
414. Matthew White, part 2
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<p> 414. Part 2 of our <a href="http://archive.org/download/414-matthew-white-part-2/414--Matthew_White--part_2.mp3" target="_blank">interview </a>with photographer and musician <a href="https://www.matthewwhitestudio.com/" moz-do-not-send="true">Matthew D. White</a>. "I am a photographer living in New Orleans. Most of my work is centered on the south Louisiana landscape, the US Gulf Coast, and South Florida. I have been photographing the Louisiana coast from Sabine Pass to the mouth of the Mississippi for more than 15 years.</p><div><span><a name='more'></a></span> I also specialize in architectural, real estate, nature, travel, aerial, and industrial imagery. My photographs have appeared in <i>Nature Conservancy Magazine; 64 Parishes</i> (Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities); <i>Marie Claire</i> (UK); <i>Stern</i> (DE); the <i>New Orleans Times-Picayune</i>; and <i>The New York Times</i>. My stock portfolio is represented by Getty Images. Licensing available for all images seen here. Inquire for commercial or editorial assignment."</div><p> </p><div><ol type="a"><li>This week in Louisiana history. April 24, 1877. Reconstruction ended in Louisiana.</li><li>This week in New Orleans history. On April 24, 1877, Federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans, ending the North's post-Civil War rule in the South.<br /> </li><li>This week in Louisiana. <br /> Fort Jesup State Historic Site sits deep in the rural country between the Louisiana Purchase’s oldest city, Natchitoches, and the trophy fish-rich waters of Toledo Bend Reservoir. For those interested in American military history, it offers insights into a nation 150 years ago that was headed westward and facing enormous growing pains. After the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, the United States’ western borders were not clearly defined. The U.S