![]() |
|
| Martha Rial, Post-Gazette An American flag was left in in a cedar tree split by Hurricane Katrina by residents evacuating Ironton, in Plaquemines Parish. Click photo for larger image. More pictures
Previous stories
|
To a list of towns that includes Tombstone and Deadwood, you can now add Ironton, La.
Population: 0.
Myrtle Grove, two miles to the south on La. 23 is empty, too. As is West Pointe a la Hache, Socola, Port Sulphur, Empire, Buras, Triumph, Venice -- all shanty towns that sit along the west bank of the Mississippi in a 63-mile stretch before the river dumps into the Gulf of Mexico.
Last week, Hurricane Katrina's first touch on Gulf Coast land was on this finger-shaped delta.
Rossaire Barthelemy, of Jesuit Bend, who rode out the storm in the home he has lived in since 1944, said of Katrina's 150-mph blow, "That was the worst wind in the world."
Yesterday morning, while Barthelemy, 81, his son, Raymond, and his nephew, Wilson Barthelemy, kibitzed in the Barthelemy garage, friends Trevellre Bartholomew and Calvin Sylve, arrived with fresh supplies. Rossaire Barthelemy, who has been without power since the storm, said he welcomed the delivery.
"I've been eating shrimp every day; I'm sick of shrimp," said Barthelemy in a Cajun lilt that was hard to understand.
Bartholomew said he was pleased to help the Barthelemys.
"We're all family here," he said.
![]() |
|
| Martha Rial, Post-Gazette Rossaire Barthelemy, foreground, and his son Raymond Barthelemy at their home in Belle Chasse, Plaquemines Parish. Click photo for larger image. |
"There's nobody left," he said of the 3,000 or so residents who call this delta finger home.
At Ironton, Rollie's word proved true.
The town sits one block off Highway 23 and then stands out into four short blocks that run perpendicular to one of the two levees that are supposed to protect the west bank towns from the river. There's a mix of mobile homes, shanties, bungalows and even a pair of brick residences. The homes are in varying degrees of destruction. Some have been splintered and shredded. Others appear fine from the front, but have gaping holes in their roofs or sides.
The storm cleaned out the closets and sent shirts, pants, underwear and dresses into the barbed wire fence that runs along the town's western edge. In a ditch in front of the fence, everything from mattresses and toilets to chairs, picnic tables and ATVs lay muddied and useless.
![]() |
|
| Martha Rial, Post-Gazette A coffin sits along Route 23 in Plaquemines Parish, La., after floodwaters carried it away from its grave. Click photo for larger image. |
Surprisingly, Alice Higgins' green mailbox in front of her home at 128 Bradish, remained standing. Higgins was not home.
On the steps of the town's church -- St. Paul Missionary Baptist -- the pages of a Bible frayed in the Gulf wind. An inscription read: "Presented to Clifford Gasper, Jr. and Mary Ethel on Aug. 25, 1972."
South of Ironton, where the land is exposed to water on both sides, the damage is more severe. Myrtle and West Point a la Hache have been turned upside down. Farther south, foul smelling water filled with oil, gas, diesel fuel, and other chemicals has filled a number of the fields where the area's few cattle herds grazed.
Yesterday, some of the cattle were observed being taken to safety. Others wandered onto the highway median in search of food.
The flooding was such that it damaged some of the area's cemeteries -- where the dead are buried above ground, because the land is below sea level. A few miles north of Port Sulphur, a power company crew from Florida stopped to photograph a casket that had floated onto the highway's shoulder.
Port Sulphur, the area's largest town, looked as if someone tossed all its buildings out of a plane. Dale Pelas and Ty Wiltz, investigators for the parish coroner, spent the day searching for bodies. They found none.
Only three are confirmed dead in the parish, a stunning figure, they said, considering the amount of damage. In neighboring St. Bernard Parish, the news was grimmer yesterday, after 30 bodies were discovered in a nursing home. Hundreds are feared dead there, largely because more people refused to leave during the storm.
"We're not as hard-headed here as those people," said Wiltz, not unkindly.
Pelas said he was told power might not return to the area for a year or longer.
No power, no people. A whole string of tombstones.
"There is talk," he said, "they're not going to rebuild."
