North Louisiana History is an academic journal published twice annually in Shreveport, Louisiana by the North Louisiana Historical Association (NLHA).
The origin of North Louisiana History parallels the history of the NLHA itself, which was organized in 1952 at Methodist-affiliated Centenary College in Shreveport.
The NLHA founding members included Mrs. D. H. Perkins and Dr. A. W. Shaw. The organization awards the Overdyke Awards for its best published research paper in memory of W. Darrell Overdyke, a Centenary College history professor. With time, the associational publications became more formal, and the NLHA became a non-profit organization. The NLHA seeks to collect and preserve historical material about North Louisiana and under editorial review considers articles for publication from professional historians, lay historians, and students. According to the historian B. H. Gilley, formerly of the Louisiana Tech University faculty, "a wealth of research has been written and preserved in [the NLHA] publications".
A bulletin was edited from 1956 to 1958 by J. A. Manry (1903–1993). Manry was a journalist, regional scholar, and an historian. Other names for the Bulletin that might be found in citations are:
From 1959 to 1969, NLHA published a newsletter. The editor was Max Bradbury, who with the Bradbury Award is still recognized annually for the "most outstanding article" published in North Louisiana History. Names for the newsletter that might be cited are:
Beginning in the Fall of 1969, Morgan D. Peoples of Ruston, then a member of the Louisiana Tech History Department, became the editor and founded the journal. Under the original title, Journal of the North Louisiana Historical Association, the journal was published quarterly from 1969 through 1998. This journal is cited under a number of similar titles:
Ending with Volume 29, No. 4 (Fall 1998) and beginning with Volume 30, No. 1 (Winter 1999), the journal was retitled North Louisiana History.