Pre-European The
Chitimacha lived in the region prior to the arrival of European colonists. The tribe's lands once encompassed the entire
Atchafalaya Basin, westward to
Lafayette, southward to the
Gulf of Mexico and eastward to the New Orleans area. The Chitimacha tribe currently resides on a reservation in
St. Mary Parish.
European colonization , north of Carlstein, indicating the location of present-day LaPlace. Present-day LaPlace was settled by German immigrants in the early 18th century during Louisiana's
French colonial period, as part of a larger settlement on the bank of the Mississippi called Karlstein. Karlstein was one of the four settlements collectively known as the "
German Coast" (), having been populated by German-speaking immigrants since 1721. French and
Acadians intermarried with the Germans, and the area came to be known as Bonnet Carré (French for "square
bonnet").
1811 Slave Revolt Manual Andry built Woodland plantation in 1793 and forced enslaved people to cultivate
sugarcane there. The amount of money he stole from their forced labor was sizable. Severe violence was inflicted on the enslaved people, as had been common in Haiti (and had led to a successful slave rebellion there). , is where the revolt began. In early January 1811, slaves at Woodland Plantation and several nearby plantations attempted the
German Coast Uprising. A group of 200-500 slaves armed with guns, axes, and
cane knives set out from LaPlace to conquer New Orleans and gain freedom for themselves and others. Local white "militia" men crushed the rebellion within three days, and nearly 100 slaves were either killed in battle, slaughtered by pursuing militia, or executed after summary trials by planter tribunals.
Post-Civil War developments In 1879, pharmacist, planter, and
patent medicine purveyor Basile Laplace arrived from New Orleans and established a large plantation in Bonnet Carré. In 1883, he allowed the
New Orleans and Baton Rouge Railroad to cut through his land. In 1850, a flood created the
Bonnet Carré Crevasse, a levee breach that was more than a mile wide. In February 2016 and again in March 2016, several
tornadoes touched down in LaPlace, damaging hundreds of buildings and disrupting power. LaPlace was badly damaged by
Hurricane Ida on August 29, 2021.
Spelling Despite the spelling used for LaPlace's namesake, the St. John the Baptist Parish
Police Jury decreed in 1971 that the official spelling of the town includes a capital letter "P".
Andouille Andouille, a
smoked pork
sausage that originated in France, is popular in LaPlace and elsewhere in Louisiana, but in the 1970s, then-Governor
Edwin Edwards proclaimed LaPlace the "Official Andouille Capital of the World". Since 1972, LaPlace has held an Andouille Festival every October. ==Industry ==