Breaking The Bonds Of Silence: Louisiana Eats Tours The Whitney Slavery Museum

In this special edition of Louisiana Eats, we celebrate the 151st anniversary of Juneteenth — the day that commemorates the end of slavery in the United States.

On the grounds of Whitney Plantation. Former slave quarters are on the right with Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall visible in the background.SARAH HOLTZ

On the grounds of Whitney Plantation. Former slave quarters are on the right with Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall visible in the background.

SARAH HOLTZ

Host Poppy Tooker and Dr. Ibrahima Seck at Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall — a memorial dedicated to all the slaves who lived in Louisiana. Names and quotes are engraved on 216 granites slabs mounted on 18 walls.  

Host Poppy Tooker and Dr. Ibrahima Seck at Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall — a memorial dedicated to all the slaves who lived in Louisiana. Names and quotes are engraved on 216 granites slabs mounted on 18 walls.CREDIT SARAH HOLTZ

Host Poppy Tooker and Dr. Ibrahima Seck at Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall — a memorial dedicated to all the slaves who lived in Louisiana. Names and quotes are engraved on 216 granites slabs mounted on 18 walls.

CREDIT SARAH HOLTZ

We take a trip to the Whitney Plantation, the only plantation museum in America that focuses entirely on slavery. The vision for the museum originated with attorney and developer John Cummings, who invested 10 million of his own dollars to help educate the public about the truths of slavery in Louisiana.

The Whitney Plantation is one of three surviving Civil War-era sugar plantations located in St. John the Baptist Parish along the Mississippi River. There, we join Director of Research at Whitney Dr. Ibrahima Seck, who gives us a personal tour of the property.

We make our first stop at a restored nineteenth century Baptist church, where we learn about slavery as viewed through the eyes of children. Not far from the church, Dr. Seck brings us to a large monument engraved with names and information about the enslaved individuals who lived at Whitney. We also step into a slaves' quarters and tour the oldest detached kitchen in Louisiana, making our final stop at the big house where the Haydel family lived.

Following our visit to the plantation, we speak with Sybil Haydel Morial — educator, activist and former First Lady of New Orleans — who recently learned of her family's connection to the Whitney Plantation. Sybil chronicled her breadth of experience during the civil rights era and the years that followed in her memoir, Witness to Change.