News Update:
The Iberia Parish Council voted unanimously last night to officially approve a $50,000 donation to the New Acadia Project, which it had first authorized last week.
Mayor Al Broussard of Loreauville, Chairman of the New Acadia Project Steering Committee, was instrumental in requesting the needed funds.
Following
an earlier $25,000 contribution by the McIlhenny Family Foundation, plus
other donations from the private and public sectors, the New Acadia Project Steering Committee has now raised well over the $77,248 for a
Cooperative Agreement with UL Lafayette.
The NAP is on Facebook at Projet Nouvelle-Acadie/New Acadia Project
A grassroots initiative involving multidisciplinary archaeological, historical, and ethnographic research to find and investigate the 1765 settlement of New Acadia.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
New Acadia Project Cooperative Agreement
A cooperative agreement between the Steering Committee of the New Acadia Project and the University of Louisiana at Lafayette is soon to be finalized. The agreement will support the initial goals and objectives of the project, most notably the initiation of archaeological fieldwork to locate the first homesteads and unmarked burials of Acadians who arrived in south Louisiana in 1765.
Jean Francois de Civrey, “cure de la nouvelle Acadie” recorded the burial of 44 Acadians in 1765, at places referred to as camp d’en bas, dernier camp d’en bas, and Camp appellé Beau Soleil. Joseph Broussard, “Commandant les Acadiens des Atakapas,” was interred at the latter location on October 20th. A staunch defender of the Acadian resistance to deportation, having led his family and friends to a new and unfamiliar land, was buried in a seemingly solitary grave within sight of the Bayou Teche. Its location, and the places where the Acadian families built their first homes, called Nouvelle Acadie by Jean Francois, remain unknown today.
The search for the New Acadia settlement is long overdue, having been identified as an important goal in a report to the Louisiana Office of Cultural Development 30 years ago. As 2015 commemorates 250 years since the arrival of Acadian families in a region that would eventually become known as Acadiana, the launching of the first expedition of the New Acadia Project in the summer of 2014 is likely to attract widespread interest. Updates will be posted as preliminary site reconnaissance, mobilization, and fieldwork begin.
Additional information can be found on Facebook at Projet Nouvelle-Acadie/New Acadia Project. The New Acadia Project cooperative agreement is made possible by donations being raised by the Steering Committee. Funding is needed for student research assistants and staff, equipment, supplies, and transportation. Is the search for New Acadia of interest to you? If so, the Steering Committee has partnered with The Acadian Heritage and Culture Foundation, Inc., to raise necessary support. Donations to the New Acadia Project can be made at the Acadian Museum or through the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Foundation New Acadia Project Fund.
Jean Francois de Civrey, “cure de la nouvelle Acadie” recorded the burial of 44 Acadians in 1765, at places referred to as camp d’en bas, dernier camp d’en bas, and Camp appellé Beau Soleil. Joseph Broussard, “Commandant les Acadiens des Atakapas,” was interred at the latter location on October 20th. A staunch defender of the Acadian resistance to deportation, having led his family and friends to a new and unfamiliar land, was buried in a seemingly solitary grave within sight of the Bayou Teche. Its location, and the places where the Acadian families built their first homes, called Nouvelle Acadie by Jean Francois, remain unknown today.
The search for the New Acadia settlement is long overdue, having been identified as an important goal in a report to the Louisiana Office of Cultural Development 30 years ago. As 2015 commemorates 250 years since the arrival of Acadian families in a region that would eventually become known as Acadiana, the launching of the first expedition of the New Acadia Project in the summer of 2014 is likely to attract widespread interest. Updates will be posted as preliminary site reconnaissance, mobilization, and fieldwork begin.
Additional information can be found on Facebook at Projet Nouvelle-Acadie/New Acadia Project. The New Acadia Project cooperative agreement is made possible by donations being raised by the Steering Committee. Funding is needed for student research assistants and staff, equipment, supplies, and transportation. Is the search for New Acadia of interest to you? If so, the Steering Committee has partnered with The Acadian Heritage and Culture Foundation, Inc., to raise necessary support. Donations to the New Acadia Project can be made at the Acadian Museum or through the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Foundation New Acadia Project Fund.
Monday, May 12, 2014
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