Ready to brush up on some fun facts about Louisiana? You wouldn’t think it, but some of these facts just don’t seem real, but they are! Test your Pelican State knowledge and see how many of these facts you already knew, and share it with your friends! Who knows, you very well could find this information handy at your next local trivia night! In no particular order, here are some of our favorite facts about Louisiana.

  1. The Louisiana State Capitol is the tallest state capitol building in the United States.

David Brossard/Wikimedia Standing tall at 450 feet and containing 34 floors, it was completed in 1930 and replaced the Old State Capitol.

  1. The highest elevation point in Louisiana is 535 feet.

Konrad Borys/Google That’s Driskill Mountain, the tallest natural summit in the state.

  1. On the flip side, the lowest elevation point is eight feet below sea level.

Nowhereman86/Wikimedia And that’s New Orleans.

  1. The first female self-made millionaire in America was from Louisiana.

Scurlock Studio/Wikimedia Madam C.J. Walker (1867-1919) made her fortune by developing and selling a line of cosmetics for Black women. She spent most of her adult life living in St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Colorado, and New York, but was born in Delta, Louisiana.

  1. Louisiana invented the cocktail.

Quinn Dombrowski/Flickr The Sazerac is often considered the first-ever cocktail, and it was invented by Antoine Amadie Peychaud in New Orleans in 1850. Yep, the same gentlemen who invented Peychaud’s bitters, the key ingredient needed to make this cocktail authentic.

  1. The first opera in the United States took place in New Orleans in 1796.

Louis Antoine Godey/Wikimedia André Grétry’s “Sylvain” was performed at the Theatre de la Rue Saint Pierre on May 22, 1796. 

  1. Caesar’s Superdome is the largest fixed dome structure in the world.

Tsaon Lieu/Google The 13-acre steel frame boasts a 273-foot dome with a 680-foot diameter.

  1. Louisiana has a lot of “capitals of the world.”

Leonce Lionnet/Google Part town pride, part political flare… here are just a few of the towns in Louisiana that received a “world title” in the 1960s and 70s:

Breaux Bridge: Crawfish Capital of the World

Dubach: Dogtrot Capital of the World

Ponchatoula: Strawberry Capital of the World

Rayne: Frog Capital of the World

Scott: Boudin Capital of the World

Mamou: Cajun Music Capital of the World

Gonzales: Jambalaya Capital of the World

Des Allemands: Catfish Capital of the World, later the Catfish Capital of the Universe

Fun fact: After Gov. Edwin Edwards proclaimed Des Allemands the Catfish Capital of the World in 1970, the Mississippi governor decided to give the same title to Belzoni, Mississippi the very next year. Not to be outdone, Louisiana gave Des Allemands a promotion to “Catfish Capital of the Universe.” Since Mississippi is responsible for 50% of the nation’s farm-raised catfish, we may have to reevaluate that title…

  1. Louisiana’s biggest exports are natural gas, soybeans, and corn. In that order.

United Soybean Board/Flickr Natural gas makes up 18% of Louisiana’s total exports, soybeans are just behind that with 15%, and coming in with the bronze medal is corn, accounting for almost 13% of Louisiana’s total exports.

  1. The Atchafalaya Basin is the largest wetland swamp in the United States.

Derek T./Google It’s almost a million acres and it’s larger than the Florida Everglades! And while the most common animal associated with the Atchafalaya is the alligator (or maybe crawfish), the basin contains the largest nesting concentration of bald eagles in the south-central United States.

Ok, be honest, how many of these facts about Louisiana did you already know? Let us know in the comments section!

David Brossard/Wikimedia

Standing tall at 450 feet and containing 34 floors, it was completed in 1930 and replaced the Old State Capitol.

Konrad Borys/Google

That’s Driskill Mountain, the tallest natural summit in the state.

Nowhereman86/Wikimedia

And that’s New Orleans.

Scurlock Studio/Wikimedia

Madam C.J. Walker (1867-1919) made her fortune by developing and selling a line of cosmetics for Black women. She spent most of her adult life living in St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Colorado, and New York, but was born in Delta, Louisiana.

Quinn Dombrowski/Flickr

The Sazerac is often considered the first-ever cocktail, and it was invented by Antoine Amadie Peychaud in New Orleans in 1850. Yep, the same gentlemen who invented Peychaud’s bitters, the key ingredient needed to make this cocktail authentic.

Louis Antoine Godey/Wikimedia

André Grétry’s “Sylvain” was performed at the Theatre de la Rue Saint Pierre on May 22, 1796. 

Tsaon Lieu/Google

The 13-acre steel frame boasts a 273-foot dome with a 680-foot diameter.

Leonce Lionnet/Google

Part town pride, part political flare… here are just a few of the towns in Louisiana that received a “world title” in the 1960s and 70s:

Breaux Bridge: Crawfish Capital of the World

Dubach: Dogtrot Capital of the World

Ponchatoula: Strawberry Capital of the World

Rayne: Frog Capital of the World

Scott: Boudin Capital of the World

Mamou: Cajun Music Capital of the World

Gonzales: Jambalaya Capital of the World

Des Allemands: Catfish Capital of the World, later the Catfish Capital of the Universe

Fun fact: After Gov. Edwin Edwards proclaimed Des Allemands the Catfish Capital of the World in 1970, the Mississippi governor decided to give the same title to Belzoni, Mississippi the very next year. Not to be outdone, Louisiana gave Des Allemands a promotion to “Catfish Capital of the Universe.” Since Mississippi is responsible for 50% of the nation’s farm-raised catfish, we may have to reevaluate that title…

United Soybean Board/Flickr

Natural gas makes up 18% of Louisiana’s total exports, soybeans are just behind that with 15%, and coming in with the bronze medal is corn, accounting for almost 13% of Louisiana’s total exports.

Derek T./Google

It’s almost a million acres and it’s larger than the Florida Everglades! And while the most common animal associated with the Atchafalaya is the alligator (or maybe crawfish), the basin contains the largest nesting concentration of bald eagles in the south-central United States.

For more state pride, check out the origin story of how these Louisiana towns got their names.

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