Today, Tallulah is a sad shell of its former self, with closed stores, a crumbling downtown, seedy houses, and a general air of despondence. Farm communities in the northern Great Plains have experienced a land and farm commodities boom in the last decade (especially for corn), but this prosperity looks like it totally bypassed Tallulah.
East Green Street - U.S. 80 - view west |
Today, many of the businesses on East Green Street look semi-derelict. Fast food restaurants are the only thriving businesses.
Garage on East Green Street, Tallulah |
Depot street parallels the railroad tracks, which are active with Kansas City Southern freight through-trains. But the stores have little prosperity now.
These abandoned shops are on North Chestnut, facing the courthouse.
Every year in October, Tallulah hosts a Teddy Bearfest. The 2013 event, centered at the Madison Parish Courthouse was crowded, and people seemed to be in a good mood. At the BBQ stand, they even called me "Sir." About the same time of the year, Rolling Fork, Mississippi, has its own Bear Affair, but I think these two fests are only related in name.
Proceed west out of town along West Green street, and the scene gets worse. You see closed beer joints and abandoned youth clubs.
Go further west, and you arrive at the Steve Hoyle Rehabilitation Center. Prisons are a big business in northeast Louisiana. The cottage and little shotgun shacks were across the street.
Approaching thunderstorm, West Green Street, Tallulah |
All photographs taken with a Panasonic G3 digital camera, nos. 2, 3, and 4 with an Olympus OM Zuiko Shift 35mm f/2.8 lens, the rest with the Lumix 20mm f/1.7 lens. RAW files were processed with PhotoNinja software and converted to black and white with DXO Filmpack 3. For most, I used the Tri-X film emulation. It is not the same as real Tri-X, which makes me think I should go back to using film and a hand-held light meter. I will need to have my Leica camera cleaned and adjusted.