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#Nachitoches
noxexistant · 10 months
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Nachitoches, Tchefuncte, Tchoupitoulas, Beignets, Ponchartrain
oh so you and the french both specifically hate me
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sparkedblaze · 10 months
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Things Nox and I have been requested to say in the accent trade
Miss Medda Larkin
Brooklyn... Spot Conlon's turf
Sir Doggington
Sir Porchington III
The words I bully Riot for (feat @caw-salem )
Birdsies
Bronte
Banger
Worcestershire
Marylebone
Bournemouth
Bicester
Gateacre
Alnwick
Greenwich
Leeds
Delancey
Tchoupitoulas
Tchefuncte
Nachitoches
Ponchartrain
Beignets
It's Tuesday, innit?
Y’all
(I will add more as I get more requests)
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oklahomahistory · 2 years
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The Cherokees
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The Cherokees 
The Cherokees stood as one of the largest and probably the most “Americanized" tribe on the continent. A few of their approximately twenty thousand members settled along the Arkansas River in present-day Arkansas as early as 1795. A tough chief named Duwali (or “The Bowl”) led this group. Gradually, more migrated into the area. By the end of the first decade of the 1800s, the federal government was actively inducing all Cherokees to move west. It did not, however, specify particular coordinates for the Cherokees’ new lands.
At least one additional delegation of Cherokees reconnoitered lands the government offered them in northern and western Arkansas Territory, and more Cherokees agreed to move west. In 1807 American traders in Nachitoches, Louisiana met Cherokees who reported living up Red River to the north, probably in present-day southwest Arkansas. And in 1808 the Osages started complaining about Cherokees hunting on their lands in northern Arkansas and the eastern part of present-day Oklahoma without permission.
Sibley and others had attempted to calm the fierce Osages as they cleared a wide and bloody swath in the wake of their southern migration from Missouri. This tribe of around 4,250 people that included 1,250 warriors raided, plundered, enslaved, and slaughtered their way through one Native group after another in present-day Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma. They drove the Caddos, the Wichitas, and others before them (see Chapter 1). Tribes throughout the Southwest feared the Osages.
Soon the Osages did much more than complain about the Cherokees. This time, however, they had met their equal. The Cherokees who had come west were a smart and rugged lot, and they had no intention of being shoved out of lands for which they had departed their ancient homes and communities and traveled hundreds in some cases, over a thousand-miles to find. The Cherokees stood their ground and fought back against the Osages, with no less savagery than their opponents.
Plus, these Western Cherokee numbers continued to grow. By 1817 around two thousand lived in Arkansas, a few in present-day eastern Oklahoma. Spurred by federal government treaties that induced the struggling Osages to cede millions of acres of land they controlled in present-day Oklahoma (bounded roughly by the Verdigris River on the west, the present Kansas line on the north, Arkansas Territory on the east, and the Arkansas River on the south) to the U.S., as well as material compensation, the Cherokees’ western population swelled to six thousand by 1820.
John Jolly (?-1838) This shrewd, greathearted man led the Western Cherokees or Old Settlers wing of the tribe through some of their most momentous years. Known in Cherokee as Ahuludegi or Oolooteka, he entered the scroll of history as headman of Cayuga town on Hiwassee Island in present-day southeastern Tennessee upon his older brother Tahlonteeskee’s migration west to the Arkansas country in 1809 as a leader of the Old Settlers.
Read the entire Oklahoma story in John J. Dwyer's The Oklahomans: The Story of Oklahoma and Its People volume 1 of a 2-part series on the 46th state and the people who make this state very special.
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ainews · 1 year
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Nachitoches, Louisiana – In a rare occurrence, a quiet trade was reported in Nachitoches, Louisiana on Thursday as an unidentified group of individuals waited in an orderly line for a numberless grip.
The curious scene first began at around 6:30 a.m. when a group of strangers gathered in front of a store in the city’s downtown area. The individuals, who were not seen speaking or interacting with one another, quietly stood in an orderly line for about an hour before dispersing.
There was no obvious explanation for the event and the individuals involved were never identified. However, some locals speculated that the group were waiting to purchase a rare item of some kind.
The incident has since been the subject of conversation among many locals, with some even suggesting that the event was supernatural in origin.
“There was definitely something strange about it,” said one local resident. “It’s like there was some kind of mysterious force at work.”
Although the specifics of the incident remain a mystery, it is clear that the mysterious queueing of a numberless grip in Nachitoches, Louisiana is an event that won’t soon be forgotten.
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rosshan-art · 2 years
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Hola gentecita, les traigo los nuevos emotes creados por su guapísimo rosshan, espero les gusten. @melizza03fh_ @nachitoche @jair.h21 Si alguien tiene interés o conoce a alguien que quisiera comprar avísenme y con gusto los atenderé, por priv. Espero les gusten, lo tkm, tomen awa. #emotes #stickers #twitchemotes #twitchstickers #twitch #streamer #art #nuevodibujo #digitalsketching #digitalpainttosai #digital_art #digitalinfluencer #digitalproduct #digitecoriginal #twitch #digitaldrawing #animeart #anime #ilustraciones #animefans #chibiart #chibi #chibistyle https://www.instagram.com/p/CgY8lOkucuL/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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the-witch-finder · 7 years
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Location post @witchyreveries
Location: Central Louisiana, US
Name: Mollie
Age: 22
Craft & other: I practice secular witchcraft, mostly weather related right now, but I also work with sigils, crystals, tarot, and pendulum dowsing. Religion-wise I struggle to find a good definition, but I’m pretty much a soft polytheist. When I work with a deity I always find myself going back to the kemetic pantheon.
Contact: @ireverie is my main and @witchyreveries is my side blog for witchy things. Feel free to message me on either. If email is easier for you, DM me and I’ll give you that address.
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wetprods · 7 years
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Moi outside Congo Square in 2000 in New Orleans on my quest interviewing and filming Louisiana Creoles for the "Creole Segment" of my yet-to-be completed documentary "The Descendants of Africa". I also drove to the historical sites of the Cane River, Melrose Plantation and Nachitoches, Louisiana. It would ultimately be in inspiration for my historical Creole drama "Blood Makes the Red River Flow". #louisianacreoles #congosquare #neworleans #nachitoches #documentary #thedescendantsofafrica #renaissancewoman #thespian #playwright #documentarian #director #producer #filmmaker #nycgirl #oloeshu (at Congo Square Preservation Society)
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airyairyaucontraire · 3 years
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I've never seen Reservation Dogs so I can't really comment on the 2nd and 3rd thing you asked, but meat pies in America would mostly refer to chicken/beef pot pies, which are meat chunks in gravy surrounded by pie dough. Even in their single serve version you'd need utensils to eat them. I'm sure there are places in the states where hand pies are commonly eaten, but those are regional. (Nachitoches came up a few times when I looked for an Oklahoma/Midwest meat pie, but those aren't common where I'm from and seem to actually be from Louisiana.)
Also, chicken sandwiches can be patties or filets or shredded chicken in whatever kind of bread you have. The first thing I think of when I hear "chicken sandwich" would actually be a breast filet, grilled or fried. Chicken salad sandwiches are a thing too, of course, but I guess when I hear that I think shredded chicken with mayonnaise.
Yeah, Willie Jack's pies were definitely hand-held, single servings, so I guess we're none the wiser at the moment.
I recommend the show, it's good fun!
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aquarianlights · 5 years
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Went to the Nachitoches Christmas fest with friends and it was amazing. :) We were so close to the fireworks that the debris was raining down on us. (The two firework pictures above are my friends pics since my phone had died by then.) It was so nice and the bestie got me some pretty awesome pressies while we were wandering around the shops. :D
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interpretingtexas · 7 years
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Bust of Louis Juchereau de St. Denis in Nachitoches, Louisiana. By Billy Hathorn - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, [source]
Louis Juchereau de St. Denis
Louis Juchereau de St. Denis was born in Quebec in 1674. In 1699 he sailed down the Mississippi River with a relative and was put in charge of forts along the Mississippi River and Gulf coast. During this time, he also led several expeditions to explore west of the Mississippi River and became friendly with the Natives, particularly the Karankawa and Caddo tribes. In 1713, he was sent to establish a fort on what was, at the time, the Red River in Nachitoches, Louisiana. St. Denis traded with the local Natives and even became friendly with the Spanish in their missions, just a stone’s throw to the west. The next year he left for an extended trip around the Hasinai Confederacy and all the way down to the Spanish posts on the Rio Grande.
When St. Denis arrived at San Juan Bautista in Coahuila, the commander, Diego Ramón, placed him under house arrest, unsure of what to do with the Frenchman illegally trading guns with Natives in Spanish territory. The 40 year old St. Denis must have been quite the charmer, because, while he waited for the decision to come from Mexico City, he successfully proposed to Manuela Sánchez Navarro y Gomes Mascorro, Ramón’s 17 year old granddaughter.
News came in March of 1715 for St. Denis to travel to Mexico City to face charges. In August, he was exonerated of all charges. (It probably helped that word of his engagement to an extremely high class Spanish woman had reached Mexico City before he had.) The general junta of Mexico City then made St. Denis a guide and commissary officer for an expedition to found new missions in East Texas. St. Denis returned to San Juan Bautista, married Manuela, and set off for East Texas.
St. Denis returned to San Juan Bautista in April of 1717 with more French merchandise, but times had changed and the Spanish government would no longer overlook a Frenchman trading guns in Spanish territory, no matter his marriage to a Spanish woman. He was sent again to Mexico City, but escaped and returned to Nachitoches. Despite his pleas to become a Spanish citizen, St. Denis was forbidden from returning to Spanish territory. Eventually, Manuela joined him in Nachitoches and the couple had seven children together.
In 1743, St. Denis was granted permission to retire from his command in Nachitoches and retire with his wife and children to New Spain. The Spanish, however, continued to forbid him from setting foot in Spanish territory and the family remained in Nachitoches. St. Denis died the following year. His descendants would continue to be influential in Louisiana and Texas.
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jbogerphotography · 7 years
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Oh Natty . . . . . #travel #nachitoches #louisiana #rain #jbogerphotography (at Natchitoches, Louisiana)
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shellcollector · 5 years
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Greetings from Nachitoches, LA
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Where is nachitoches
anon what does this M E A N -
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oklahomahistory · 4 months
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The Cherokees
The Cherokees  The Cherokees stood as one of the largest and probably the most “Americanized" tribe on the continent. A few of their approximately twenty thousand members settled along the Arkansas River in present-day Arkansas as early as 1795. A tough chief named Duwali (or “The Bowl”) led this group. Gradually, more migrated into the area. By the end of the first decade of the 1800s, the federal government was actively inducing all Cherokees to move west. It did not, however, specify particular coordinates for the Cherokees’ new lands. At least one additional delegation of Cherokees reconnoitered lands the government offered them in northern and western Arkansas Territory, and more Cherokees agreed to move west. In 1807 American traders in Nachitoches, Louisiana met Cherokees who reported living up Red River to the north, probably in present-day southwest Arkansas. And in 1808 the Osages started complaining about Cherokees hunting on their lands in northern Arkansas and the eastern part of present-day Oklahoma without permission. Sibley and others had attempted to calm the fierce Osages as they cleared a wide and bloody swath in the wake of their southern migration from Missouri. This tribe of around 4,250 people that included 1,250 warriors raided, plundered, enslaved, and slaughtered their way through one Native group after another in present-day Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma. They drove the Caddos, the Wichitas, and others before them (see Chapter 1). Tribes throughout the Southwest feared the Osages. Soon the Osages did much more than complain about the Cherokees. This time, however, they had met their equal. The Cherokees who had come west were a smart and rugged lot, and they had no intention of being shoved out of lands for which they had departed their ancient homes and communities and traveled hundreds in some cases, over a thousand-miles to find. The Cherokees stood their ground and fought back against the Osages, with no less savagery than their opponents. Plus, these Western Cherokee numbers continued to grow. By 1817 around two thousand lived in Arkansas, a few in present-day eastern Oklahoma. Spurred by federal government treaties that induced the struggling Osages to cede millions of acres of land they controlled in present-day Oklahoma (bounded roughly by the Verdigris River on the west, the present Kansas line on the north, Arkansas Territory on the east, and the Arkansas River on the south) to the U.S., as well as material compensation, the Cherokees’ western population swelled to six thousand by 1820. John Jolly (?-1838) This shrewd, greathearted man led the Western Cherokees or Old Settlers wing of the tribe through some of their most momentous years. Known in Cherokee as Ahuludegi or Oolooteka, he entered the scroll of history as headman of Cayuga town on Hiwassee Island in present-day southeastern Tennessee upon his older brother Tahlonteeskee’s migration west to the Arkansas country in 1809 as a leader of the Old Settlers. Read the entire Oklahoma story in John J. Dwyer’s The Oklahomans: The Story of Oklahoma and Its People volume 1 of a 2-part series on the 46th state and the people who make this state very special.
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response to Nikki pt2 (hopefully the finale tbh)
"“I’ve been bullied my whole life” no you haven’t. Well. I don’t know you. But you really haven’t. Otherwise you’d more than likely would have more than just depression. Proven fact. I never talked shit about Hunter, Abby, Maddie (before two days ago), Roni, You, so Uhm…….thanks for the lie. If anyone is manipulative it’s Maddie. And honestly call the cops wanna know where I live??! Here. Nachitoches Louisiana. I told my side of the story and when y'all said “delete the posts and we’ll go from there” like. First. It was not only rude the way you said it but it’s my shit. I’ve ignored everything all day. They called her a bitch because they know don’t coddle someone. Feed the animals they get dependent. I’ll apologize when I get one from at least one person in your mean girl wanna be group. Yeah. I’ll own up to my mistakes. But i don’t apologize for things I’m not sorry for. No one has said sorry to me. Show me the texts. You said you wanted to be mature and not post????????? Bitch. Look at what you did. Y'all have harassed me all damn day sending shit that only y'all know. Texting me all day and then getting pissed when I say my side cause it’s not “yeah I was very wrong I’m sorry” so just fuck off. If you want it to be over. Fuck. Off." not sure if you're aware but I'm holl, and hunter. holl is my nickname?? weird that you think we are two different people even though I've corrected you multiple times. You really don't know me, first and foremost, i have been bullied my whole life. I've gotten into multiple fights in elementary and won. and in 7th I was stabbed with pencils, made fun of for my clothes, and then was told to kill myself. (that's only one instance) And I've had to report people at school for harassment and stalking. So yes, I have been. For as long as I can remember I've had to go to teachers and principals to resolve things, and it didn't do shit, so like you said I should be depressed. wrong. having to fight for myself made me stronger. and gave me more tolerance to people like you. And also no I don't need to call the cops. I don't care where you live. I can fight for myself. There's nothing that's worth reporting other than harassment and cyber bullying but I'd rather save my breath. And also I'm pretty sure Abby apologized for all of it? Anyway you've given me an apology I couldn't care less at this point. Not sorry for not apologizing and not sorry for taking Maddies side. Hope you have a great life and make many new friends or stay friends with the "irl" ones you have. Also I made the post because you wouldn't delete yours and you wanted people to be exposed, you're just mad it was you who was exposed considering we've been postin screenshots. Bye! @ship-the-outsiders-imagine
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driving-route-66 · 7 years
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Road Trip - Louisiana
So I said “ we’ve done America “ “ where else is there to explore ? “ Of course I'm not counting the West coast which hasn't really appealed me, too many National Parks, mountains of them so to speak ! 
Im sure they are stunning, beautiful, majestic and I would be happy to stare at them for moments on end, with the sun setting, the sun rising and bits in between, however every Park soon merges into one, unless of course, it's either the Grand Canyon or Monument Valley, then it's a different story entirety.
Casually flipping through CNA website I come across “ Lively Louisiana “ , mmn, sounds interesting so on a whim we've booked it. 
It's different, it's French, it's sultry  and it's haunted. 
Now I didn't know it was haunted ( I mean the whole State is haunted ) until the deposit was paid, although it's not surprising given the history of this melting pot of cultures.
We fly into New Orleans ( hereafter called n’awlins or NOLA as the locals refer to it ) in June 2018 and will be holed up in the Hotel Monteleone (HAUNTED). We hope to spend a pleasant few days researching the Voodoo culture, exploring cemeteries and listening to jazz.
Then off to Lafayette ( Plantation Mouton :  NOT HAUNTED ) to check out swamps, gators, zydeco music, gumbo, creole and Tabasco
After a couple of days we are heading to Lake Charles ( HAMPTON: NOT HAUNTED ) for a flutter and to drive the Creole Nature Trail and head out into the swamp on a little boat.
Following the road north we shall hit the oldest town in Louisiana Nachitoches (pronounced Nak A Tish) and Sweet Cane Inn ( PARTIALLY HAUNTED ). 
Further North we head into Shreveport and the 2439 Fairfield, not sure about this one yet, however in Cheneyville we’ll staying at Loyd Plantation ( VERY HAUNTED ) and then The Stockade in Baton Rouge. 
Finally Oak Valley Plantation ( SUPER HAUNTED ) 
Eeek 
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