Acadian
Village is located on the 32-acres of LARC (Lafayette Association for
Retarded Citizens). In the early 1970s, officials with the facility
were looking for an opportunity to improve tourism in Lafayette, Louisiana.
However, the idea was to serve a dual purpose: to generate revenue for
the facility and to serve as an employment opportunity for those persons
with developmental disabilities that were fully capable of working. Dr.
Norman Heard, Bob Lowe and Glen Conrad are credited with the idea, which
soon after became a reality. Of course, the visionary team wanted to
use authentic homes. Most of the homes that are on the Village grounds
had long been abandoned and were being used for hay storage or just
not used at all. Families were immediately contacted, and the negotiations
began. In some cases, grants were used for the purchase and movement,
and in some cases the houses were free - only the cost of moving them
was incurred.
In order to recreate a typical 1800 Cajun village, the design team would
have to transform 10 acres of farmland into a shaded-lived in community
with a waterway running through it. The massive undertaking of reconstruction,
dredging of bayous and such was accomplished through local carpenters,
businessmen, civic organizations
and community volunteers. Even the Army Reservists of the Lafayette
area pitched in by building an information center. The end result was
a moment captured in time. Perhaps the 1978 Village Director Mrs. Marti
Gutierrez said it best in a Times Picayune special section “The
old ways are worth keeping alive, worth handing down, worth remembering.”
Seven
of the 11 buildings are authentic homes of the 19th century donated
by the families whose ancestors once occupied them. All homes show the
passing of time and are remarkable examples of the ingenuity of the
early Acadian homebuilders, complete with wooden pegs, mud walls, hand-hewn
cypress timbers and high-peaked roofs. Each was moved piece by piece
and carefully restored.