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Mansfield, Louisiana

Mansfield, Louisiana
City
City of Mansfield
Downtown Mansfield about The Mansfield Enterprise newspaper, once edited by Joseph Barton Elam, Jr.
Downtown Mansfield about The Mansfield Enterprise newspaper, once edited by Joseph Barton Elam, Jr.
Location in DeSoto Parish and the state of Louisiana.
Location in DeSoto Parish and the state of Louisiana.
Mansfield, Louisiana is located in Louisiana
Mansfield, Louisiana
Mansfield, Louisiana
Mansfield, Louisiana is located in the US
Mansfield, Louisiana
Mansfield, Louisiana
Location in DeSoto Parish and the state of Louisiana.
Coordinates: 32°01′58″N 93°42′09″W / 32.03278°N 93.70250°W / 32.03278; -93.70250Coordinates: 32°01′58″N 93°42′09″W / 32.03278°N 93.70250°W / 32.03278; -93.70250
Country  United States
States  Louisiana
Parish DeSoto
Government
 • Mayor Curtis McCoy (D) (began fourth term July 1, 2014)
Population (2010)
 • Total 5,001
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
ZIP code 71052
Area code 71052
U.S. Highway US 84.svg US 171.svg
Website cityofmansfield.net

Mansfield is a small city in and the parish seat of DeSoto Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 5,001 at the 2010 census, a decline of more than 10 percent from the 2000 tabulation. Mansfield is 77 percent African American. Mansfield is part of the ShreveportBossier City Metropolitan Statistical Area.

The Battle of Mansfield, a Confederate victory under General Richard Taylor (son of Zachary Taylor), was fought here on April 8, 1864. This battle turned 42,000 Union troops away from their conquest of the Louisiana Confederate capital, Shreveport, and sent them in retreat to New Orleans. The battle is commemorated at the Mansfield State Historic Site some four miles south of Mansfield off Louisiana Highway 175.

The first woman's college west of the Mississippi River, Mansfield Female College, was founded by the Methodist Church there in 1855. A two-year college, its first class graduated in 1856. Financial difficulties and the threat of war closed the college from 1860 to the end of the American Civil War, during which its buildings served as a hospital for soldiers wounded in the battle of Mansfield; it reopened in 1865. In 1930, Mansfield Female College merged with Centenary College of Louisiana in Shreveport and closed its doors permanently. In 2003, the Louisiana State Legislature moved to convert the main building of Mansfield Female College, the Lyceum, into a future museum.


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