- Caroline Dormon
Caroline Coroneos Dormon (
July 19 ,1888 -November 21 ,1971 ) was abotanist ,horticulturist ,ornithologist ,historian ,archeologist ,preservationist , naturalist,conservationist , andauthor fromLouisiana . She was born in modest circumstances at Briarwood, the family home in northernNatchitoches Parish , to James L. Dormon and the former Caroline Trotti. She was reared in Arcadia, the seat ofBienville Parish , in northern Louisiana. She never married.As a child, she developed a great interest in plants and wild life. She was educated at the
Baptist -affiliatedJudson College in Marion (Perry County),Alabama , from which she received abachelor's degree inliterature andart . She taught several years in Louisiana schools and then re-established her home at Briarwood in 1918. She began to collect and preserve native trees and shurbs. In 1921, she became apublic relations representative for the Louisiana Forestry Department. She attended a Southern Forestry Congress in 1922 and persuaded theUnited States Forest Service to establish a national forest in Louisiana.U.S. Representative James B. Aswell of Natchitoches worked with Dormon to bring to fruition theKisatchie National Forest , which was designated in 1930, during the administration of President Herbert C. Hoover.In 1941, Dormon during the administration of Governor Sam Houston Jones, Dormon joined the Louisiana Highway Department (since the Department of Transportation and Development) as beautification consultant. She was thereafter a landscape consultant for the
Huey P. Long Charity Hospital in Pineville inRapides Parish east of the Red River from Alexandria.She was also a consultant for the popular
Hodges Gardens State Park near Many, the seat ofSabine Parish . The private development opened in the 1950s, but it came under the operation of the State of Louisiana in April 2007.Dormon also proposed what became the Louisiana State
Arboretum , located some eight miles (13 km) north of Ville Platte, the seat ofEvangeline Parish , as part of nearby Chicot State Park. The convert|301|acre|km2|sing=on site was dedicated in 1964. The Caroline Dormon Lodge, which opened in 1965, serves as a visitor center, a library, and houses a herbarium of native plants which grow within the boundaries of the arboretum.Her published works include the following: "Wild Flowers of Louisiana" (1934), "Forest Trees of Louisiana" (1941), "Flowers Native to the Deep South" (1958), "Natives Preferred" (1965), "Southern Indian Boy" (1967), and "Bird Talk" (1969).
Dormon was the only woman member of the De Soto Commission, which was established by Congress in 1935 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of Hernando de Soto's expedition across the American Southeast, which crossed northern Louisiana.
In 1965, Dormon was presented with an honorary doctor of science award from
Louisiana State University inBaton Rouge . The Dormon Collection is located at theEugene P. Watson Memorial Library ofNorthwestern State University in Natchitoches.Briarwood, located near Saline (Bienville Parish), is now the headquarters of the Caroline Dormon Nature Preserve. Natchitoches attorney and
philanthropist Arthur C. Watson organized the Foundation for the Preservation of the Caroline Dormon Nature Preserve and served as its treasurer until his death in 1984. There is also a Caroline Dormon Trail extending convert|10.5|mi|km in the Kisatchie Bayou Recreation Complex within the national forest. It is popular for horseback riding,hiking , andbicycling . The trail starts at the Longleaf Scenic Byway.Dormon is interred in the Briarwood Baptist Church Cemetery near her home.
References
"Caroline C. Dormon", "A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography", Vol. 1 (1988), p. 251
Donald M. Rawson , "Caroline Dormon: A Renaissance Spirit of Twentieth Century Louisiana," "Louisiana History", XXIV (1983)
*http://www.hodgesgardens.com/
*http://www.cp-tel.net/dormon/
*http://www.fs.fed.us/r8/kisatchie/kisatchie-rd/trails/dormon.htm*www.explorenatchitoches.com/outdoors.php?task=view&articleID=87 - 28k
*http://www.friendslaarb.org/aboutus.html
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