History Captured
Olide Paul Schexnayder: Louisiana photographer

With the temperature projecting to dip between a steady 31 and 29 degrees, along with an 86% chance of wintry precipitation coming up on Thursday, January 9, 2025 and staying much the same on Friday (34-32 with 50 %,) then finally levelling off on Saturday with a high of 39 degrees and only a 24% chance of any other wetness...you will find all of us in north Louisiana bracing for "it." We can readily put up with the heat and humidity and the bugs, but none of us like the cold, the ice, or the snow much at all.
So, I thought this reflection of the coldest day ever recorded should be noted. The one and only true blizzard of our state which wreaked havoc to shipping from the Mississippi River for two weeks, and killing cattle and fruit trees.
Also to note, the importance of the Louisiana photographer who captured the silvery lines of ice on the frozen Mississippi and the sheer life-force found in each of those eight people in his timeless photograph.
I was enraptured by the character they each projected. I wanted to get to know them and their stories. My imagination went wild. This told me that Olide Paul Schexnayder had most assuredly earned his right to be showcased among Louisiana State Museums' Visual Arts Collection. (https://louisianastatemuseum.org/collections-olide-p-schexnayder)

He has many other "true life" photos that tell compelling stories in his collection. I hope you will take the time to browse them.
Interesting to note was the fact that he gave up his career as a photographer and became an optician. He corrected vision in both fields, I would say. What an artist!
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References:
https://louisianastatemuseum.org/collections-olide-p-schexnayder
https://www.nola.com/archive/you-think-its-cold-now-in-1899-the-mississippi-river-froze-over/article_c502d458-cc64-5ab2-808b-8aedceb1e754.html
https://64parishes.org/land-of-the-defunct-orange-tree-and-ice-burdened-palmetto
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schexnayder
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22657948/olide_paul-schexnayder
About the Creator
Shirley Belk
Mother, Nana, Sister, Cousin, & Aunt who recently retired. RN (Nursing Instructor) who loves to write stories to heal herself and reflect on all the silver linings she has been blessed with :)
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Comments (15)
Lovely and well written. Here's mine https://shopping-feedback.today/authors/danielle-mosley-rrf0n40ghs%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cstyle data-emotion-css="w4qknv-Replies">.css-w4qknv-Replies{display:grid;gap:1.5rem;}
Lovely article
Brilliant article
A great story. I prefer the humidity and mosquitoes over the cold too.
Wonderful story
Great article
Brrrrr! It was -17 here this morning. I am excited (?!) for mosquitoes and humidity right now! This was a great read and I loved the picture too.
Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! ππππππ
nice
Great story of a great photographer and visual historian. Thanks for the inspiration
Thanks for sharing this fascinating slice of history.
Snow is great to look at once in a great while for about ten minutes then back to summer please. The old picture was interesting though.
Oh my, I cannot stand the cold at all. If I were them, I'd have frozen and died, lol
Loved this, Shirley. Old photos are always super interesting, I think. But give me the cold. Sweating and bugs? Nope!!
Interesting tidbit. Thanks for sharing