Narcisse Prudhomme Plantation
Narcisse Prudhomme Plantation, also known as Narcisse Prud'homme Plantation, Beau Fort Plantation, and St. Charles Plantation, is a historic planation house and a former plantation, located in the unincorporated community of Bermuda, Louisiana near the village of Natchez.[2] It is one of the oldest plantations in the Cane River National Heritage Area.[3][4] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since July 13, 1976, for its architectural significance.[5] HistoryThe first known owner of the plantation is Louis Barthelemy Rachal, and the plantation house is thought to have been built sometime between 1790 and 1821.[3] The name "Beau Fort" is derived from an oral history about the land the plantation occupies once being the site of an early French fort.[3] The second owner of the plantation house was Louis Narcisse Prud'homme (1788–1844) and his wife Marie Theresa Elizabeth (née Métoyer).[5][3] Prud'homme's father owned the Oakland Plantation and were the first to grow cotton in the area.[6] Prud'homme's daughter Marie Clarisse Prud'homme (1817–1908) was married to Charles Emile Sompayrac (1813–1878) and they owned the Cherokee Plantation.[6] ArchitectureThe architecture of the Narcisse Prudhomme Plantation house is Creole influenced, but it is not designed as a typical Creole cabin.[2][7] The original rooms have 12 foot tall ceilings with Greek Revival molding.[2] The house also has French Colonial architectural features such as a bousillage walls, a gable roof, french doors, a front gallery space, the floor plan layout, and interior chimneys.[2] The framing of the house is made with cypress wood.[2] The plantation house was nicknamed "Luclora".[8] Remodels to the house occurred in 1937 with exterior changes; and in 1949 with a wing of the house added.[9] Located nearby is Oaklawn Plantation, Cherokee Plantation, and Cedar Bend Plantation.[10] See also
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