Capture of Brashear City During the
American Civil War, the Star Fort of Fort Brashear was the larger of two works erected by the
Union Army occupying the city to defend a Federal military depot and the town. During the
Bayou Teche Campaign, on the night of June 22, 1863, 325
Confederates of Gen.
A. A. Mouton's command, led by Major
Sherod Hunter, landed their skiffs and flats in the rear of the town. Attacking the next day, they surprised and captured the city, taking 1,300 Union prisoners, 11 heavy siege guns, 2,500 stands of rifles, immense quantities of quartermaster, commissary and ordnance stores. They also captured 2,000 African Americans, between 200 and 300 wagons and tents, all while suffering losses of only three killed, 18 wounded.
Morgan City In 1876, the community's name was changed to Morgan City in tribute to
Charles Morgan, a rail and steamship magnate who first dredged the
Atchafalaya Bay Ship Channel to accommodate ocean-going vessels. On
September 11, 1961, an F2 tornado struck the city, causing heavy damage to the city and injuring 16 people. In middle April 1973, the city had 14 inch rainfall over 48 hours along with flooding in the Mississippi River and Atchafalaya River systems, but the Army provided an engineering battalion to shore up emergency works to protect the city. On October 28, 1985,
Hurricane Juan (not to be confused with the 2003 storm of the same name) made landfall near Morgan City, flooding many parts of the city. The storm then looped offshore and came onshore again in
Alabama. On August 26, 1992,
Hurricane Andrew came ashore to the southwest of Morgan City. Andrew was the second most destructive hurricane in U.S. history, crossing
Florida and then regaining strength in the
Gulf of Mexico before it struck Louisiana. In 2019, Morgan City and the surrounding area were selected as a setting for the paranormal-themed reality TV show
Ghosts of Morgan City, broadcast on the
Travel Channel. On July 13, 2019
Hurricane Barry made landfall west of Morgan City as a Category 1 Hurricane on the
Saffir–Simpson scale.
Agricultural A type of
blackberry deemed the
youngberry was developed by B.M. Young in 1905 in Morgan City, as a hybrid between a variety of blackberries. The youngberry is a cross between Luther Burbank's Phenomenal Berry and the Austin-Mayes
dewberry, a trailing blackberry. The youngberry was introduced commercially in 1926 and quickly came to rival the
loganberry. The youngberry had excellent qualities, such as taste and high yields and it soon replaced the loganberry of California. ==Geography==