Uncle Sam Plantation

Uncle Sam Plantation
The main house in 1936
LocationConvent, Louisiana vicinity
Coordinates30°02′14″N 90°49′57″W / 30.03709°N 90.83247°W / 30.03709; -90.83247
Built1829–1843[1]
Demolished1940
Architectural style(s)Greek Revival
Governing bodyPrivate

Uncle Sam Plantation, originally known as Constancia, was a historic sugar plantation and elaborate Greek Revival-style mansion on the Mississippi River, near Convent in St. James Parish, Louisiana. It was established during the 1810s, with the main house and numerous outbuildings built by Samuel Pierre Auguste Fagot between 1829 and 1843. Once renowned as one of the most intact and architecturally-unified plantation complexes in the Southeastern United States, all of the structures were demolished to make way for construction of a new river levee in 1940.[1] It was recorded by the Historic American Buildings Survey prior to its destruction.[2]

  1. ^ a b Matrana, Marc R. (2009). Lost Plantations of the South. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi. pp. 211–219. ISBN 978-1-57806-942-2.
  2. ^ "Uncle Sam Plantation, Convent, St. James Parish, LA". Historic American Buildings Survey. Library of Congress. Retrieved January 30, 2012.