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Cameron Parish History and Information
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Cameron Parish Facts

Cameron Parish
Cameron Parish was created on March 16, 1870, by Legislative Act 102, from part of Calcasieu and from the southwestern comer of Vermillion and the parish was named in honor of U.S. Secretary of War Simon Cameron . The Parish seat is Cameron . Cameron Parish is one of the largest parishes in Louisiana but has the smallest population. The current courthouse was built in 1937 and is one of the most historic courthouses in Louisiana. It was one of the few buildings in town to escape serious damage from Hurricane Audrey. On June 26, 1957 the courthouse sheltered Cameron residents for the disastrous hurricane.

It is borderd by Calcasieu Parish (northwest), Jefferson Davis Parish (northeast), Vermilion Parish (east), Gulf of Mexico (south), Jefferson County, TX (southwest), Orange County, TX (west) . Cites, Towns and Communities include Cameron, Hackberry, Holly Beach, Johnson's Bayou, Grand Lake, Grand Chenier, Creole, Big Lake . The Official County Website is located at http://user.camtel.net/cameron/public/ .

Henry Clay Warmoth, carpet-bag governor of Louisiana, created Cameron Parish as a favor to his friend, Colonel George W. Carter. The latter, with friends and adroit political manipulation, came down into the newly created parish as Parish Judge. Governor Warmoth had given him carte blanche to appoint the parish officers, sheriff, police jurors, constables, justices of the peace, and registrars of voters. See Extended History for More information.

 

There are free downloadable and printable forms to help with your research. These include U.S. Census Extraction Forms, U.K. Census Extraction Forms, Research Calendar, Ancestral Chart, Research Extract, Correspondence Record , Family Group Sheet , Source Summary Form.

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Cameron Parish Court Records
PLEASE READ!! Please call the clerk's department to confirm hours, mailing address, fees and other specifics before visiting or requesting information because of sometimes changing contact information.

  Cameron Parish Clerk of Court has Court Records from 1870 and Land Records from 1870 and Probate Records from 1870 has Marriage Records from 1870 and is located at 119 Smith Circle, P O Box 549, Cameron, LA 70631, (337) 775-5316, (337) 775-7172 Fax.
   The Clerk of Court for each parish in Louisiana performs the functions of more than one office. As the Recorder, the office of the Clerk of Court receives, files, records and indexes all mortgages, conveyances and all other instruments recorded in the Public Records for the Parish. The Clerk’s Office receives and files all pleadings, such as petitions, answers, motions and other filings in Civil and Probate matters, as well as indictments, bills of information and other filings in Criminal matters. The Clerk’s Office also handles special Juvenile matters and Criminal Neglect cases. Another function of the Clerk’s Office is the issuance of Marriage Licenses and recording their returns after the marriages are performed.

There are a few online databases for Court, Land and Probate Records which include:Louisiana Marriages, 1718-1925, Louisiana Marriages to 1850, Louisiana Marriage Records, 1851-1900, New Orleans, Louisiana Marriage Records Index, 1831-1925, Louisiana Land Records. You may also search the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) which does cover Louisiana and does cover surrounding states. Many pioneers and settelers bought land from the government instead of individuals.


Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Court, Land, Wills & Financial Records! - Researchers often overlook the importance of court records, probate records, and land records as a source of family history information.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Court Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Court Records by clicking the link below:

  • Cameron Parish, Louisiana Court Books at Amazon.com

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Cameron Parish Vital Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Birth, Marriage & Death Records! - Birth, marriage, and death records are connected with central life events. They are prime sources for genealogical information. Look also for baptism, christening, and burial records in this collection.

Some documents are just too important to wait six weeks for. With VitalChek Express Certificate Service you won’t have to. Birth, Marriage, Divorce & Death Certificates Signed. Sealed. Delivered. Often in as few as three business days!

   Vital Records Registry Office of Public Health, 325 Loyola Avenue, P.O. Box 60630. New Orleans, LA 70160; Tel: 504-568-5150 504- 568-5152 (automated) is the repository for all Louisiana Birth Certificates less than 101 years old and all Louisiana Death Certificates less than 51 years old. Existing records of births which occurred in Louisiana more than 100 years ago or deaths which occurred more than 50 years ago are maintained by the Louisiana State Archives. They have the following records:

  • Birth Certificates: State office has had records since July 1914. Birth records for city of New Orleans are available from 1892. Death records are available since 1942. Older birth, death, and marriage records are available through the Louisiana State Archives, P.O. Box 94125, Baton Rouge, LA 70804.
    • Cost: The cost of a birth record is $15.00. Fees must be remitted by personal check, money order or Credi/Debit Card Online for the exact amount at the time the order is placed. No credit cards are accepted except online. If the record is not on file, one fee is retained to cover the expense of the search. Please do not send cash in the mail.
    • Processing Time: 4-6 weeks when ordered by MAIL or 2-5 Days when you order ELECTRONICALLY
  • Death Certificates: Death records maintained by Arkansas Vital Records start with February 1, 1914 through the present. Arkansas Vital Records does have a limited number of deaths occurring prior to 1914 for Little Rock and Fort Smith dating from 1881. The Arkansas History Commission has a death index of deaths occurring in Arkansas from 1914 through 1949. This is only an alphabetical listing of deaths occurring in Arkansas. The History Commission does not have copies of the death records. 
    • Cost: The cost of a death record is $7.00. Fees must be remitted by personal check, money order or Credi/Debit Card Online for the exact amount at the time the order is placed. No credit cards are accepted except online. If the record is not on file, one fee is retained to cover the expense of the search. Please do not send cash in the mail.
    • Processing Time: 4-6 weeks when ordered by MAIL or 2-5 Days when you order ELECTRONICALLY
    • Click Here to Search the Social Security Death Index for FREE
  • Marriage Certificates: Orleans Parish records only from Vital Records Registry or the Louisiana State Archives. For other parishes, certified copies are available from the Clerk of the Court in the parish where the license was issued.
  • Divorce Certificates: Divorce records are available from Clerk of Court in parish where divorce was granted. Fees vary. Call Civil District Court, (504) 592-9100.

Order By Mail: SUBMIT APPLICATION, COPY OF STATE OR FEDERAL PHOTO ID AND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO: Vital Records Registry, P.O. Box 60630, New Orleans, LA 70160. Please do not send cash in the mail. IF NO RECORD IS FOUND, YOU WILL BE NOTIFIED AND FEES WILL BE RETAINED FOR THE SEARCH PER R.S. 40:40.
Order On-Line:  To obtain a certified copy of a vital record by on-line purchase with a credit card, please link to VitalChek.

There are a few online marriage databases which include:Louisiana Statewide Death Index, 1900-1949, New Orleans, Louisiana Birth Records Index, 1790-1899, New Orleans, Louisiana Marriage Records Index, 1831-1925, New Orleans, Louisiana Death Records Index, 1804-1949 and New Orleans Deaths, 1840-1970

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Vital Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Vital Records by clicking the link below:

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Cameron Parish Census Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Voter Lists & Census Records! - Few, if any, records reveal as many details about individuals and families as do government census records. Substitute records can be used when the official census is unavailable.

  Parishwide Records: Federal Population Schedules that exist for Cameron Parish, Louisiana are 1870, 1880, 1890 (fragment, see below), 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1930. Other Federal Schedules to look at when researching your family tree in Cameron Parish, Louisiana are Industry and Agriculture Schedules availible for the years 1870 and 1880. The Mortality Schedules for the years 1870 and 1880.

  Statewide Records that exist for Louisiana are 1810, 1820, 1830, 1840, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1890 (fragment, see below), 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1930. After the 1803 purchase of Louisiana it became an American possession; therefore, the first federal census report taken for the state was 1810.

Caution should be used particularly with the AIS indexes for Louisiana. Many of the French and Spanish names were transcribed wrong and numerous omissions exist. Many of these population schedules have been published. See Louisiana Census Records. Volume I: Avoyelles and St. Landry Parishes, 1810 and 1820 & Louisiana Census Records. Volume II: Iberville, Natchitoches, Pointe Coupee, and Rapides Parishes, 1810 and 1820 by Robert Bruce L. Ardoin & The Census Tables for the French Colony of Louisiana from 1699 Through 1732 by Charles R. Maduell, Jr. These books are on 1 Family Archive CD

As early as 1860 the federal government began attempts to identify Native Americans. In 1900 and 1910 it created a special Indian schedule. The first page was the same as the population census only it had “Indian Population” as its heading. The second page provided for such important information as: tribal affiliation, the tribe of each parent, the person's Indian blood quantum, and—if not full blooded —their precise racial mixture. These schedules will be found at the end of the ward or district in which the Native American resided.

  There are Industry and Agriculture Schedules availible for the years 1850, 1860, 1870 and 1880. Slave Schedules exist for 1850 & 1860. The Mortality Schedules for the years 1850, 1860, 1870 and 1880. Union Veterans Schedules were conducted in 1890.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Census Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Census Records by clicking the link below:

  • Cameron Parish, Louisiana Census Books at Amazon.com

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Cameron Parish Maps & Atlases

   Genealogy Atlas has images of old American atlases during the years 1795, 1814, 1822, 1823, 1836, 1838, 1845, 1856, 1866, 1879 and 1897 for Louisiana and other states.
   You can view rotating animated maps for Louisiana showing all the parish boundaries for each census year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in parish boundaries. You can view a list of maps for other states at Census Maps
   You can view rotating animated maps for Louisiana showing all the parish boundary changes for each year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in parish boundaries . You can view a list of maps for other states and State Department of Transportation Maps at County Maps.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Maps. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Maps by clicking the link below:

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Cameron Parish Military Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Military Records! - Military and civil service records provide unique facts and insights into the lives of men and women who have served their country at home and abroad.

   The uses and value of military records in genealogical research for ancestors who were veterans are obvious, but military records can also be important to re-searchers whose direct ancestors were not soldiers in any war. The fathers, grandfathers, brothers, and other close relatives of an ancestor may have served in a war, and their service or pension records could contain information that will assist in further identifying the family of primary interest. Due to the amount of genealogical information contained in some military pension files, they should never be overlooked during the research process. Those records not containing specific genealogical information are of historic value and should be included in any overall research design.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Military Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Military Records by clicking the link below:

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Cameron Parish Tax Records

   Tax records are a valuable but little-used source. Almost everything was taxed: household and personal goods, livestock, slaves, and property. Tax lists can be used as a substitute census, to create complete neighborhoods for a neighborhood study, establish relationships, locate land, and so on. Unfortunately, most of these lists no longer exist in Louisiana, but those that are extant are usually found in the tax assessor's office in the Cameron Parish courthouse.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Tax Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Tax Records by clicking the link below:

  • Cameron Parish, Louisiana Tax Books at Amazon.com

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Cameron Parish Genealogical Addresses

   The Repositories in this section are Archives, Libraries, Museums, Genealogical and Historical Societies. Many County Historical and Genealogical Societies publish magazines and/or news letters on a monthly, quarterly, bi-annual or annual basis. Contacting the local societies should not be over looked. State Archives and Societies are usually much larger and better organized with much larger archived materials than their smaller county cousins but they can be more generalized and over look the smaller details that local societies tend to have. Libraries can also be a good place to look for local information. Some libraries have a genealogy section and may have some resources that are not located at archives or societies. Also, take a special look at any museums in the area. They sometimes have photos and items from years gone by as well as information of a genealogical interest. All these places are vitally important to the family genealogist and must not be passed over.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Genealogical Addresses. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Genealogical Addresses by clicking the link below:

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Cameron Parish Church & Cemeteries
Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Obituary Records! - This database is a compilation of obituaries published in U.S. newspapers, collected from various online sources. Obituaries can vary in the amount of information they contain, but many of them are genealogical goldmines, including information such as names, dates, places of birth and death, marriage information, and family relationships.

   There are many churches and cemeteries in Cameron Parish. Some transcriptions are online. A great site is the Cameron Parish Tombstone Transcription Project.

Most Catholic church registers are still in the local parish church. Many of them have been translated and published. 

The recording of cemetery inscriptions in Louisiana has long been a project of the DAR and numerous genealogical societies. Genealogical publications continually print these inscriptions in their issues.

Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Cemetery & Church Records. Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Cemetery & Church Records by clicking the link below:

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Family Trees & Genealogy Tidbits

Search Online Click Here to Search Louisiana Family Tree Records! - The use of published genealogies, electronic files containing genealogical lineage, and other compiled sources can be of tremendous value to a researcher.

   When view family trees online or not, be sure to only take the info at face value and always follow up with your own sources or verify the ones they provide. Below is a list of online resources for Cameron Parish Family Trees, web forums and other family type information . Email us with websites containing Cameron Parish Family Trees, web forums and other family type information by clicking the link below:

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County History

   The history of a people can never be separated from the geography of the land in which they dwell. Cameron Parish, the largest in Louisiana, is no exception. Located in the Southwestern comer of the state, it is a land of abundance, unique in formation, fertile in soil, rich in beauty, and a veritable storehouse of oil and gas, a repository for game and fish, fur-bearing animals, and cattle.

Geologists tell us that at times Cameron Parish had been the bed of the Gulf of Mexico; at other times, it was far inland with the coastline much farther to the south than it is at present. During the period when the polar parts of the world were covered by great glaciers, the level of the sea dropped hundreds of feet, exposing immense areas of land. With the warming trend and the inundation of coastal regions caused by melting ice, Cameron was again submerged by the Gulf waters. Then its rivers ran freely and fiercely, dumping silt at their mouths. Year after year the silt spread along the coast, thickened, and slowly rose to the surface. Solid land appeared. Thus did the prairies in the northern part of the parish come into existence. In a similar manner, the marshes were formed. One might say that a prairie is a marsh grown older.
The cheniers in the southern part of the parish are in reality former beaches that, through the activities of nature, have become isolated from the sea by strips of marshes. The older cheniers lie to the north.
Geologists believe that the cheniers nearest the Gulf had been there over 1,200 years before the inquisitive eyes of the first white explorers beheld their pristine beauty.

And beauty it was! Enormous groves of majestic oaks, producing rich crops of acorns and bearing their wealth of Spanish moss, supported strong vines that, in turn, yielded their harvest of purple muscadines. There were clumps of wild plum and scattered groves of walnut and pecan. In the spring, dewberry and blackberry vines were heavy with fruit. Lesser shade trees and wild flowers contributed their share to the overall picture of rustic beauty. The most significant cheniers are Grand Chenier, Front Ridge, Little Chenier, and Chenier Purdue.

The Sabine, Calcasieu, and Mermentau Rivers harbored fish and crabs. The deeper marshes were the habitat of monstrous alligators. All manner of wild fowl, including the migratory ones, found sanctuary, there. In the woods were deer, bear, and smaller animals. There are strong reasons for supposition, not proof, that wild hogs and cattle roamed the ridges and marshes before the white man came.
Prior to 1870, the region that is now Cameron Parish had been a part of varied political divisions. During the 17th and 18th centuries, the territory lying between the Sabine and the Calcasieu, called by the Spaniards the Rio Stondo, or Deep River, was known as the Neutral Strip. Spain had claimed the Calcasieu River as the boundary; the question again arose between the governments of the United States and Mexico. In 1819, a final settlement placed the boundary at the Sabine.

Louisiana was early divided into parishes, illdefined though they were. The present Cameron Parish fell into two of these. The territory west of the Mermentau belonged to Opelousas-east of the river to the Attakapas.
The Opelousas district, became St. Landry Parish. The southwestern section of St. Landry was later converted into Calcasieu Parish. In 1870, the extreme southern part of Calcasieu was included the newly-created parish of Cameron.

The land east of the Mermentau has been a part of five different parishes. In 1807, it was included in the formation of St. Martin. In 1828, it became a part of Lafayette Parish, which was carved from the southern part of St. Martin Parish. Vermilion Parish was formed from the southern part of Lafayette in 1844, and in 1870, the southwestern corner of Vermilion became a part of the new parish of Cameron.
The earliest inhabitants of the present parish are believed to have been Indians of the Attakapas tribe. Although the Indian name is derived from a term meaning "man eaters," it remains an unsettled question as to whether they were actually cannibalistic.

Comparatively large concentrations of Indian archaeological finds have been unearthed around the shores of Grand Lake and particularly on Little Pecan. Burial mounds are also found on Little Chenier. Pots, herds, and arrowheads arc found on all the cheniers, indicating that the Indian population must have been large and widespread.

It may be that the Spanish explorers under Cabeza de Vaca touched at points along the Cameron coast. De Soto's survivors most certainly landed on its shores on their voyage from the mouth of the Mississippi to the Spanish colonies in Mexico. The pirate brothers, Jean and Pierre LaFitte, were undoubtedly on the Cameron rivers and bayous and may have gone inland to build temporary camps on the wooded cheniers.
Tradition tells us that the first white settlers in the area were a family bearing the surname of Phillips. They lived at the western end of Grand Chenier beside the bank of the Mermentau in a shack built of poles covered with palmettos. A lone Indian had attached himself to their household.

A hurricane swept in, in all likelihood allother Audrey. A number of Louisiana weather authorities pinpoint it as the disastrous one of 1824. The sole survivor was the Indian. He later crossed the marshes till he found other white people to whom he reported the tragedy.

As previously mentioned, the boundary between the United States and Mexico was not officially settled until 1819. The disputed area developed into a virtual "no man's land." Devoid of official supervision, it became a hideout for criminals. After the Sabine River had been decided upon as the line of demarcation, the federal government sent in officials to control the territory.

Another factor delayed the settlement of present Cameron until the 1830's. Previously, Congress had reserved the tracts of liveoak lands as naval reserves. When it was determined that such vast amounts of oak timber were no longer needed for shipbuilding, an amendment was passed to free the cheniers (oak groves) for private ownership.

Pre-emption laws, similar to the Homestead Act passed by Congress in 1862, were in existence at the time. Many of the early immigrants to the cheniers availed themselves of these laws.
About the same time, Congress passed a law to pay off old army veterans with land grants to the formerly reserved naval lands. The elderly or middleaged veterans had little desire to move westward. They sold their grants to speculators, who in turn sold to prospective landowners.

In the 1830's and '40's, a wave of migration from Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi swept into the cheniers. Some also came from Texas, sojourners there for a few years after having left their original homes in some of the northeastern and eastern states. They were for the most part of Celtic or Anglo-Saxon lineage. Later arrivals came mostly from the French of Louisiana, descendants of the displaced Acadians or of French Creoles. Early census records contain names of individuals born in various foreign countries. The present parish has been cited for the cosmopolitanism of its beginners.

It appears from census records that the cheniers were settled before the prairies to the north. Logic indicates the truth of this supposition since the cheniers were more accessible to water travel, and the waterways were the great highways of that day. The pioneer settlers of the prairies were more of French lineage than of Celtic or Anglo-Saxon.

Prior to the Civil War, the settlements were of a typical pioneer nature. Land was cleared; houses built; gardens and fields cultivated. For the most part, each farm was self-sufficient. Mere trails became wagon roads. Money was rare. Bartering was the ordinary means of exchange. Banks were not used until the latter part of the 19th century.

From the very beginning of the settlements, education was deemed important. Private schools were maintained long before public schools came into existence.
Another priority was religious worship. Missions were established early by the Methodist, Episcopal, Roman Catholic, and Baptist Churches.

Then came the War of the Secession, or the Civil War, the bitterest, the most tragic of all conflicts in which the people of this country have been called to participate. The suffering in what is now Cameron Parish was no exception, although little actual fighting occurred. There were minor battles at Leesburg (now Cameron, the parish seat) and at Sabine Pass. Federal gunboats patrolled the Sabine, the Calcasieu, and the Mermentau.

Many families had relatives in the Union States. A few of the men in the cheniers were not only Union sympathizers, but were activists as well. Some of the men hid out in the marshes to avoid conscription and even affiliated with the despised Jayhawkers. Be that as it may, by far the people supported the Confederacy. They believed in their right to govern themselves and to solve their problems locally.
Many of the soldiers died of wounds or illness caused by contagion or exposure. Many a veteran carried a Civil War bullet to his grave after having lived to an old age.

Back home during the conflict, the women and children, the elderly men, and the Negroes carried on as best they could. The year 1865 witnessed the surrender of Robert E. Lee and the fall of the Confederacy. Surviving soldiers returned home, some to die within a few months of disease contracted during the war. All were weary, suffering from malnutrition, thankful to be reunited with their families, to mend the broken threads of their lives, and to begin anew.

The Jayhawkers continued their raids. More deaths followed before their activities ceased.
The freed Negroes continued living on the lands of their former masters. There was some racial trouble. On one occasion, a pitched battle occurred near Leesburg. Each side fired a volley of shots at the other. When the smoke-cleared, only two men, both white, remained at the scene. All other combatants had taken to the bushes. No one had been injured.

The close of the Reconstruction Period ushered in an era of prosperity, resulting in the building of new homes, one-room schools, and churches. More cattle, cotton, cane, and oranges were raised for outside markets. Trapping became an important occupation. Boats plied the three rivers of the present parish, and schooners made regular runs to Galveston, Texas, to New Orleans and New Iberia, as well as frequent trips to other coastal ports.

On March 16, 1870, by Legislative Act 102, the new parish of Cameron was created. It was carved from the southern part of Calcasieu and from the southwestern comer of Vermilion. Henry Clay Warmoth, carpet-bag governor of Louisiana, created Cameron Parish as a favor to his friend, Colonel George W. Carter. The latter, with friends and adroit political manipulation, came down into the newly created parish as Parish Judge. Governor Warmoth had given him carte blanche to appoint the parish officers, sheriff, police jurors, constables, justices of the peace, and registrars of voters.
Governor Warmoth's memoirs read, in part:

"The reader will not be surprised that with all this power, Colonel Carter was able to fulfill his ambition and my wishes by being elected a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Cameron Parish. He was unanimously elected, and when he returned to the city, boasted that he had been elected to the Legislature as a Republican on his Confederate record.
"A remarkable fact was that Carter, who represented Cameron Parish, was never in that parish sixty days. The fact was that I signed the bill creating the Parish of Cameron and sent Carter down there to organize it and to get himself returned to the House."

There is no established record as to why Cameron Parish was so named. According to the March 20, 1902, issue of the "New York Sun," one reads: "The Hon. Samuel P. Henry, 'father of Cameron Parish' ...gave it the name of Cameron in honor of his friend, Simon Cameron of Pennsylvania."
Both Henry and Cameron (United States Senators from 1866-77) were born in Lancaster County Pennsylvania. The former, having moved into Calcasieu Parish in 1870, soon became the Parish Judge of Cameron.

Another version of the naming of the parish is that it was given in honor of Robert Alexander Cameron, a soldier of the Confederate army who took part in Bank's Red River campaign. He was prominent in Louisiana politics during the immediate postwar period. The name Cameron itself is of Scottish origin. In the old Gaelic tongue it meant "Crook Nose." It is derived from the words kam, meaning crooked or bent, and ieron, meaning nose.

When the parish was organized in 1870, an already existing building was purchased for use as a courthouse. The building burned in 1874. Tradition has it that this was a clear case of arson, the purpose of which was to destroy certain land records. Neighboring parishes suffered similar experiences about that time. A new building was erected immediately. It served until 1937, when the present courthouse, a steel and concrete structure, was built.

The Spanish-American War of 1898 was scarcely felt in Cameron. Not so were the two World Wars, the Korean Conflict, and the war in Vietnam. Hardly a family was left untouched by these struggles. Some were affected by anguish and apprehension alone; others by death or injury to their loved ones.
Times were hard in Cameron Parish during the Great Depression of the 1930's, but there were no "bread lines" and no person was even threatened by starvation.

The greatest disaster that ever struck the parish was Hurricane Audrey on June 27, 1957. For a timethe entire nation was aware of the destruction of life and property. There had been other intense hurricanes, namely those of 1886, 1915, and 1918, but none had wrought the devastation of Audrey.
Cameron survivors showed an indomitable spirit. They set out at once to recoup their losses. They worked hard. They succeeded.

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