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Repelled by American racism, thousands of free people of color bounced between New Orleans and Haiti in the 19th century.
After his father died, Mark Charles Roudané, a retired Minnesota schoolteacher, began going through his dad’s papers. There were scores of binders, the records of a life as a prosperous, white, ...
Pope Leo XIV, the first U.S. pope, descends from Creole and free people of color in Louisiana, highlighting complex issues to ...
In an interview with Louisiana Considered, Jari Honora, a family historian at the Historic New Orleans Collection, shares ...
The new pope’s French-sounding last name, Prevost, intrigued historians who began digging in the archives and discovered the ...
A genealogist hopes when the pope will stop in New Orleans when he comes to the U.S.: "We have to have a second-line. We have ...
When news broke that Pope Leo XIV had Black and Creole ancestry, the internet practically collapsed. How could this white man ...
The genealogical findings underline the significance of Pope Leo XIV being not only the first pope from the United States, but also being the first with documented ancestral ties to Louisiana’s ...