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HISTORY OF CENTRAL
Central
is the site of Greenwell Springs which makes it extremely rich in history. Europeans encountered the Amite and Choctaw
Indians when they first set foot on the
beautiful piney woods of Central in the 1800’s.
Life was ordinary with farming of crops such as cotton, sweet potatoes,
or milling of pine until a resort hotel community was built in 1853. Residents of the area then found work and
entertainment at the Greenwell Springs Resort and Spa. They also found cabins, a huge hotel, a post
office, a church, and bath houses.
People fled yellow fever epidemics and heat in the cities to partake of
the therapeutic qualities of the 10 springs that were said to cure almost any
ailment.
This festive era disappeared with the winds of the Civil
War. Soldiers fought many battles in
this area. Baton
Rouge residents fled war torn Baton
Rouge to find refuge in the cabins and woods of
Greenwell Springs. The hotel was used as
a military headquarters and infirmary.
After the war local people dismantled the hotel and cabins to use the
wood to rebuild their destroyed homes.
How did Central get its name? Many people believe that it
was called Central because it is the exact middle of Ward 3 District 1. A
second theory is that Central became “Central” because of Central
School which was located near the
intersection of Hooper and Sullivan Roads. During the 1800’s there were many
one-room schoolhouses all over the Parish. There was Frenchtown
School at the intersection of Frenchtown
Road and Beaver Creek. There was Woodland
School at the intersection of Joor
and Hooper roads. The Magnolia School
was also called the Fifteen Mile
School because of its distance from
downtown Baton Rouge. Wilderness
School was located at the
intersection of Wax and Sullivan roads. These schools closed when Baton
Rouge’s first consolidated school was built in
Central. This location remained at the Crossroads of Central until Central High
was built in the 1970’s. Central Middle is still at the Crossroads.
Greenwell Springs reemerged in 1910. A second grand hotel was built along with a
bottling company. Unfortunately the
hotel and springs went out of business the first year. During the 1920’s the hotel was converted
into a tuberculosis hospital. In 1922 it
was rebuilt as a hospital and today, this area houses a state psychiatric
facility.
Life changed for Central families with the construction of
Standard Oil in 1909. Farmers became
plant workers and Central became a extension of Baton Rouge’s
lengthening suburbia. After many years,
residents banded together to get Central incorporated. In 2005, Governor Blanco approved the
Incorporation of Central. In 2006, the Central
Community School District
was created. Through the dedication and
hard work of many residents, Central is on its way to becoming one of the
greatest cities in Louisiana.
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