This postcard image shows the Southern Creosoting Plant in Slidell in 1908. Creosoting and supplying pilings and railroad crossties were major business activities in early Slidell.
Click on the image to make it larger.
According to Ryan Kirk, the creosote plant burned
to the ground in 1915, killing 55 workers and 3 firefighters. The plant was
rebuilt on Bayou Lane, closer to a water source and closer to a fire
station. Eventually, creosote polluted the bayou which was a source of
drinking water for many of Slidell's residents. The creosote plant was
abandoned in 1986 and became an EPA Superfund site. The canal was
dredged and waste incinerated until completion of the cleanup in 1996.
At that time a boat launch was built and Heritage Park was constructed
on the former site.