East Carroll Parish, Louisiana


East Carroll Parish is a parish located in the Mississippi Delta in northeastern Louisiana. As of 2020, its population was 7,459. The parish seat is Lake Providence. An area of cotton plantations in the antebellum era, the parish in the early 21st century has about 74% of its land devoted to agriculture.

History

This area is part of the delta along the western edge of the Mississippi River, long subject to the seasonal flooding that gave the area fertile soils. It was occupied by indigenous peoples for thousands of years. European explorers encountered the historic tribes of the Caddo and Choctaw in this area, as well as the Natchez on the east side of the Mississippi River.
In the 1830s, the United States forced out most of the people of the Five Civilized Tribes from the Southeast to west of the Mississippi River in Indian Territory to make way for development by European Americans. Areas along the river were cleared and developed for cultivation of cotton, the major commodity crop in the Deep South before the Civil War. The cotton was cultivated and processed on plantations by large groups of enslaved African-American laborers.
Prior to 1814, all of the territory covered by the current East Carroll Parish was part of the now defunct Warren Parish. The original Carroll Parish, before it was divided into "East" and "West" segments after Reconstruction, was named for Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Maryland, the only Roman Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence. This and other nearby parishes along the Mississippi River were called the Natchez District, referring to the major port on the Mississippi side of the river. Both areas were developed for cotton plantations.
Given the dependence of plantation agriculture on enslaved workers, the population of this area was majority African American well before the American Civil War. Carroll Parish had 11,000 slaves in 1860, more than three times the white population of the total parish. Most were located on the plantations in the floodplain along the Mississippi River. During the war, many slaves joined Union lines and served in the United States Colored Troops; Louisiana had more former slaves enlisted in the USCT than six other southern states combined.
During the course of the Civil War, the United States Navy would buy beef and groceries from a Union patriot named Duncan at the foot of Island 92.
Carroll Parish covered a large area and the parish was split by the state legislature in 1877, following the Reconstruction era. West Carroll Parish, with territory west of the Bayou Macon, was majority-white and voted Democratic.
After the war, this area continued to be dominated by agriculture and was largely rural. Numerous black Union veterans settled in East Carroll Parish and some owned their own land, especially in an area called Soldiers' Rest, site of a former Union camp. They developed an independent community. With blacks outnumbering whites in Carroll Parish by a seven-to-one margin, and with combat experience, they resisted efforts in the 1870s to suppress their population. Voters in the larger Carroll Parrish elected blacks to the positions of sheriff, state representative, clerk of the court, and several justices of the peace, and hired black constables, giving blacks a voice at the local level.
But white conservative Democrats formed groups noted as Bulldozers, conducting violence against black voters, teachers, and supporters to suppress their activities. White conservatives succeeded in regaining control of the state legislature by the end of Reconstruction. By creating West Carroll Parish in 1877, they had an additional jurisdiction dominated by white Democrats.
Two decades later, at the end of the 19th century, the state legislature passed a new constitution in 1898 that raised barriers to voter registration, with rules applied against African Americans. They were effectively disenfranchised well into the 1960s. The legislature passed segregation and Jim Crow laws of increasing severity into the early 20th century.
In 1907 U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt came to East Carroll Parish near Lake Providence for a black bear hunt. When a particular bear managed to elude the hunters, the president's camp was moved to Bear Lake in Madison Parish near Tallulah. The 21-year-old Arthur Spencer of Richland Parish took a photograph of Roosevelt with the heavily armed hunting party. Among the hunters was John M. Parker, future governor of Louisiana and the vice-presidential choice of the Bull Moose Party ticket in the 1912 presidential election.

Law and government

From 1922 to 1962, African Americans were prohibited from registering to vote in East Carroll Parish through a combination of laws and practices such as literacy tests. The first African Americans were registered after the ruling in U.S. v. Manning found that the prohibition of voter registration for Black people violated the Civil Rights Act of 1960. It was not, however, until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 became law that large numbers of African Americans became registered to vote, and they continued to vote at high levels. They have tended to support Democratic Party candidates, as the national party had supported the civil rights movement. As East Carroll Parish is majority black, its voters still favor Democratic Party candidates. Most conservative whites have shifted since the late 20th century to the Republican Party, which candidates dominate elections in majority-white areas of the state.
In 1988, Governor Michael S. Dukakis of Massachusetts carried East Carroll Parish over then Vice President George Herbert Walker Bush, 1,809 votes to 1,536. In the 2004 presidential race, East Carroll gave the Democratic John Kerry/John Edwards slate 1,980 ballots to 1,357 votes for the George W. Bush/Richard B. Cheney slate.
In 2012, U.S. President Barack H. Obama swept the parish with 2,478 votes to Republican Mitt Romney's 1,508. In 2008, Obama had handily defeated John McCain in East Carroll Parish, 2,267 to 1,254.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the parish has a total area of, of which is land and is water.

Major highways

Adjacent counties and parishes

Communities

Towns

Unincorporated communities

Extinct settlements

Demographics

Race / ethnicity Pop 1980Pop 1990Pop 2000Pop 2010Pop 2020% 1980% 1990% 2000% 2010% 2020
White alone 4,3473,2962,9332,1982,03436.93%33.95%31.13%28.33%27.27%
Black or African American alone 7,1056,2696,2975,3245,16460.36%64.57%66.84%68.62%69.23%
Native American or Alaska Native alone 14171620.01%0.04%0.18%0.21%0.03%
Asian alone 40203144170.34%0.21%0.33%0.57%0.23%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander alone xx000xx0.00%0.00%0.00%
Other race alone 402050.03%0.00%0.02%0.00%0.07%
Mixed race or Multiracial xx2950122xx0.31%0.64%1.64%
Hispanic or Latino 2751201121271152.34%1.24%1.19%1.64%1.54%
Total11,7729,7099,4217,7597,459 100.00%100.00%100.00%100.00%100.00%

2020 census

As of the 2020 census, there were 7,459 people in the parish. The median age was 36.0 years, 20.9% of residents were under the age of 18, and 14.8% of residents were 65 years of age or older. For every 100 females there were 139.3 males, and for every 100 females age 18 and over there were 152.4 males age 18 and over.
The racial makeup of the parish was 27.5% White, 69.6% Black or African American, <0.1% American Indian and Alaska Native, 0.3% Asian, <0.1% Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander, 0.5% from some other race, and 2.1% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino residents of any race comprised 1.5% of the population. Of Louisiana's 64 parishes, it was one of six that had an African-American majority in 2020.
<0.1% of residents lived in urban areas, while 100.0% lived in rural areas.
There were 2,375 households in the parish, of which 33.1% had children under the age of 18 living in them. Of all households, 28.5% were married-couple households, 23.5% were households with a male householder and no spouse or partner present, and 40.9% were households with a female householder and no spouse or partner present. About 32.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 14.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. There were 2,791 housing units, of which 14.9% were vacant. Among occupied housing units, 58.0% were owner-occupied and 42.0% were renter-occupied. The homeowner vacancy rate was 1.1% and the rental vacancy rate was 6.5%.

Economy and poverty data

East Carroll Parish is still largely agricultural, with 74% of its land devoted to crops. As farm labor needs have been reduced by mechanization and farms have been consolidated into larger units, jobs in the area have been reduced. Agriculture may take the form of aquaculture, and row crops.
Of 3,197 counties ranked by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2011 for "estimated percent of people of all ages in poverty", East Carroll Parish was fifth. It was estimated that 44 percent of the rural county's residents lived in poverty.

Education

Public schools in East Carroll Parish are operated by the East Carroll Parish School Board, which covers the entire parish. In an infographic released by Graphiq, East Carroll Parish is ranked as the least educated parish in Louisiana with 32.29% of 25 year-olds without a high school diploma and 9.4% of 25 year-olds with a bachelor's degree or higher.

Notable people

Politics

Unlike neighbouring West Carroll Parish, and Louisiana generally, East Carroll Parish is a Democratic stronghold, owing primarily to its majority African-American population. It was one of just two parishes to support the Democratic candidate in the 1999 Louisiana gubernatorial election. Furthermore, in presidential elections, it has not supported a Republican since 1972, when Republican incumbent Richard Nixon carried 63 of the state's 64 parishes, and East Carroll was still Nixon's fourth weakest parish in the state. East Carroll rejected Ronald Reagan in both 1980 and 1984. The last Democratic candidate to win less than 60% of the parish's vote in a presidential was John Kerry, who ran against President George W. Bush of neighboring Texas. Four years prior, in 2000, it had been Al Gore's fourth best parish statewide. However, East Carroll was previously known to support third-party segregationists. In 1948, it gave Strom Thurmond over 60% of the vote. In 1960, it gave a plurality to George Wallace of Alabama. And in 1964, the parish gave 85% of its vote to Republican Barry Goldwater, who lost in a landslide to Lyndon Johnson nationally, compared to just 15% for Lyndon Johnson. Before 1964, like most of the south, East Carroll was powerfully Democratic, giving just 3 votes to Republican Charles Evans Hughes, and even giving 77% of its vote to Al Smith, who performed considerably worse in the south than past Democratic candidates, losing traditionally Democratic strongholds including Texas, Florida and North Carolina. In 1996 the Parish saw a leftward swing in favor of Bill Clinton; his performance in this election was the best by a Democrat since 1944. East Carroll maintained a strong support for Democrats after this; in 2008 it highly favored Democrat Barack Obama who again broke this record. In 2012 Obama won more votes than Bill Clinton in 1996, and in 2016 Hillary Clinton won more votes than her husband, Bill Clinton, had won in 1992. In 2020, Joe Biden performed slightly better than Hillary had, and then in 2024 the Parish saw a shift to the right; Kamala Harris' performance in this election was the worst by a Democrat since 2000.