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Stream in Natchitoches Parish, LA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bayou Brevelle is a series of interconnected, natural waterways totaling over 18 miles in length in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana. Its main channel is at Old River and Kisatchie Bayou at Montrose to Natchez near the Cane River. During heavy rains or floods, Bayou Brevelle joins the Cane River. The bayou is flanked by Interstate 49 on the west and the Cane River on the east, and is one of the many waterways on Isle Brevelle.
Bayou Brevelle Brevelle Bayou, Bayou des Jean Baptiste Brevelle | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Louisiana |
Parish | Natchitoches |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | Old River, Kisatchie Bayou, Little River, Cane River |
Mouth | |
• coordinates | 31°34′30″N 92°58′56″W |
Length | 18 miles (29 km) |
The area was inhabited since time immemorial by tribes of the Caddo Confederacy including the Adai, Natchitoches, Yatasi, and Doustioni.[1] Over the past 300 hundred years, the area has changed dramatically due to the Great Raft and its subsequent removal. Periodic flooding over the centuries and the deposit of river silt has made the area one of the most fertile farmlands in Louisiana.[2]
Like nearby Cane River and Old River, Bayou Brevelle was once the Red River.[3]
The name Brevelle is from the French (Brevel and Breville) and is an ancient surname originating in the 1200s Normandy region of France from the Fief of Breville.[4] The bayou is named after metis (french and native american) Jean Baptiste Brevelle II, the area's earliest settler and the 18th-century explorer and soldier of the Natchitoches Militia at Fort St. Jean Baptiste. He is the son of Jean Baptiste Brevelle, a Parisian-born trader and explorer, and his Adai (French: Natao) Caddo Indian wife, Anne des Cadeaux. The baptism of Jean Baptiste Brevelle II. is recorded on May 20, 1736 in the oldest Catholic Registry in the Louisiana colony. Jean Baptiste Brevelle II was granted Isle Brevelle and the land surrounding Bayou Brevelle by David Pain, the subdelegate at Natchitoches in 1765 for his service to the French and Spanish crowns as a Caddo Indian translator and explorer of Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico.
Jean Baptiste Brevelle II, his mother, and his father are buried at the old Brevelle Plantation along Bayou Brevelle south of the city of Natchitoches, Louisiana.[5]
Along the banks of Bayou Brevelle lies the birthplace of Creole where the mixture of French, Spanish, African, and Native American cultures created a unique community and people.[6] The Isle of Brevelle community, the original and oldest Creole community in Louisiana, was isolated until World War II, after which the community saw significant outward migration.[7] The St. Augustine Catholic Church Fair, held annually, still draws back many former members of the community.[8]
There are several noteworthy examples of Creole architecture in the area.[9] One example is the Badin-Roque House.
Bayou Brevelle continues to be the inspiration and subject of Creole paintings, photography, and literature.[10]
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