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New Camp Beauregard namesake is historically unknown 

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lailluminator.com – Piper Hutchinson – 2025-08-13 05:00:00


Louisiana’s largest National Guard training facility, Camp Beauregard, originally named after Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard, was renamed in 2023 by Gov. Jeff Landry after the general’s father, Jacques Toutant-Beauregard, a slave owner with limited military distinction. This move contrasts with previous renamings under Trump’s administration, which honored unrelated military heroes. Jacques Toutant owned a sugarcane plantation worked by enslaved people and served in the Louisiana Militia during the War of 1812, though records show no notable battles. Historians criticize the choice, viewing it as insensitive to Black citizens. The facility’s renaming reflects ongoing debates over Confederate legacies and historical memory.

by Piper Hutchinson, Louisiana Illuminator
August 13, 2025

ST. BERNARD PARISH — Before being elevated by Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, the slave-owning new namesake of the state’s largest National Guard training facility was at best a footnote in history, according to a review of what few documents are available to trace his background. 

Camp Beauregard, founded in 1917 in Pineville, was originally named after Confederate Gen. Pierre Gustav Toutant Beauregard, a St. Bernard Parish native who initiated the attack on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, to begin the Civil War. In 2023, Beauregard’s name was removed from the facility amid a nationwide effort to remove monuments and honorifics to Confederate veterans and leaders. 

Landry announced in July the facility would be renamed after the Confederate general’s father, Jacques Toutant-Beauregard. 

The governor’s decision to restore the Beauregard name is in keeping with the style of President Donald Trump’s administration, which has restored the former Confederate names of military installations by selecting unrelated military heroes. 

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But Landry’s choice of honoree is different. 

For starters, Camp Beauregard’s new namesake is shown in nearly every historical document and on his grave as Jacques Toutant. According to a biography of his son, “P.G.T. Beauregard, Napoleon in Gray,” by historian T. Harry Williams, the future Confederate general began going by a single last name, Beauregard, when he enrolled at West Point in an attempt to Americanize himself. 

Jacques Toutant is also different from Trump’s other restored honorees as he is related to the original namesake. He also does not have any distinctive military accomplishments and was a slave owner, which to many make him a worse choice than his son, who adopted more racially moderate stances after the war. 

“It signals to the Black citizens in [Louisiana] that [Landry] thinks you’re second-class and he doesn’t care if you’re offended,” University of North Carolina Charlotte historian Karen Cox, a scholar on the legacy of Confederate monuments, said of Landry’s decision. 

Landry spokeswoman Kate Kelly did not respond to a request for comment as to why the National Guard facility was being renamed, who was involved in the decision or why Landry opted to name it after a slave owner. 

Little is known about Jacques Toutant other than that he owned a sugarcane plantation in St. Bernard Parish that was later named Contreras. Enslaved people were forced to work on his fields and in his home. Toutant also served as a captain in the Louisiana Militia, though historical records don’t tie him to any particular battle. 

Six historians at four universities contacted for this report declined to comment on his history, citing how little they as individuals – and historians as a group – know about the elder Beauregard. 

“Very little has been written on Contreras Plantation or on Jacques Beauregard, apart from brief mentions in biographies of P.G.T Beauregard,” LSU historian John Bardes said. 

The most detailed records of Toutant’s life come in the Slave Schedules of the 1850 census, which list the age, residence and owner of each enslaved person in the United States. 

Toutant is listed as the owner of 86 enslaved people, ranging from a 60-year-old Black woman to a 2-year-old mixed-race child. The names of the enslaved people Toutant owned were never recorded. 

According to P.G.T. Beauregard’s biographer, T. Harry Williams, Toutant forced an enslaved woman to nurse his children, a practice that often forcefully separated Black women from their own infants. 

Even on his home turf in St. Bernard Parish, the name Jacques Toutant is all but forgotten. 

The site of the Contreras Plantation, where a large home burned down in the mid-20th century, is marked with a decrepit memorial to P.G.T. Beauregard. Enclosed on three sides by barbed-wire topped fences, the grassy patches that surround the memorial were littered with empty beer cans and rotted picnic tables when visited by a reporter in late July. 

The white brick pyramid memorial at the Contreras site was financed by Judge Leander Perez, according to local historian and author Sean Michael Chick. Perez is remembered as a dogged segregationist who was excommunicated from the Catholic Church for his efforts to obstruct the integration of schools in New Orleans. He also attempted to stop civil rights workers from entering Plaquemines Parish to help Black residents register to vote. 

Once pristine, the pyramid was covered in grayish muck during a reporter’s recent visit. It only mentions Toutant as among the general’s ancestors. 

Less than 2 miles down the road, Toutant is buried in the St. Bernard Parish Catholic Cemetery. The engraved door to his tomb is broken in over a dozen places, his name hardly legible through the cracks and the wear of time. 

Jacques Toutant’s grave in St. Bernard Parish, pictured in July 2025. (Piper Hutchinson/Louisiana Illuminator)

The grave also bears a medallion commemorating Toutant as a veteran of the War of 1812. 

It is on this veteran status that Landry chose to honor Toutant. 

“By restoring the name Camp Beauregard, we honor a legacy of courage and service that dates back over two centuries,” Landry said in his announcement about the renaming. 

Through a public records request, the Illuminator obtained the historical documents the Louisiana National Guard said it used to justify renaming its Pineville training base after Toutant. They included militia payroll records that span from Dec. 16, 1814, to March 20, 1815. They indicate Toutant served under Col. Pierre Denys de la Ronde, who led the Louisiana Militia at the Battle of New Orleans and later earned the rank of major general. 

The records do not definitively place Toutant at the site of any particular battle or indicate he earned any military honors. A Louisiana National Guard press release announcing the renaming notes his regiment took part in a prelude to the Battle of New Orleans, although historians have noted only minor skirmishes along Lake Borgne before the war’s final conflict in Chalmette.  

Despite having no details on Toutant’s militia service, Maj. Gen. Thomas Friloux, adjutant general of the Louisiana National Guard, praised him as an American hero. 

“We’re naming our premier training installation after an American hero and patriot who fought for the freedom of the city of New Orleans, the State of Louisiana, and the United States of America against a foreign invader,” Friloux said. 

When asked about this discrepancy, Louisiana National Guard spokeswoman Lt. Col. Noel Collins referred questions to the Society of the War of 1812’s Louisiana chapter, which she said was consulted for information about Toutant. 

Chapter president Brig. Gen. Rodney Painting, who is listed online as an assistant adjutant general in the Louisiana National Guard, did not respond to a request for comment. 

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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

The post New Camp Beauregard namesake is historically unknown  appeared first on lailluminator.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This content presents a critical perspective on the decision to rename a military facility after a slave-owning figure, highlighting the historical context of slavery and the implications for Black citizens. It emphasizes concerns about racial sensitivity and the legacy of Confederate symbols, which aligns with a center-left viewpoint that often advocates for racial justice and reevaluation of historical commemorations. The article maintains a factual tone but frames the renaming decision as controversial and potentially offensive, reflecting a moderate progressive stance without extreme partisanship.

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Council to finalize Lemoine Building purchase, Northside rezoning

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thecurrentla.com – Camden Doherty – 2025-09-02 10:16:00

SUMMARY: In June, the Lafayette City Council approved $6.5 million in bonds for LFT Fiber to purchase the former Lemoine building at 214 Jefferson Street, currently its rented headquarters. LUS allocated $3.5 million from reserves for sewer and power line repairs due to stormwater infiltration causing losses and limiting new housing connections. The Council plans to rezone over 30 properties between Mudd Avenue and E. Simcoe Street for mixed commercial and residential use to promote development, despite challenges from a new short-term rental ban. Additionally, the 400 Block of Renaud Drive will shift from industrial to mixed-use zoning. ADA upgrades at Rosa Parks Center are delayed, doubling the timeline from three to six years.

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Jefferson Parish deputies investigate second fatal shooting Labor Day morning

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wgno.com – Raeven Poole – 2025-09-01 11:26:00

SUMMARY: The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office is investigating a homicide in Harvey, Louisiana, after a man was found dead from multiple gunshot wounds inside a red vehicle on Aberdeen Drive on September 1. The victim was reportedly shot while driving, causing a crash into unoccupied cars. Neighbors expressed shock and fear, describing the incident as unsettling for the usually safe neighborhood. This marks the second homicide in the area within 12 hours. Authorities are gathering evidence to identify a suspect and motive. The Jefferson Parish Coroner’s Office will release the victim’s identity after autopsy and family notification. Anyone with information is urged to contact JPSO.

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Just isolated rain today, then turning hotter and drier

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www.youtube.com – KSAT 12 – 2025-09-01 09:56:06

SUMMARY: Good Monday morning and happy Labor Day! Today in San Antonio, expect isolated rain showers with a 20-30% chance, mainly south and west of town. Temperatures will reach around 90°F, starting cooler at 83°F by noon. September typically cools from an average high of 94°F to 87°F and is one of the rainier months, averaging 3.88 inches. After today, it will turn hotter and drier through midweek. Looking ahead, a potential Pacific hurricane combined with a trough could bring heavy rain this weekend, though timing is uncertain. Rain chances are set for Saturday and Sunday, with cooler weather expected.

Less rainfall today, while temperatures will be a bit cooler.

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