Results navigation
22. Louisiana 1822 Mayor, New Orleans
23. Louisiana 1822 Recorder, New Orleans
24. Louisiana 1822 State Senate, East Baton Rouge Parish
25. Louisiana 1822 State Senate, Feliciana Parish
26. Louisiana 1822 State Senate, Iberville County
27. Louisiana 1822 State Senate, New Orleans
28. Louisiana 1822 State Senate, Saint Martin Parish
29. Louisiana 1822 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1
30. Louisiana 1822 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2
Results navigation

The State of Louisiana, lying at the mouth of the Mississippi, was so named in honour of Louis XIV in 1682. Louisiana of the seventeenth century extended from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains, and from the Rio Grande and Gulf of Mexico to BritishAmerica. The cession of Louisiana by France to the United States took place on 20 December, 1803, and in 1804, Congress organized the territory of Orléans, which comprised a portion of the great district of Louisiana. In 1806 there were but 350 English-speaking white men in New Orleans. Between 1806 and 1809, 3100 Americans arrived. In 1809-10 came the immigration from the West Indies, due to the Santo Domingo and Haitian negro uprisings. In 1810 the Irish began to come, and they kept coming steadily for over forty years.
In 1811 Congress authorized the inhabitants of the territory to draw up a constitution, with a view to establish a state government. The constitution was adopted in 1812, and immediately thereafter, on 30 April 1812, Congress admitted Louisiana to the Union. Almost simultaneously with her admission, the war with England broke out, and on 8 January 1815, the famous battle of New Orleans, between 12,000 English soldiers under Pakenham and 5000 American recruits under Andrew Jackson, was fought within a few miles of the city of New Orleans, resulting in the overwhelming defeat of the British.