Americanization of Louisiana

E621440

Americanization of Louisiana refers to the 19th-century process by which U.S. political, legal, and cultural norms reshaped Louisiana’s formerly French- and Spanish-colonial society, profoundly altering the status and identity of communities such as the Creoles of color.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (2)

Statements (78)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historical process
socio‑political transformation
appliesToJurisdiction State of Louisiana NERFINISHED
Territory of Orleans NERFINISHED
follows French colonial rule in Louisiana
Louisiana Purchase NERFINISHED
Spanish colonial rule in Louisiana
hasCause Louisiana Purchase NERFINISHED
hasCountry United States of America
surface form: United States
hasEffectOn American cultural norms in Louisiana
Anglo‑American migration to Louisiana
Catholic Church in Louisiana NERFINISHED
Creole identity in Louisiana
Creole of color access to education
Creole of color access to public office
Creole of color civic organizations
Creole of color cultural institutions
Creole of color literary production
Creole of color military service opportunities
Creole of color political activism
Creole of color press and newspapers
Creole of color property ownership patterns
Creole of color social stratification
Creoles of color NERFINISHED
English language in Louisiana
English‑language dominance in Louisiana public life
French language in Louisiana
Jim Crow laws in Louisiana NERFINISHED
Plessy v. Ferguson context in Louisiana
Protestant presence in Louisiana
Spanish language in Louisiana
U.S. common law influence in Louisiana
U.S. federal legal framework in Louisiana
U.S. style electoral politics in Louisiana
binary black‑white racial system in Louisiana
citizenship status of Louisiana residents
civil code of Louisiana
civil law traditions in Louisiana
code noir legacy in Louisiana
criminal law in Louisiana
enslaved African Americans in Louisiana
erosion of intermediate racial categories in Louisiana
free people of color in Louisiana
indigenous peoples in Louisiana
inheritance law in Louisiana
jury service in Louisiana
language use in Louisiana
legal status of free people of color in Louisiana
manumission practices in Louisiana
marriage law in Louisiana
militia service in Louisiana
mixed‑race communities in Louisiana
municipal governance in New Orleans
plantation economy in Louisiana
political institutions in Louisiana
press and print culture in Louisiana
property rights of free people of color in Louisiana
public education in Louisiana
public schooling language policy in Louisiana
racial classification in Louisiana
racial laws in Reconstruction‑era Louisiana
racial segregation in public accommodations in Louisiana
racial segregation in public transportation in Louisiana
racialized citizenship in Louisiana
religious institutions in Louisiana
representation of Louisiana in the U.S. Congress
segregation practices in Louisiana
slavery regime in Louisiana
status of gens de couleur libres
suppression of French in Louisiana schools
urban culture of New Orleans
voting rights in Louisiana
white Creole population of Louisiana
hasLocation Louisiana NERFINISHED
hasPart cultural Americanization of Louisiana
legal Americanization of Louisiana
political Americanization of Louisiana
hasStartTime early 19th century

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Creole of color affectedByEvent Americanization of Louisiana
Musson family of New Orleans partOf Americanization of Louisiana
this entity surface form: Creole elite of New Orleans