W.P.A. collection. Historical Records Survey transcriptions of Louisiana police jury records. Livingston Parish, 1875-1939.

ArchivalResource

W.P.A. collection. Historical Records Survey transcriptions of Louisiana police jury records. Livingston Parish, 1875-1939.

This collection consists of microfilm of transcriptions of police jury meeting minutes for Livingston Parish between 1875 and 1939. The records document government functions such as elections, road building, public health, law enforcement, parish budgets and taxes, the development of education for blacks and whites, the battle to control yellow fever, livestock maintenance, transportation, flood control, and levee building. They concern topics such as citizen participation in and expectations of government, settlement of the state's rural areas, and changes in land ownership. The records also contain genealogical information useful in identifying ancestors' places of residence, death dates, and role in their communities. The transcriptions were made between around 1939 and 1942 as part of the Louisiana Historical Records Survey, administered through Louisiana State University.

5 linear ft.

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

Louisiana Historical Records Survey

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67x08hb (corporateBody)

Livingston Parish (La.). Police Jury.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6355hq0 (corporateBody)

Louisiana's unit of local government is the parish rather than the county. When Louisiana was purchased from France in 1803, the portion that is now approximately the State of Louisiana was called the Orleans Territory. On April 10, 1805, the governing body of the Orleans Territory divided it into 12 counties that roughly coincided with the parishes established by the Catholic Church during the Spanish and French regimes. On March 31, 1807, the territorial legislature passed an act ...