|
|
|
ǩ_B(Natchitoches)tϸ`
aʿ
zݹLtϸ`Ϥj|ܡH
w{ǩ_Btϸ`y]tFϤj|BCοO`(Festival
of Lights)Col1920~NyOӥsqOzDNAL{NtϿOb@_u۫e(Front
Street)aANOqOPө(Power
& Light Department)m̨θtϸ`§CӿOwOΫhѷaӦ殽mʶRCۦHAH̳|QοOqΨLyʨwyC~tϩu`C1930~NߴAW}l|Ϥ|Aᤣ[AC]yʤ@AC]Abͮ(Cane
River)W|쪺Htϸ`˹DDjCCӨൣChO1970~N}lC
~A`ѥ[`yʪCȤ]iHY۷w諸ǩ_BCt~AǪuc]s`BϧwJ|BuksפΨLCNpP䤤@ӹCȻGuunO̴媺BѤWBaWΪAiHbnצ̧vC
Have you ever seen a fireworks display at Christmas time?
In Natchitoches, Louisiana, Christmas celebrations include fireworks, a parade, and the Festival of Lights. This festival started in the 1920s, when the city's new chief electrician got the idea that stringing Christmas lights along Front Street would be a nice Christmas present from the Power & Light Department to the citizens of the town. Local businesses donated money for the lights, and every year since then the light show has expanded with more lights and events to celebrate the Christmas season. In the late 1930s, the town started the fireworks displays and soon thereafter started to hold parades, including a parade of Christmas-decorated barges on the Cane River. The children's parade was started in the 1970s.
In addition to all the entertainment festival-goers can eat the highly popular Natchitoches meat pie. Food vendors also offer crawfish pies, funnel cakes, alligator, and other festival food. As one festival-goer put it, "If it swims, flies, hops, or crawls, you can find it there, deep-fried and on a stick."
1/1
aʿ
|