A graduate student鈥檚 paper revealing the forgotten history of vigilantism in south Louisiana has earned this year鈥檚 .
Kelsey Couvillon authored 鈥淎ttakapas Vigilante Committees: Race, Class, and Extrajudicial Violence in Antebellum Louisiana.鈥 It examines the factors that motivated organized vigilantes in the region now known as Acadiana in the years prior to the Civil War.
Couvillon is pursuing a at the 青青草视频. The Caffery prize recognizes outstanding student research that utilizes primary sources housed in at the University鈥檚 .
Lawlessness was a challenge in antebellum Louisiana, and ineffective law enforcement led to the formation of vigilante committees in several parishes that meted out punishment for a host of real and imagined crimes. Sentences ranged from exile to beatings to lynching.
Couvillon said these groups 鈥渃laimed that they were ridding the area of criminals, but my paper shows how they used violence and intimidation as a means of social control on the eve of the Civil War.鈥
The paper is part of her master鈥檚 thesis. The larger study connects antebellum vigilantes to similar extrajudicial organizations such as the Knights of the White Camelia and the White League that formed in the region and throughout the South in the postwar years.
Couvillon鈥檚 exploration of 19th-century vigilantes began in a decidedly 21st-century forum: social media. On Facebook, she came across an advertisement for a reenactment of the Battle of Bayou Queue de Tortue, an 1859 armed confrontation between vigilantes and residents who opposed their activities.
Couvillon contacted the reenactment鈥檚 organizer to learn more about the vigilantes. He told her one of the group鈥檚 members, Alexandre Barde, published a memoir in 1861 that 鈥渃hronicled the group鈥檚 membership and targets, and provided justifications for their actions,鈥 she said.
Couvillon found Barde鈥檚 book, , in Special Collections. Other materials held in the archives were vital to her study as well, she said.
鈥淭he collections provided a window into the thoughts of other Lafayette citizens who wrote about the actions of the vigilantes in their letters. The and the provided important background information on vigilante committee members.鈥
Couvillon said she was surprised that few historians have examined the vigilantes, especially given the richness of available primary sources. 鈥淭hey are fascinating as local history and as part of a wider movement of vigilante groups that organized during this period,鈥 she said.
A native of Shreveport, La., Couvillon earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in history from UL Lafayette in 2013. She plans to pursue a Ph.D in history at Rutgers University after she completes her master鈥檚 degree this summer.
Ambassador Jefferson and Gertrude Caffery established the award in 1967. Dupr茅 Library and the University Library Committee administer the competition. A $500 prize accompanies the award.
Jefferson Caffery was a member of the first class to enter Southwestern Louisiana Industrial Institute, now UL Lafayette, in 1901. He served as an American diplomat for 44 years. His postings took him to 12 foreign countries on five continents.
Special Collections of his long career. The library鈥檚 and a major thoroughfare in his native Lafayette are named in the diplomat鈥檚 honor.
Find more about the Jefferson Caffery Research Award, .
Photo caption: Kelsey Couvillon, winner of the Jefferson Caffery Research Award (Photo credit: Doug Dugas / 青青草视频)