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 more...>Louisiana Agriculture Magazine>Past Issues>2001>Fall>

 

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ON THE COVER
Kenneth Gravois is resident director of the Sugar Research Station at St. Gabriel, La., where the sugarcane breeding research is conducted.

in this issue


Cover Page
Louisiana Agriculture Magazine Fall 2001
Vol. 44, No. 4 Sugarcane
Audubon Sugar Institute: Poised to Continue Its Proud Tradition
In 1887, a group of sugarcane growers known as the Louisiana Planters Association set up a research facility in Audubon Park in New Orleans so they could learn more about the granulation process. This was the beginning of the Audubon Sugar Institute. C.W. Stubbs, a professor of agriculture, became the first director of the station. A classroom building in the LSU Quadrangle is named in his honor.
Crossing House
New Sugarcane Varieties Pay Bid Dividends
New sugarcane varieties are the lifeblood of the Louisiana sugar industry. In fact, the high and the low points of the Louisiana sugar industry closely parallel those of sugarcane variety development. The first sugarcane varieties grown in Louisiana were of foreign origin. Introduced varieties were typically renamed and included “Creole,” from which Etienne De Bore first granulated sugar, “Otaheite,” and later “Louisiana Striped” and “Louisiana Purple.”
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