Cultural Heritage
Cultural Heritage· Terrebonne Parish

Vietnamese Shrimpers of Houma

Good forFood & drink loversHistory buffs

In the 1970s, South Vietnamese refugees arrived in south Louisiana following reunification of Vietnam and settled to work as shrimpers, just as they had at home. Houma received a significant share. The parallels were precise — the boats, the nets, the marsh geography, the seasonal rhythms — and Vietnamese families built a parallel shrimping economy alongside the Cajun one already there. Many ethnic Vietnamese families continue to work in shrimping today, a tradition passed down through their families for decades. The story of Houma's waterfront is not one culture but at least three — Houma Nation, Cajun, Vietnamese — all working the same bayous.

Quick facts
  • ·In the 1970s, South Vietnamese refugees settled in Houma to work as shrimpers — the parallels with home were precise: boats, nets, marsh geography, seasonal rhythms.
  • ·Vietnamese families built a parallel shrimping economy alongside the Cajun one already there.
  • ·Many ethnic Vietnamese families continue to work in shrimping today, a tradition passed down through decades.
  • ·Houma's waterfront story is not one culture but at least three — Houma Nation, Cajun, Vietnamese — all working the same bayous.
  • ·Vietnamese-owned seafood markets and restaurants are concentrated along the Highway 24 and Highway 56 corridors.

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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.