This is a quick roadside photo stop near the point where the three states meet. The listed address is on the Texas side, so it is technically just outside Louisiana.
Look for the unusual roadside monument decorated with green concrete frogs. It recalls Frog Level, the colorful name once used for the community that later became Rodessa.
This surviving 1914 vertical-lift bridge crosses the water at Mooringsport. Visitors can admire its industrial steelwork, photograph Caddo Lake, and walk along the pedestrian portion when accessible.
This quiet park on Black Bayou Lake has a boat launch, dock, pavilion, playground, and views of a cypress-filled wetland. It is especially suited to fishing, birdwatching, and peaceful nature photography.
The museum tells the story of the early Louisiana oil boom through photographs, films, equipment, reconstructed scenes, drilling machinery, and outdoor displays connected to the historic Caddo-Pine Island Oil Field.
This Caddo Lake park offers a boat launch, fishing pier, campsites, picnic areas, playgrounds, disc golf, and broad views across the lake. It is a good stop for fishing, paddling, or a waterside meal.
Drift Inn is primarily a Caddo Lake boat landing and gathering place. Visitors will find a deep-water launch, places for recreational vehicles, a small store, food, and easy access to boating and fishing.
These wooded trails were created for mountain biking, hiking, and trail running. The system includes bike-oriented singletrack and shared paths through the rolling terrain north of Shreveport.
Visitors can walk through one of the country’s last surviving steam-powered municipal water plants. The original pumps, boilers, pipes, and industrial architecture explain how Shreveport once purified and distributed its water.
The aquarium features sharks, rays, alligators, tropical fish, touch exhibits, and displays about marine and river habitats. Its downtown location also provides views of the Red River.
The university’s main visitor attraction is the Pioneer Heritage Center, a collection of seven historic regional buildings. These include a dogtrot house, plantation residence, kitchen, blacksmith shop, doctor’s office, commissary, and mission.
Tours by Appointment Only. Call (318) 797-5339
32.35476, -93.66284
Venue de LaChute
This is a private wedding and event estate centered around a historic-style mansion, landscaped lawns, mature trees, and waterfront scenery. It is normally seen while attending an event or by appointment rather than as a walk-in attraction.
32.25175, -93.46059
Joe D. Waggonner Jr. Lock and Dam No. 5
This large navigation structure shows how modern locks allow boats and barges to travel along the Red River. Visitors can view the dam, lock chamber, levees, and river traffic from permitted public areas.
32.10813, -93.45550
Red River National Wildlife Refuge, Yates Tract
This remote refuge tract contains wetlands, shallow-water areas, fields, and bottomland habitat used by waterfowl and other wildlife. It is best suited to birdwatching, wildlife observation, and seasonal outdoor recreation.
31.87294, -93.20128
Powhatan Texas and Pacific Railway Depot
The old rural depot is a reminder of the period when small communities along Louisiana Highway 1 depended upon the railroad. It is primarily an exterior photography stop, and regular interior access should not be expected.
31.93370, -93.30056
Red River Parish Locks near Fairview Alpha
Visitors can observe Red River navigation and the engineering that maintains a dependable channel for commercial and recreational boats.
31.94110, -93.27190
Red Oak Lake Recreation Area
This small recreation site has a two-lane boat launch, parking, picnic facilities, grills, a seawall, and places for bank fishing. It is a convenient stop for accessing Red Oak Lake and the surrounding waterways.
31.83379, -93.16656
Gator Country Louisiana Alligator Park
The park houses hundreds of alligators along with reptiles and other animals. Elevated walkways, feeding programs, demonstrations, and animal encounters allow visitors to see Louisiana alligators at close range.
31.75979, -93.08663
Natchitoches Riverfront Amphitheater
Located beside Cane River Lake in the historic district, the amphitheater hosts concerts, festivals, holiday events, and public gatherings. The riverfront also provides attractive views of downtown Natchitoches.
31.76165, -93.09396
Texas and Pacific Railway Depot
Built in 1927, the restored depot preserves separate entrances and waiting areas from the segregation era. It now helps interpret railroad history and the stories of Cane River’s African American communities.
31.75222, -93.08778
Fort St. Jean Baptiste State Historic Site
This reconstructed French colonial fort contains wooden defensive walls, barracks, a chapel, storehouses, and other structures. Exhibits explain trade, military life, and the French presence in early Louisiana.
31.65572, -93.00957
Cane River Creole National Historical Park
Oakland preserves a complete plantation landscape with a main house, cabins, barns, store, workshops, and other outbuildings. Interpretation discusses the lives of landowners, enslaved people, tenant farmers, and workers across several generations.
31.60207, -92.97337
Badin-Roque House
Dating to around 1770, this is a rare example of French Creole construction using earthfast posts and bousillage walls. The building also served as a convent and school, but interior access is generally limited.
31.59361, -92.97278
St. Augustine Catholic Church
This historic Cane River church grew from a congregation organized by free Creoles of color, particularly the Metoyer family. Visitors can see the church, cemetery, historic bell, religious artwork, and surrounding Cane River community.
31.52807, -92.85738
Little Eva Pecan Company
Located on a working pecan orchard, the store offers Louisiana pecans, candies, gifts, and regional products. Displays also connect the property to Cane River history and the artwork of Clementine Hunter.
31.39465, -92.67246
Boyce Recreation Area
This Red River park includes a two-lane boat launch, bank fishing, picnic shelter, grills, walking trails, playground facilities, and river access. It is a practical rest or picnic stop along the route.
31.30862, -92.44458
Louisiana History Museum, Alexandria
The museum contains exhibits covering Alexandria, Central Louisiana, Indigenous history, military events, transportation, politics, and everyday life. Because access can be limited, arrange or verify a visit in advance.
31.18703, -92.29283
John H. Overton Lock and Dam No. 2
South of Alexandria, this Red River complex provides views of a modern navigation lock, dam, boat traffic, and river-management infrastructure. Nearby recreation areas support fishing, boating, and picnicking.
31.12472, -92.04778
Marksville Prehistoric Indian Site
The site contains ancient earthworks and burial mounds associated with the Marksville culture and the broader Hopewell tradition. The land was returned to the Tunica-Biloxi Tribe, and public museum and trail access has been reported closed, so confirm before visiting.
31.09155, -92.05537
Tunica-Biloxi Museum
The museum interprets the history and living culture of the Tunica-Biloxi people. Its best-known collection is the Tunica Treasure, which contains Indigenous, European, and trade objects from the eighteenth century.
31.05840, -92.05070
Avoyelles Commission of Tourism / 4H Museum
This is primarily a visitor-information stop where travelers can obtain maps, brochures, and guidance about Avoyelles Parish attractions, food, festivals, historic sites, and outdoor recreation.
30.99087, -91.84227
Yellow Bayou Historic Civil War Battle Landmark
Yellow Bayou was the site of the last major battle of the 1864 Red River Campaign. Visitors can see the historical marker, battlefield landscape, surviving earthworks, and a picnic area near the site.
30.93311, -91.70458
Birthplace of George “Buddy” Guy
Lettsworth honors the legendary blues guitarist with roadside markers, including a Mississippi Blues Trail marker and the designation of part of Louisiana Highway 418 as Buddy Guy Way. Beautiful area with many adandoned buildings, virtually a ghost town!
30.91870, -91.68090
Chinn-Scott Chapel
This small rural African American church dates to the late nineteenth century and reflects the growth of Methodist congregations after emancipation. It is mainly an exterior architecture and community-history stop.
30.89778, -91.66917
St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Innis
This historic brick Gothic Revival church is one of Pointe Coupee Parish’s oldest surviving brick buildings. Visitors can view its pointed windows, traditional church design, and historic cemetery.
30.77660, -91.61990
Morganza Spillway Outlet Works
This enormous flood-control system was designed to divert dangerous Mississippi River floodwater into the Atchafalaya Basin. Its long row of gates, concrete structures, levees, and cranes make it an impressive engineering stop.
30.72922, -91.48672
St. Francis of Pointe Coupee
The present Gothic Revival chapel dates to the late nineteenth century, while the congregation’s history reaches back to the French colonial period. The building now helps preserve Pointe Coupee’s Catholic and architectural heritage.
30.69222, -91.43511
Morel’s Restaurant
Morel’s is built along the edge of False River and is valued as much for its waterfront view as for its seafood and Louisiana cooking. It is a pleasant meal stop overlooking the lake.
30.63433, -91.48730
Pointe Coupee Parish Museum
The museum occupies a rare Creole-style log house with portions dating to the early nineteenth century. Period furnishings, household objects, documents, and architectural details illustrate local life before and after the Civil War.
30.46056, -91.20639
West Baton Rouge Museum
This museum complex uses galleries and historic buildings to examine sugar agriculture, slavery, emancipation, plantation labor, local communities, and the cultural history of West Baton Rouge Parish.
30.45477, -91.20844
Port Allen Rail Depot
The restored depot and accompanying railcar preserve the history of passenger and freight transportation in Port Allen. It is a compact stop for railroad architecture and local transportation history.
30.35444, -91.26639
Addis Museum
Housed in a former bank building, the museum covers the town’s development as a railroad community. Exhibits include railroad materials, Mardi Gras objects, military memorabilia, photographs, and local family history.
30.29238, -91.23463
Plaquemine Lock State Historic Site
The Plaquemine Lock preserves a 1909 navigation lock designed under the supervision of George Goethals. Visitors can see the lock structure, gates, machinery, and museum exhibits about river and bayou transportation.
30.23631, -91.13833
Madonna Chapel, Bayou Goula
This tiny roadside Catholic chapel measures only about nine feet by nine feet. Visitors may step inside to see its altar and devotional objects, and the key is traditionally kept nearby for respectful visitors.
30.10174, -90.99405
River Road African American Museum
The museum presents the history of enslaved people, freedom, Reconstruction, Black education, rural medicine, jazz, and community life along the Mississippi River. Its research includes the names of thousands of enslaved individuals.
30.10020, -90.98690
Fort Butler
The site commemorates a Union fort that defended Donaldsonville during the Civil War. Although little of the original fort remains, markers and memorials explain the 1863 battle and the participation of African American soldiers and formerly enslaved men.
29.84620, -90.85860
E.D. White Historic Site
This nineteenth-century home contains exhibits about the White family, including Chief Justice Edward Douglass White, as well as the Chitimacha, Acadian settlement, slavery, sugar production, and Bayou Lafourche life.
29.79619, -90.82495
Wetlands Acadian Cultural Center
This National Park Service center offers films, exhibits, walking programs, and occasional boat tours. It explains Acadian migration, Cajun traditions, music, food, waterways, and life in Louisiana’s wetlands.
29.78991, -90.78674
Laurel Valley Village and Plantation Road
Laurel Valley preserves one of Louisiana’s largest surviving collections of sugar-plantation buildings. Visitors can see workers’ cabins, a school, church, store, agricultural structures, and a small museum while learning about enslaved and later plantation laborers.
29.64520, -90.53821
Lockport Elevated Boardwalk
The approximately 440-foot boardwalk passes through a swamp filled with native trees, wetland plants, birds, and seasonal flowers. It provides an accessible way to experience the Bayou Lafourche wetlands.
29.55801, -90.37445
Larose Memorial Chapel
This small roadside chapel was created as a memorial to the 22 people killed in the area during Hurricane Hilda in 1964. It is a quiet place of remembrance rather than a conventional tourist attraction.
29.39401, -90.26996
Holy Mary Shrine, Golden Meadow
This handmade devotional site was built following a reported Marian apparition in the 1970s. Visitors will see religious statues, painted signs, rosaries, flowers, and other expressions of local Catholic faith.
29.18053, -90.06788
Elmer’s Island Wildlife Refuge
Elmer’s Island protects Gulf beach, dunes, tidal flats, salt marsh, and coastal wildlife habitat. Visitors come for fishing, birdwatching, shell collecting, photography, and walking, but there are few facilities and vehicle access is restricted.
mmmm
Cheniere Caminada Cemetery
Once known as the “Isle of the Chitimachas,” this coastal settlement later became Cheniere Caminada, a community of fishermen, farmers, and families with stories of pirates and the sea. On October 1, 1893, a powerful hurricane destroyed nearly the entire settlement and killed more than 750 people. Many victims were buried in mass graves within this cemetery, making it a solemn memorial to one of Louisiana’s deadliest natural disasters.
29.22962, -89.99974
Grand Isle Beach
Grand Isle offers miles of public Gulf shoreline suitable for swimming, beachcombing, surf fishing, birdwatching, sunrise viewing, and relaxing beside the water. Public crossovers provide access through the developed portions of town.
29.23624, -89.98726
Grand Isle Veterans War Memorial
This small civic memorial honors military service members and veterans. The site includes commemorative elements and a large nineteenth-century naval cannon, making it a brief history and photography stop.
29.26374, -89.94916
Grand Isle State Park Fishing Pier
The state park offers Gulf and lagoon fishing, crabbing, beach access, birding, camping, and nature trails. Fishing structures have experienced repeated hurricane damage, so verify which pier or section is accessible before visiting.