Bayou Teche at PJ Allain Waterfront Park & Sculptural Garden
What's the Story?
Bayou Teche is an ancient channel of the Mississippi River, which flowed through this area 3,800 to 5,500 years ago. The 125-mile bayou is bordered by natural levees, crevasse splay ridges and various geologic scars left behind when the Mississippi changed course.
Although early travelers used personal boats to navigate Bayou Teche, by 1821 the Attakapas Steamboat Company served the waterway, and the steamer Louisville became the first to reach St. Martinville in 1826. By 1850, four steamboats regularly made the two-day trip up the bayou from New Orleans to deliver and board freight and passengers at Franklin, New Iberia and St. Martinville. They also stopped for commerce at all intermediate landings.
Because movement at the time was far easier and quicker by water than by land, many daily activities that normally would have taken place in town occurred by boat on Bayou Teche. For example, a letter in 1857 from a member of the Weeks family (who owned Shadows-on-the-Teche Plantation) described a large flatboat that advertised in the local newspaper and floated along the bayou, selling a variety of plants and evergreens to customers. Bayou Teche was also used for mail delivery and a host of other services that later became accessible by road transportation.
Today on the banks of the bayou in New Iberia, markers outline the bow of a Civil War steamer gunboat, the Teche, which lies below the water’s surface. After the Civil War ended, this gunboat was repurposed to transport goods and passengers between bayou towns and New Orleans. It is believed that the Teche wrecked and sank in its namesake bayou in 1868. The shipwreck was discovered in 2004 and placed on the National Registry for Historic Places in 2008. The steamer’s keel was eventually removed from the site and put on display at the Bayou Teche Museum.
To imagine what bayou-centered life might have been like in this region, visitors can explore Bayou Teche via the Bayou Teche Paddle Trail Corridor, which is part of the National Park Service’s National Water Trails System and offers multiple access points for paddlers.
This site’s geology/geomorphology: Pleistocene meander-belt deposits of Mississippi River blanketed by Peoria Loess
Site GPS Coordinates: 30.0050877, -91.815946
Closest Address: 109 N. Weeks St., New Iberia, LA 70560
Driving Directions: From LA-182 S/Old Spanish Trail Hwy. N, turn onto South Weeks Street heading toward Bayou Teche and proceed to the site.
Trail Site Information
Nearby Parking
No Entrance Fees
TRAIL ACTIVITIES
Biking
Fishing
Hiking
Parks & Refuges