Ducros Plantation | |
Nrhp Type: | nrhp |
Coordinates: | 29.7542°N -90.8181°W |
Built: | 1859-1860[1] |
Architecture: | Greek Revival |
Added: | November 7, 1985 |
Refnum: | 85002759 |
The Ducros Plantation (a.k.a. Old Jackson Plantation or Polmer Plantation) is a Southern plantation located in Schriever, Louisiana.
The plantation is located in Schriever, Terrebone Parish, Louisiana.[2] It is two miles and a half away from Thibodaux.[3]
The land was granted by Spain to Thomas Villanueva Barroso[4] who, 10 years later, sold it to Pierre Denis de La Ronde whose son-in-law, Adolphe Ducros, developed it into the Ducros Plantation.[5] [6] In 1845, Ducros sold it to Colonel Van Perkins Winder.[4] [7] Winder expanded the acreage by purchasing adjacent land formerly owned by Thomas Butler and smaller farms.[3]
The mansion was built by Winder's widow, Martha Grundy, who was Felix Grundy's daughter, shortly after her husband's death.[1] [6] Construction began in 1859 and was completed in 1860.[3] It was designed in the Greek Revival architectural style.[2] Martha hired a Louisiana architect named Evens and told him to model the mansion on The Hermitage, Andrew Jackson's plantation home in Nashville, Tennessee.[3] Indeed, she had grown up in Nashville.[3]
During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, the mansion was saved from a fire by Union General Godfrey Weitzel.[3] However, the outbuildings burned down.[3] Meanwhile, the fields were used as a camping ground by the Confederate States Army and the Unionists.[3] The Texas Rangers hoisted Bonnie Blue Flag, a flag of the Confederate States of America, on top of the house.[3]
In 1872, the plantation was purchased by two brothers, R.S. Woods and R.C. Woods, who were married to two sisters, Maggie Pugh and Fannie Pugh.[3] It became known as the Old Jackson Plantation.[8] It is two-story high, with a white facade.[1]
It was purchased by Samuel and Leon Polmer in 1909.[9] It was later inherited by Leon Polmer's sons, Irvin and Marvin.[9] In 1974, it was inherited by J.L. Fischman of New Orleans.[10]
The plantation is now owned by the Bourgeois family.[10] It was featured on If These Walls Could Talk, a television program on HGTV, in 2002.[10] Old wood with inscriptions about the secession of South Carolina and the presidential run of Stephen A. Douglas in 1860 have been found on the property.[10]
It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 7, 1985.[2]