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      • Built by Huey P. Long in 1930 as “Louisiana's White House,” the Old Governor's Mansion is now a historic house museum and the headquarters of the Foundation for Historical Louisiana.
      www.visitbatonrouge.com › things-to-do › museums-history
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  2. Although Louisiana became a state in 1812, the first purchase of a gubernatorial mansion was not until 1887, when the State of Louisiana purchased the house from the heirs of Nathan Knox for $10,000. The Knox mansion, located at the present site of the Old Governor's Mansion, was built in 1857.

  3. By 1887, conservatives were powerful enough to push through a bill to purchase the first Louisiana governor’s mansion. McEnery chose a house built by Nathan Knox in 1857. It was at the south side of North Boulevard between Royal and St. Charles.

  4. After the Civil War, New Orleans was Louisiana's capital until political shifts returned the title to Baton Rouge in 1881. Initially, governors lived in rented city homes. By 1887, conservatives secured enough power to buy the first governor's mansion—the Knox House on North Boulevard—for $10,000.

  5. The Old Governor’s Mansion is located on a live oak-lined boulevard in downtown Baton Rouge, just four blocks from the Mississippi River. Nine governors and their families lived in the Georgian-style home, but it was built by the most flamboyant and notorious of them.

  6. Jun 7, 2023 · Davis served as governor from 1944 to 1948 and again from 1960 to 1964, and was the last governor to live in the mansion. The new Governor’s Mansion, a modern structure with air conditioning situated close to the Louisiana State Capitol, opened in 1963.

  7. The Old Governor's Mansion, built by Huey P. Long in 1930 and nicknamed "Louisiana's White House," has served as the official residence to nine Louisiana governors and their families. The flamboyant Earl K. Long, known for cavorting with exotic dancer Blaze Starr, lived there the longest.

  8. The first governor's mansion, a large frame house built for Baton Rouge businessman Nathan King Knox, served as the official residence of Louisiana governors from 1887 until 1929, when it was razed. The architects for the neoclassical mansion were Weiss, Dreyfous, and Seiferth of New Orleans.

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