidents inside a three-month reconstructionon this section of road. Governor Bobby Jindal and the Baton Rouge legislative delegation, in 2009, were prosperous in allocating state and federal funding to widen I-12 from O'neal Lane to Range Avenue (Exit 10) in Denham Springs.

Interstate 10 was widened to three lanes over a five-year reconstructionbetween the I-10/I-12 split and Highland Road. In 2010, the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act provided supplemental funding for this universal to extend to the Highland Road exit in East Baton Rouge Parish. Commute times have since plummeted for this section of interstate.

Surface streets in Baton Rouge are apt to harsh congestion.

Baton Rouge Mayor Kip Holden has instituted an extensive upgrade of East Baton Rouge Parish roads known as the Green Light Plan, geared toward grade areas of congestion on the city's surface streets.

A circumferential loop freeway has been proposed for the greater Baton Rouge metro region to help alleviate congestion on the existing through-town routes.

The proposed loop would pass through the outlying churches of Livingston (running alongside property owned and marketed as an industrialized evolution by Al Coburn, a member of President Mike Grimmer's staff), Ascension, West Baton Rouge, and Iberville, as well as northern East Baton Rouge Parish.

This proposal has been subject to much contention, especially by inhabitants living in the outer churches through which the loop would pass. Other suggestions considered by the improve are upgrading Airline Highway (US 61) to freeway standards in the region as well as establishing more links between East Baton Rouge Parish and its neighboring communities.

The average one-way commute time in Baton Rouge is 22 minutes, 13% shorter than the US average.

99% of the Baton Rouge workforce drives a personal vehicle to work.

Located 10 minutes north of downtown near Baker, the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport joins the region with the four primary airline hubs serving the southern United States.

Three primary rail lines, Kansas City Southern, Union Pacific, and Canadian National furnish barns freight service to Baton Rouge. Since 2006, Baton Rouge and New Orleans leaders as well as the state government have been pushing to secure funding for a new high-speed rail passenger line between downtown Baton Rouge and downtown New Orleans, with a several stops in between. Capital Area Transit System (CATS) provides urban transit throughout Baton Rouge, including service to Southern University, Baton Rouge Community College, and Louisiana State University.

Main article: List of citizens from Baton Rouge, Louisiana Baton Rouge Police Department East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff's Office Although the City of Baton Rouge and East Baton Rouge Parish have a merged government, this differs slightly from a traditional merged city-county government, as the metros/cities of Zachary, Baker, and Central operate their own individual town/city governments inside East Baton Rouge Parish.

As a result of this system, Baton Rouge has the uncommon office of "Mayor-President", which consolidates the executive offices of "Mayor of Baton Rouge" and "President of East Baton Rouge Parish".

Total region for the City of Baton Rouge, not all of East Baton Rouge Parish.

Because the Louisiana uses churches, the equivalent of a county in other states, in the state this form of government is called a "consolidated city-parish".

"City of Baton Rouge and Parish of East Baton Rouge".

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Baton Rouge Government Website.

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Baton Rouge Rugby.net.

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City of Baton Rouge.

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East Baton Rouge Parish School Board.

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Baton Rouge Municipalities and communities of East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, United States

Categories:
Cities in the Baton Rouge urbane region - Baton Rouge, Louisiana - Cities in Louisiana - Cities in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana - Parish seats in Louisiana - Populated places established in 1699 - Louisiana populated places on the Mississippi River - Inland port metros/cities and suburbs of the United States - University suburbs in the United States - 1699 establishments in New France