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The Eunice Museum. Located at 220 South C.C. Duson Drive near the municipal complex, the Eunice Museum is open Tuesday through Saturday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Admission is free. The museum, which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places, is actually a converted train depot situated where the first landsites for the town were sold. Collections include Cajun music artifacts, old toys, railroad items, displays on Mardi Gras, artifacts of pioneer farming, Indian artifacts, a loom and spinning wheel, and historical newspapers, plus a railroad caboose adjacent to the depot. Various souvenirs, including Cajun and Zydeco music recordings, are on sale. Phone (337) 457-6540. |
Cajun Music Hall of Fame and Museum. The Cajun Music Hall of Fame and Museum, established after a lot of hard work by the Cajun French Music Association, is now open. The building is situated adjacent to the Eunice Museum, just a block from the Liberty Theatre. Inside are photographs, biographical information, and memorabilia highlighting the careers of the top Cajun musicians, both living and dead. Open Tuesday-Saturday. Phone (337) 457-6534.
Cajun Prairie Restoration Project. Before the land was cultivated, the Cajun Prairie encompassed some 2.5 million acres, but now the original prairie exists only in a few remnant strips along railroad right-of-ways mainly in Acadia and Jeff Davis parishes. In 1988, two LSU at Eunice biologists began working to restore the prairie after Eunice Mayor Curtis Joubert, with the support of the City Council, leased 10 acres for the project from the Union Pacific Railroad. Dr. Charles Allen, now professor of biology at Northeast Louisiana University, and Dr. Malcolm Vidrine, professor of biology at LSUE, recruited volunteers who collected seeds from remnant strips and planted them at the restoration site. Some nonrare plants were also moved to the site, so that about 200 prairie plants are growing there. The site, which is now a city park located at the corner of Martin Luther King Drive and Magnolia Street, was added in 1994 to the Natural Areas Registry with the Nature Conservancy.
Courir de Mardi Gras. On Mardi Gras Day,
Eunice holds a traditional Courir de Mardi Gras. Costumed
participants ride on horseback or on flatbeds through the countryside.
They parade along Second Street starting about 3 p.m. Throughout
the day, downtown Eunice features Cajun and Zydeco bands, food
vendors, a children's parade and costume contest, plus special
performances in the Liberty Theatre and displays at the Eunice
Museum. The emphasis is on family-oriented fun. The celebration
begins on Sunday with a children's courir. Sunday activities also
include a traditional boucherie (hog butchering) held downtown.
There is also a Monday night street dance before Mardi Gras. For
more information go to the town's web site and/or Visit LSUE's Eunice Mardi Gras page. |
World Championship Crawfish Etouffee Cook-off. About 70
teams compete to see who can cook the best crawfish etouffee (smothered crawfish usually
served with rice). Once the judges have their samples, the rest of the etouffee is sold to
visitors for $2 a cup. Cajun and Zydeco bands add to the fun. The event is held
in downtown Eunice the last Sunday in March (or the third
Sunday if Easter falls on the last Sunday. For
more information on the cookoff, go
to the town's web site.
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Cajun French Music Association Cajun Music Festival. This event celebrating Cajun music and culture is held in late spring. The CFMA also sponsors a variety of other events and activities.
LSUE Community Day. The event, which features a wide variety of activities, is held in April. For more information, phone the LSUE Office of Student Activities, (337) 550-1395.
Louisiana Cajun Culture and Music Club. The LCCMC's annual Un Celebration de Cajun is held each June. Proceeds are used for the preservation of the Cajun language, culture, and music.
For schedules of festivals and other activities in Eunice and the rest of St. Landry Parish, go to the Tourist Commission's web site.
Like the rest of Acadiana, Eunice
was hurt economically when the oil industry went into a downward spiral
in the early 1980s. But townspeople worked together to enhance other
assets, especially by promoting cultural tourism through the establishment
of the Jean Lafitte Center and the Liberty Theatre. Today, with a
more diversified base and with the revival of oil-related businesses,
the economy is once again strong. For more information, contact the
Eunice Chamber of Commerce,
P. O. Box 508, Eunice, LA 70535; or call (337) 457-2565.
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These pages were established and maintained by David Simpson, who retired from LSUE in 2009.