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Feautures
Takes Reservations
Accepts Credit Cards
Apple Pay
Delivery
Outdoor Seating
Good for Kids
Good for Groups
Waiter Service
Take-out
Wheelchair Accessible
Has TV
Dogs Allowed
Sells Gift Certificates
Alcohol
Has Music
Karaoke
Parking Lot
Valet Parking
Free Wifi
Smoking Allowed
Shower
Contact Information
13786 River Rd, Destrehan, LA 70047, United States
Detailed Information

Ormond Plantation has survived into the late 20th Century with its unique character and sometimes tragic history. In the early 1780s, Pierre dTrepagnier was awarded a tract of land by the Spanish Governor Don Bernardo deGalvez, in recognition of Trepagniers service in subduing the British at Natchez during the American Revolution. The main building was completed shortly before 1790 and occupied by Mr. and Mrs. dTrepagnier and their children. dTrepagnier began growing indigo, and then sugar cane, and the Plantation began to prosper. The house is built in the Louisiana Colonial style for plantations, which is modeled after the great sugar plantations of the West Indies. The house was constructed using bricks between cypress studs (Briquettes Entre Poteaux – Brick Between Posts) on the front and rear walls and a type of adobe filling on the sidewalls. Round cemented brick columns sported the front porch, or gallery, with wood columns on the second floor sporting the roof. The home was often the scene for entertaining officials of the Louisiana and Spanish Governments. In 1798, the first of the mysteries occurred. Pierre dTrepagnier was summoned from a family meal by a servant to meet a gentlemen, supposedly dressed in clothes signifying a Spanish official. After a word to his wife, Pierre dTrepagnier left with the man and never returned. No trace of dTrepagnier was ever found. On June 25, 1805, Col. Richard Butler, son and nephew of American Revolutionary war heroes bought the plantation home and land from Mrs. dTrepagnier. Butler had served in the U.S. Army and had fallen in love with the South. He named his new home Ormond, after his ancestral home, the Castle Ormonde in Ireland. On August 7, 1809, Butler became a business partner with Captain Samuel McCutchon, a merchant and sailor, originally from Pennsylvania, when he sold to McCutchon, one-third share in Ormond Plantation. On June 29, 1819, in a private pact signed at the Plantation, Richard

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