1959: (Class Zone III — 24 Percent — Class Zone III Making Up 24 Percent or 36,000 People Inhabiting Areas North of Champs Mars Including Poste Marchard and …
1959: (Class Zone III — 24 Percent — Class Zone III Making Up 24 Percent or 36,000 People Inhabiting Areas North of Champs Mars Including Poste Marchard and Bolosse, Distinguished from Zone IV in That Two-Thirds Had Permanent Employment Primarily in the Industrial Sector — Within St. Gerard’s Parish Twenty-One Ounfò and Five Protestant Churches, “One of Their Outstanding Characteristics Is the Extreme Care Which They Take with the Education of Their Children,” Zone III Also Being “Swollen by Well-to-Do Children Who Attended Downtown Schools” and the “Best Patrons of the Stadium”): Class Zone III made up 24 percent of the urban population (36,000 people) inhabiting areas north of Champs Mars including Poste Marchard and Bolosse. This group was most distinguished from Class Zone IV in that two-thirds of the population had permanent employment primarily in the industrial sector. Within St. Gerard’s Parish, there were twenty-one ounfò and five Protestant churches. One of their outstanding characteristics was the extreme care which they took with the education of their children — they nourished definite, thereby no means unreasonable, ambitions for their offspring. This class zone was also swollen by well-to-do children who attended downtown schools, and Zone III residents were the best patrons of the stadium.