Showing posts with label Slidell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slidell. Show all posts

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Men Who Saw Slidell Grow

 In 1933 the Slidell News newspaper ran a series of feature articles about "Men Who Saw Slidell Grow From A Village Into A City. " Here are three of those columns. Click on the images to make them larger. 


Mr. F. A. Bourgeois


Dr. J. F. Polk


Mr. U. G. Neuhauser


Sunday, January 21, 2024

First United Methodist 100th Anniversary - Slidell 1987

 Some thirty-seven years ago, the First United  Methodist Church in Slidelll celebrated its 100th anniversary in 1987. Here are some photographs from the "dinner on the grounds" and a horse wagon ride. Click on the images to make them larger. 






















Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Mall Walking

 Walking the lengths of shopping malls back and forth use to be a regular form of exercise. That was back when there were actually large enclosed air conditioned shopping malls. There were even groups who did it together. Here are some pictures from 34 years ago, around 1989, of such a group walking the Northshore Mall over in Slidell. Click on the images to make them larger. 
















Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Slidell Businesses in 1972

 Here is a couple of business feature articles I wrote for the Slidell Sentry News back in 1972, before it became a daily newspaper. They tell about Signs By Jason and Lake Volkswagen.


Click on the images to make them larger and more readable.





Thursday, December 8, 2022

Slidell Visited by Big Bear

 In 1968, a black bear wandered from the Honey Island Swamp into Slidell. Here's the story, embellished by News Banner feature writer Polly Morris, in her own creative style.


The Big Black Bear Scare

BY POLLY MORRIS

It was a day in late May of 1968 when a bear left Honey Island Swamp and paid Slidell a memorable visit. The bear had not planned it that way.. .

He woke up at sunrise as usual, and breakfasted on berries and branch water. His meal silenced the rumbling in his belly, but not the strange stirrings in his innards. Restless and bored, he decided to mosey over to the territory of a young she-bear that had caught his myopic eyes. He hoped some nice muzzling and muzzling would calm his thumping gizzard, but the she-bear impatiently cuffed him aside. Spring turned young man's fancies to love, but he would have to bear up another month or so until early summer. He only had Spring fever anyhow, so get lost, she snapped savagely.

Well.. he just might do that very thing. So he left Steamboat Bayou in a huff, and crossed Flea Point. Still grouchy and peevish, he plunged into Pearl River, grumbling to himself. He swam to the opposite bank and shook huge diamonds of water from his shaggy body. The dunking in cold water had cooled his hot blood, and the bright warm caused him to blink and to think. It had been a long time since his hide had been warmed by sunshine. Maybe his sweet  disposition had been soured by too much of the dank swamp. Shucks! All he needed was a brighter outlook on life.

He started loping through the woods, whoofing and snorting. The faster he ran, the happier he became. The fresh ozone air was intoxicating and the heady fragrance of magnolia so invigorating that the bear began to believe that he could exceed the 30 mile per hour speed set for him by humans. Foolish creatures! Had they ever clocked a young bear delirious with the sheer joy of living?

He was going like sixty when he heard whooshing and roaring noises, and began putting on his brakes. He skidded almost out of the piney woods, then stared at a wide trail that looked as hard as a turtle shell. Huge monsters thundered along it and frightened him until he realized that they were like the funny things that, possomlike, carried living things inside them to campsites. They were noisy and smelly but bearable if one did not meet them headon. They had critter names like bobcat and rabbit and thunderbird. He would be a barefaced coward to let them curtail his adventures.

It was still early in the morning and the gadabout bear did not wait long for a break in the highway traffic. He scooted across unnoticed and felt quite proud of himself. All his kith and  kin were curious, peering at people from under-cover. But he was a rare bear indeed, brave and daring. He plodded along in a wobbling gait until he came to the outskirts of Slidell, where he stopped and sniffed, his sensitive nose twitching with tantalizing odors. He could identify the aroma of cured ham, pork chops, syrup and jam.

Bubbling over with confidence and good will and a hearty appetite, he took leave of his forest trail and headed into town. By now he doubted that human beings were dangerous. Anyone who left such delicious tidbits laying around their campsites for animals could not be all bed. Perhaps it was an overture of friendship to four-footed friends. As long as he did not crash headon with humans and their metal rabbits and such, he anticipated no danger.

The vagabond bear congratulated himself on his common sense when he at last trotted down the street between houses. His reception was magnificent. Big and little human beings shouted and screamed with glee at his approach. They ran to their houses to see him pass, not wanting to frighten him away. But before they departed, the little humans generously tossed things aside for him to find. Sandwiches filled with peanut  butter and jelly . . . cookies . . . candy bars. Half a bottle of pop.

He munched his way down the street, partaking of each goodie to show his appreciation of the tasty offerings. Only when he heard a weird wailing sound like that of a screech owl did he look up from crunching a crisp pork crackling. Well, well!

The people were coming out after all, to congregate around a flashing red light. Maybe they were getting ready for a picnic, and would not want him too close. He had better mind his manners and keep his distance, so he politely headed for a tall pine tree and clawed his way to a comfortable branch. Here he could watch what was going on, and he looked down from his lofty perch to study humans as never before.

The bear noticed that everyone was pointing up at his tree like they did in the woods when they spotted a pileated woodpecker. He looked around, but he could not see what had attracted their attention. The people shouted and screamed and fussed with one another, but no one opened a picnic basket or a bottle of pop. 

The commotion went on and on and he began to get drowsy and bored. It had been an eventful day, but his belly was full and he needed quiet. Those live human beings were acting quite crazy now. He flinched a little when what was  possibly a bee stung him, but it was no more annoying as when he raided a honey tree.

Ho hum! he could barely keep his nearsighted eyes open. He slouched down in the crotch of the tree for a snooze. And missed the most exciting part of his day.

When the first frantic telephone call came into the police department, it relieved the dull routine with a ripple of laughter. Pink elephants. . purple alligators. . . and now a huge black bear coming down a street of Slidell. Let NASA handle something as far-out as this . . . It was either a hallucination, a hoax, or a prankster dressed up in a Mardi Gras costume.

But as more calls followed the first, the dutiful but dubious police went to the scene of the turmoil, sirens screaming to let the people know that help was on its way. Suddenly the patrol car squealed to a halt, its way blocked by a real-live bear of a small bear species. 

Except It looked as big as a grizzly. In due respect to the police, their usual efficiency was overcome by a most unusual situation. They were people-police and the proper procedure was to frisk the suspect, handcuff him, and read the Miranda. All of which was now hysterically comical. Their situation was complicated because people were emerging from houses now that the boys in blue were there to protect them from The Beast. The policemen opened the doors of the patrol  car with understandable reluctance.

The bear temporarily solved their dilemma by clambering up  a tree. The bloodthirsty ones in the mob shouted "shoot him!", but the officers hesitated. The bear was eighty feet up. If a bullet missed It could ricochet.

If it hit, it could only injure a dangerous animal. If it hit right, there would be an awful splatter of blood and guts and bear fat. Once again they were spared a dread decision by animal lovers who screamed that killing an innocent animal would be like cold-blooded murder. He had only disturbed the peace, and it would be in-human to kill him.

What about the Humane Society? This led to another ticklish situation. They were dedicated to kindness to animals, but they were trained only to care for domestic creatures. They could not say what to do with a wild bear. but they could be quite unhelpful and say what must not be done. Not a hair must be hurt on Bruin's big body.

Jokers in the crowd had a field. No one knew what to do in a hairy situation. Face the bare facts. Police were people-chasers, and the SPCA was only a dog catching outfit. Everyone was like the bear . . up a tree. Build a fire under the tree and put the heat on the fire department. Call Frank Buck. Call Wild Kingdom. The last stupid remark chanced to be the smartest yet. Marlin Perkins used tranquillizers on TV . . did  the New Orleans Zoo use them too?

At long last a specialist arrived, measured out the proper amount of tranquillizer, and shot the bear. The people prepared to run from an enraged beast that would come down from the tree fighting mad. When the dart hit, the bear only twitched and settled down for a nap. Which created another problem. How to get the related bear down from the tree? Leaving him to sleep it off was like leaving a sniper on a tower, and would paralyze the city indefinitely.

At long last a traveling crane called a cherry picker was sent to the scene. Eighty feet up, men pulled and pushed and pried at the slumped and slumbering bear until they finally got him into the conveyance. Then he was lowered to a waiting truck and transported back to Honey Island Swamp.

The bear scare ended in big black headlines in a local newspaper. But the spectators never forgot the way-out wayfarer who proved one thing: In a world of hate and hunger and hydrogen bombs, Man is still sentimental enough to work long and hard to rescue one small bear.

When the vagabond awoke next morning, a flock of crows were tormenting one old owl high in a pine tree. What a dream! No doubt the loud cawing of the birds had caused a silly dream about humans squawking over something up high in a pine tree.


End of Polly Morris Article


Monday, October 3, 2022

Slidell at Carey and Cousin

 Here are two photographs of the intersection of Carey and Cousin Streets in Olde Towne Slidell, facing east, taken 77 years apart. The top photo is from 2019 and the bottom is from around 1942.


Click on the above image to make it larger. 


Thursday, July 21, 2022

Slidell Overview Update 1907

 An overview of the origins and growth of Slidell was published in the St. Tammany Farmer newspaper in November of 1907. Here is a copy of that article. Click on the image below to see a larger and more readable version. 



Here is the text from the article above:

TOWN OF SLIDELL

Some Interesting History or the Past and Present

Indications of a Bright Future and Continued Prosperity. Published November 1907

Slidell.(C. M. Liddle, in Sunday•Picayune.)

     In the year 1882, twenty-five years ago, the writer first heard of the discovery of the place now know as Slidell. F. Salmen was engaged in the manufacture of brick at Handshoro, Miss., on a small scale, and wishing to enlarge the business and get in touch with a better market, located here. He had faith.

     In the year 1883 the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad was completed and the town soon after named. It was so called in honor of John M. Slidell, who was connected with the Erlanger Syndicate, au English company which financed the road. 

     Mr. Slidell was in they year 1861 appointed by the Confederate States a commissioner to France. He passed .the blockade at Charleston and on the 8th day of November (forty-six years ago) sailed from Havana on the English steamer Trent. The vessel was captured by a United States gunboat and Slidell claimed as a prisoner of war. 
 
     The British government demanded his release, which was ordered by President Lincoln on Christmas day of the name year.

     After the town grew into importance it was incorporated. The several mayors have been as follows and in the order named: S. H. Decker, Joseph Cherry, Elijah Linton, U. F. McMahon, W. 0. Wilder, 0. L. Ditmar (two terms) and F. A. Bourgeois(two terms). F. Salmen was also elected Mayor, but did not accept the position.

     The growth of the town has been sure and substantial. Real estate values have increased rapidly. The entire square upon which is now the bank building, the Presbyterian church and the schoolhouse was offered seven years ago for $3,000, and at that figure the owner could not secure a buyer.

     Slidell is twenty-eight miles north of New Orleans, fifty minutes rides on the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad, and is at the junction of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad. It four miles north of Lake Pontchartrain and is also on Bayou Vincent, connected with the lake and Gulf of Mexico. Water communication is thus given to the world. 

     The town has a population at present of more than 2000. It is in St. Tammany pariah in the Ozone district, pronounced by the United States Government to be one of the health sections of the world. There has never been an epidemic and there has never been a quarantine against yellow fever
or other sickness. 

     The atmosphere is unequaled in the "Sunny South;" and with the lake breezes, pure water and proximity to the largest city in the South, this is the logical place for a summer or winter resort. The assessed valuation has almost doubled within the past few years:

1903-  $186,170
1904-  $ 212.694
1905-  $236.688
1906-  $339,352
1907-  $354,953

The next year will show a total of more than half a million dollars.

     At the present we have: Banks, hotels, schools, boating, hunting, fishing. farming, churches, newspaper, telephone, shipyards, lumber mills, brick-plants, creosote works, artesian water, electric lights, a $50,000 ice factory, a $25,000 school building, a $5,000 new town hall, $20,000 wholesale grocery. A $5,000 steel bridge will be erected in the near future; in fact, work has begun upon all.

     A town can be well judged by its post office. The gross receipts show for the past few years a gradual increase in business activity :

                                1905.  1906.   1907.
First quarter        $549.38   $683.73 $865.83
Second quarter 553.48 653.00   864.00
Third quarter         706.47 663,97   888.13
Fourth quarter         737.07 775.24

     The above shows that $300 a month is paid by the citizens for postage. The Bank of Slidell has a capital stock of $10,000 and deposits of nearly $100,000. For the first nine months of the present year s grand total of all deposits was, $1,155,480.56; paid out, $1,132,354.01.

Hotels

    Two well kept hotels furnish accommodation to the local and traveling public. Boating is one of the pleasures. there being a number of motor-boats. There are also a number of vessels used for extensive commerce, for import and export shipments of bricks and lumber. 

     Religious denominations are Baptist, Presbyterian, Methodist, Catholic and Episcopal.

     Fraternal societies: Knights of Pythias, Woodmen of the World, Masons, I. 0. R. M. and others.

     Farming is not on a very extensive scale, but sugar cane, rice, potatoes and vegetables are profitable. A. Provost, who has been a resident of the parish some fifty years, gives as a result of his experience, 200 bushels of sweet potatoes to the acre.

     Dairying is an undeveloped but profitable industry. L. Usanaz has a herd of nearly forty cows. He can produce milk at a cost of 10 cents a gallon. Food is high in price now, but cheaper in summer season.

     The New Orleans papers of Sunday mentioned the organization of the St. Tammany Dairy Company, capital $100,000, which is to be located near Slidell.

     The manufacturing interests, while not varied, shows an immense volume of business. The Southern Creosoting Company handled the past year 20,000,000 feet of lumber and disbursed for labor $77,873.

     The Salmen Brick and Lumber Co. in the past twelve months manufactured 27,834,294 bricks, 17,152,120 feet of lumber, 11,904,000 cypress shingles, 1,950,000 laths, and pine piling, if in one piece, sufficient to reach from New Orleans to Ellisville--132 miles,-and disbursed for labor $286,900.61.
 
     The Southern Express Company's total yearly receipts were $25,000, and is double the business of three years years ago. The Cumberland Telephone Company's business Is $5,000 a year, and
growing rapidly. The New Orleans Great Northern Railroad's business in and out of Slidell for the year has been : 

Freight forwarded, $11 920.67; 
Freight received, $26,506 67; 
Tickets sold, $9,873.85; 
Grand total, $48.301.19.

     In the above there is no passenger business south, all going north.

     The New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad handled during the same period outward shipments 121,363 tons of freight and received 63,48.5 tons. Passengers out of Slidell 27,834.

     The above shows that nearly 40,600 people travel out of the town in one year. It further shows that the 64,525 freight cars would make a solid train 450 miles long.

     The future shows, with a better assessment, a lower rate of taxation will follow.

     Then, with taxes no higher than now a fund can easily be secured to give drainage to the town. Drainage means health and wealth. With better school facilities, population will increase, and a good class of citizens will result in making the town more widely known.

     The field for suitable manufacturing industries is inviting, as such is to be free from taxation until the year 1911.

     With the completion of the New Orleans Great Northern Railroad and the opening of a new country to Jackson, Miss., Slidell, by virtue of location and advantages, will undoubtedly come into prominence and greater prosperity. To the attainment of the foregoing and resultful consequence, tie Slidell Progressive union will contribute.

See also:

Slidell's Train Station


Friday, June 24, 2022

Slidell's First Postmaster

The first postmaster in Slidell was Jacob Hufft, from Hamburg, Germany, according to this photograph found in an old scrapbook. 

Click on the image to make it larger.  

Thursday, June 2, 2022

Skater's Paradise in Slidell 1989 - Part Three

 Here are a few more pictures from a group of young folks skating with friends at Skater's Paradise in Slidell 33 years ago in 1989. Click on the images to make them larger. 

















See also:

PDF File with All of the Skater's Paradise Pictures from 1989

Skater's Paradise - 1989 Part One

Skater's Paradise Slidell - 1989 Part Two