Project Community: Filipino impact on Louisiana's seafood industry and culture
The Filipinos were among the very first Asian American immigrants to settle in Louisiana.
Mayor Tim Kerner Jr. is the descendant of one of them. His great great grandfather is John Rojas who founded Clark Cheniere or Clarksville around 1860. The village even had its own coin that was accepted by locals.
Clarksville, like Manilla Village and other platforms were built entirely on stilts. They were part shrimp processing plant and part town.
"Just a wood platform on the water and they would spread the shrimp out on the sun and you had to pick them up and then we used to shell them and sell them," said Gordon Rojas, who is Tim Kerner's grandfather.
The Manilla men created an innovate method called the shrimp dance that would separate the shells from the meat. They helped to introduce dried shrimp to Louisiana and the global community before the days of refrigeration.
"It was innovative at that time right because then you could store it. You didn't need to keep it on ice. So it created a whole new market and let people from outside the gulf coast experience the seafood," said Kerner.
The other well known floating village was St. Malo in St. Bernard parish which was built in the early 1800's according to historians.
"They did it in one of the harshest environments. This is pre-air condition. They didn't have a meteorologist to tell you when a storm is coming. It's extremely hot with mosquitos and alligators. They came here and thrived and persevered," said Kerner.
They thrived for decades, overcoming all kinds of adversity in the marshland, but the floating villages could not withstand the power of mother nature.
They were battered by storms and in 1965 Manilla Village was destroyed by Hurricane Betsy.
Kerner wants the story to be told and not forgotten. He says they were brave pioneers who ventured out into the murky waters, for a fresh start. Their hard work and industrious nature laid the foundation for the modern day shrimp industry, and made a lasting impact on the culture of Louisiana.
According to the Honorary Consul of the Philippines Robert Romero, some of the Filipino immigrants were sailors on the Spanish galleons who were dealing with violent and abusive working conditions. So they jumped off the ship to escape. Some of them drowned, but those who survived found the platforms in the swamps of Louisiana.
According to other historians, Filipinos were in Louisiana in the mid 1700's when the Philippines and Louisiana were under Spanish colonial government in Mexico.
They say there's some documentation that the Filipinos fought in the Battle of New Orleans in 1815 and the War of 1812.
Kerner feels their legacy should be honored in a bigger way, saying their stories encompass the values of modern day Louisiana.
"They were hard working, family oriented, big belief in God. You can still feel that connectiveness and that work ethic here in Jean Lafitte. The resiliency you see from storms, we're the first ones to back when we get hit the hardest," said Kerner.