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511. Danielle Romero, Part 1

Louisiana Anthology Podcast
Louisiana Anthology Podcast
Episode • Mar 3, 2023
511. Part 1 of our interview with Danielle Romero about her documentary, Finding Lola. Danielle lives in Nashville, Tenn., but has deep roots in Natchitoches Parish. A filmmaker, she is documenting the search for her great-grandmother, Lola Perot, who passed away before Romero was born. “She left the Natchitoches area of Louisiana in the 1930s and changed her name and race to hide her identity and attempted to pass as white in New York where I was born,” Romero said. Romero said when Perot left Louisiana with her Irish husband, John Donnelly, and moved to New York, she taught her children, including Romero’s grandmother, that they were French and Irish.
Romero made her first visit to this area in 2021 to find family and truth. “Where did Lola’s family come from? What was she hiding, and why? It was time to find Lola, and myself. I’ve spent months interviewing elders and cousins and I am excited to share the journey of the complexity of Louisiana heritage — both in the past and today.”

  1. This week in Louisiana history. March 3, 1820. Slavery
    outlawed within the Louisiana Purchase territory north of
    36°30' latitude (northern border of Arkansas.)


  2. This week in New Orleans history. The Washington Post
    printed on March 3, 1909, "The news comes from Louisiana that
    large areas of that State heretofore devoted to the growing of
    cotton will be planted to cane, because the boll weevil has
    wrought such havoc on the former crop. If this pest shall be
    the occasion of a diversity of farm crops at the South his
    presence in the cotton field will not prove an unmixed evil."



  3. This week in Louisiana.

    Women's Symposium

    Bayou Pointe Event Center

    100 Warhawk Way,

    Monroe, LA 71209

    As part of ULM's celebration of Woman's History Month, the
    Women's Symposium - in a panelist/moderator format - discusses
    issues women face every day: networking, inclusion,
    leadership, professionalism, and financial growth.

    What: Women's Symposium

    When:  Wednesday, March 14, 2023

    Time: 12pm-4:30pm. Networking Social to immediately follow
    (4:30-6:30).

    Purchase
    Tickets Here
    :

    EARLY BIRD (Before February 16th): Students- free.
    Faculty/Staff- $20. Community- $35

    February 16th and after: Students- free; Faculty/Staff- $25;
    Community- $40

    2023 Early Bird (Through 2/16/23) Students- Free (all)
    Faculty/ Staff- $25 Community- $40


  4. Postcards from Louisiana. Bruce listens to twins singing a
    duet on Decatur Street in front of St. Louis Cathedral.
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