In the summer of 1872, fear gripped the bayous of southern Louisiana. Eleven Ku Klux Klan leaders were found dead in their beds — all killed in secret, with chilling precision.
Locals whispered her name: Lav Noir — The Black Widow. To the freedmen and freedwomen of St. Martin Parish, she was justice walking through the night. Official records barely mention her, but in oral history, her legend lives on.
