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More model informationOriginally from the Allendale Plantation in the West Baton Rouge Parish of Louisiana, this mid-19th century, frame-construction cabin housed enslaved families, who worked on the plantation. As a means to preserve the physical place and the stories of the people that inhabited the cabin, it was relocated to the West Baton Rouge Museum in 2006 along with two other cabins. The three cabins are used to interpret the lives of plantation workers through different socio-economic epochs, namely- Slavery and Freedom, Reconstruction and Jim Crow Era, and 1950s and 1960s.
This cabin interpret the home life of plantation workers during the Reconstruction and Jim Crow Era (after the Civil War through the early 1900s).
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