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Councilman Tony Hardy reads over the inspection report of the old Hibernia building.

Abbeville council votes to accept old bank building, cultural center from police jury

It will cost between $600,000 to $1.5 million to get building into operating condition

Unless the Vermilion Parish Police Jury changes its mind, the city of Abbeville is set to take ownership of two new buildings by May 1.
The city council approved the agreement by a 3-1 vote, accepting the police jury’s offer concerning the two buildings in Abbeville.
The police jury is expected to vote on transferring ownership of the two buildings to the city of Abbeville at its meeting on Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. in the courthouse.
Six months ago, the police jury proposed that the city assume ownership of the former Hibernia Bank building on Charity Street and the old library building downtown.
The sole condition for Abbeville to accept the offer is that the Sheriff’s Office may continue to house its detective unit on the third floor of the bank building at no cost.
If the city agrees, the police jury will transfer both buildings, valued at over $1 million combined, at no cost.
Before proceeding, the city council engaged David Hamer of Vermilion Architects, LLC, to inspect the building and provide cost estimates for necessary repairs and full restoration.
Hamer presented a slideshow to the council and Mayor Roslyn White, detailing photos and cost estimates for repairs, including windows, eight rooftop air conditioning units, and water leak remediation.
He divided the project into two phases.

Phase One

Phase One addresses immediate needs, with an estimated cost of $605,000 and includes the following repairs:

• Repair sinking foundation ($45,000)
• Reseal the third-floor wall and all third-floor windows ($275,000)
• Repair the flashing and roof ($24,000)
• Wall repair ($20,000)
• Repair columns ($55,000)
• Replace two 12-ton air conditioning units and repair the remaining five units ($75,000)
• Replace 26 windows and repair exterior stucco ($116,000)

Phase Two

Phase Two is estimated to cost $445,000.
• This includes purchasing five new 12-ton rooftop air conditioning units.
• Restoration of the architectural stucco design on the building’s exterior ($260,000).
The total cost for both phases ranges from $1 million to $1.5 million, depending on the extent of repairs the city chooses to undertake.
Hamer concluded that, based on his assessment without removing the exterior stucco, the building’s structural framework appears to be in good condition.
. “To summarize, the property at 407 Charity Street presents a unique opportunity for the City, but it is one that carries significant immediate financial and legal obligations. The City must recognize that the $560,000 appraised value is only the starting point of the investment.
“Our assessment identifies approximately $740,000 in essential and proactive capital repairs and $260,000 of optional repairs required to stop active water intrusion, stabilize the foundation, and bring the building into compliance with life safety and ADA codes. While the visible portions of the primary steel and masonry frame appear structurally sound, a definitive assessment is not possible as much of the framing remains concealed. Furthermore, its systems and envelope require a significant program of restorative maintenance. There is always the possibility of additional costs arising with the structure when remediation begins.
“Additionally, there is the cost for the renovation schemes, which could be upwards of $637,000.00.
“The decision to pursue this acquisition should be made with the understanding that to transform this building into a safe, legal, and functional municipal workspace, the City will need to commit to a multi-phased restoration plan. Acting on the essential repairs in Phase One will protect the building’s current value and prevent further interior deterioration.”

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Broc Prejean will remain at VC.

Broc Prejean not leaving VC; he will return as head football coach

Vermilion Catholic High School has concluded its search for a new head football coach.
On Wednesday afternoon, Broc Prejean informed the VC community by email that he will remain at the school and return as head football coach next school year. Prejean announced he was not returning to VC two weeks ago.
“I recognized I would be missing a lot more than just football with the relationships that have come into our lives through VC. I am just appreciative that I was blessed to recognize that before it was too late,” said Prejean.

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Abbeville High’s Khandi Shuford is joined by her family and coaches as signs a powerlifting scholarship with Midland University on Thursday.

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Khandi Shuford concentrates before getting under the bar at a powerlifting meet.

Abbeville High's Khandi Shuford signs with Midland University

Abbeville High School senior Khandi Shuford signed on Thursday with Midland University in Fremont, Nebraska, to continue her power lifting career while she pursues a degree in criminal justice.
Shuford, who carries a 3.7 GPA and just won her fourth state championship, chose Midland because of its reputation as a power-lifting school and its proximity to home. Midland’s women’s team has also won the national collegiate title four years in a row.
“Midland is a private university whose main focus is power lifting,” Shuford said. “They have other sports, but power lifting is their thing.
“I like that it’s in Nebraska. I really want to broaden my horizons, and to do that I need to be somewhere else.”
Shuford’s interest in powerlifting began when she was a kid, watching her older brother Chuck compete in high school. The sport consumed her when she began competing five years ago.
“It really started when I’d go watch my brother,” Shuford explained. “At first, I didn’t see myself doing it because all I’d do was sleep in the bleachers. But once I started competing, my love for it just kept growing. Now I don’t ever see myself not doing power lifting. It’s my passion, and my life revolves around it.”
Shuford thanked her parents, Charles and Katreet Shuford, and her longtime coach, Travis Werner, for always believing in her and pushing her to be the best she could be.
“Coach Werner has been with me since I started,” Shuford said. “He has faith in me and sees my potential. My parents weren’t light on me. They kept me disciplined and made sure I stayed on top of things.”
“Khandi has achieved everything a high school powerlifter could possibly achieve,” said Werner. “She was a regional, state, national, and world champion. What I am proudest of is what the titles don’t reveal. She brings good spirit and fierce determination to every workout.
“That attitude is infectious and elevates the lifting of all the girls who train with her. Midland is getting more than just an elite lifter; they are getting a great teammate.”
Shuford will leave for Nebraska in late July or early August.
“I’m excited, and I’m ready,” she exclaimed.

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Kandice Broussard

North Vermilion Middle’s Kandice Broussard named semifinalist for State’s top principal

During her time as principal at North Vermilion Middle School, Kandice Broussard has worked to create a cultural that is exciting throughout campus and maintains a strong focuses on the value of classroom instruction.
That work has gained Broussard some statewide attention.
Broussard is among a group of semifinals for Louisiana Principal of the Year. The Louisiana Department of Education announced the list of 24 principals last week.
“It is a true honor to be recognized as a semifinalist for State Principal of the Year,” Broussard said. “This distinction reflects the collective efforts of an outstanding school community and a supportive district committed to excellence in education.”
Broussard said her goal is to cultivate an environment that makes school enjoyable. Along with their expectations in the classroom, students can take part in numerous activities, including can join three-on-three basketball games, walking with friends while listening to music in the gym, playing board games, and even line dance, which has become a school favorite, Broussard said. Recently, more than 200 eighth-graders took part in a Career Day.
Vermilion Parish School System Superintendent Tommy Byler said Broussard’s vision and culture have been a perfect fit at NV Middle. Byler said that due to her leadership, which has led to growth in many areas at the school, including a 3-point increase in the School Performance Score, Broussard is a deserving candidate for this honor.
“Congratulations to Ms. Kandice Broussard of North Vermilion Middle for being named a semifinalist for State Principal of the Year,” Byler posted. “We are proud of your work and wish you the best in the next round.”
Dr. Holly Boffy, a Vermilion Parish native and Abbeville High alumna, is also on the list. Boffy is principal of W. D. & Mary Baker Smith Career Center in Lafayette Parish. Finalists for Louisiana Teacher and Principal of the Year will be announced in May. Overall honorees will be announced for all teacher, principal, and leader awards in July at the 20th Annual Cecil. J. Picard Educator Excellence Gala.
“I am sincerely grateful for the opportunity to represent our school and parish,” Broussard said, “and I am inspired to continue striving for success on behalf of our students and staff.”
The full list of Louisiana Principal of the Year semifinalists is:
• Shelley Strother, Galvez Middle School, Ascension Parish
• Melanie Bellamy, Labadieville Elementary School, Assumption Parish
• Chuck Normand, Bunkie Magnet High School, Avoyelles Parish
• Douglas Salvaterra, Saline High School, Bienville Parish
• Alyshia Coulson, Bellaire Elementary School, Bossier Parish
• Shannon Wall, Northwood High School, Caddo Parish
• Angela Guillory, Moss Bluff Middle School, Calcasieu Parish
• Kalandra Loyd, Vidalia Lower Elementary School, Concordia Parish
• Brian Anderson, Stanley High School, DeSoto Parish
• Amy Gobert, Elton High School, Jefferson Davis Parish
• Dr. Holly Boffy, W. D. & Mary Baker Smith Career Center, Lafayette Parish
• Casey Cheramie, Raceland Lower Elementary School, Lafourche Parish
• Lacey Holcomb, Simsboro High School, Lincoln Parish
• Wesley Howard, Denham Springs High School, Livingston Parish
• Doll Ann Johnson, Sterlington High School, Ouachita Parish
• Christy Dugas, Paradise Elementary School, Rapides Parish
• Lisa Perrin, Allemands Elementary School, St. Charles Parish
• April Guidry, Grand Prairie Elementary School, St. Landry Parish
• Lauren Rentrop, Patterson Junior High School, St. Mary Parish
• Gina Brown, Mandeville Junior High School, St. Tammany Parish
• Sharess Baptiste, Kentwood High Magnet School, Tangipahoa Parish
• Terez LeBlanc, Houma Junior High School, Terrebonne Parish
• Kandice Broussard, North Vermilion Middle School, Vermilion Parish
ª Jacquelyn Bristow, Bains Lower Elementary School, West Feliciana Parish

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Jim Bradshaw

Birdsong, flowers made memorable boat ride

traveler and writer Charles Dudley Warner rowed early one spring morning, “while the dew was still heavy” down Bayou Petit Anse. “in Petite Anse means “little cove.” The bayou runs along the west side of Avery Island, then flows generally south into Vermilion Bay. Warner described his delightful boat ride in a long article about “The Acadian Land” in Harper’s Magazine in February 1887.
“Mullet were jumping in the glassy stream, perhaps disturbed by the gar-fish, and alligators lazily slid from the reedy banks into the water at our approach,” he wrote. “All the marsh was gay with flowers, vast patches of the blue fleur de lis intermingled with the exquisite white spider-lily, nodding in clusters on long stalks; an amaryllis (pancratieum), its pure half-disk fringed with delicate while filaments. The air was vocal with the notes of birds, the nonpareil and the meadow-lark, and most conspicuous of all the handsome boat-tail grackle, a blackbird, which alighted on the slender dead reeds that swayed with his weight as he poured forth his song. Sometimes the bayou narrowed so that it was impossible to row with the oars, and poling was resorted to, and the current was swift and strong. At such passes we saw only the banks with nodding flowers, and the reeds, with the blackbirds singing, against the sky. Again we emerged into placid reaches overhung by gigantic live-oaks and fringed with cypress. It was enchanting.”
Warner’s interest in the Acadian country in south Louisiana may have been partly inspired by a visit he made in 1874 to Nova Scotia and recounted in a travel journal called Baddeck, And That Sort of Thing (Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston, 1891). Excerpts from his accounts of both visits can be found in a little book. In Acadia, The Acadians in Story and Song, compiled by Margaret (Minnie) Avery Johnston (F. F. Hansell & Bro., New Orleans, 1893).
Margaret was not an Acadian. She was the daughter of Daniel Dudley Avery (1810-1879), the first Avery on Avery island, and Sarah Craig Marsh (1818-1878). Her interest in the Acadians was stirred by an interest in spinning and weaving, and by the financial panic that began in the United States in 1873, spread to Europe, and brought on a depression that lasted for nearly a decade.
She wrote in the introduction to her book, “I have been led to undertake the compilation of this little volume by a desire to enlist the interest of the public in the Acadian people of Louisiana. Brought up in the neighborhood and personally acquainted with many of them, my family learned to respect … and to admire the many excellent qualities that distinguish them.
“In the period of great depression through which Louisiana has passed … [the Acadians] felt the touch of want in homes where formerly reigned a rude plenty. It was then that it occurred to us that if their handwoven fabrics of cotton, grown by themselves, could be brought to the attention of the art-loving public, a remunerative field would be open for their industry.”
She and her sister, Sarah Avery Leeds, worked to find markets for the cloth with such success that in March 1893 the Abbeville Meridional, boasted that Acadian cottonade had gained so much prestige that “in some of the most fashionable of New York and New Orleans’ mansions, you will find all the draperies, portieres, lambrequins and table scarfs made of the products of the looms of the Attakapas Acadians.”
The reason for the Meridional report was that in the spring of 1893 Louisiana and the rest of the nation were making plans for the upcoming Chicago World’s Fair, and that the Avery sisters were working to create an exhibit featuring Acadian weavers. They were successful. Margaret reported in her introduction that “their simple handicrafts of spinning and weaving” were showcased at the fair.
Margaret may have been aware of Warner’s Acadian pieces because he apparently visited Avery Island. He doesn’t say so specifically in his essay, but says in his Petite Anse narrative that after visiting a community on Bayou Tigre, “We went home gayly and more swiftly, current and tide with us … with … much pleasure [while viewing] the wide marshes through which we voyaged.
“When we landed and climbed the hill, and from the rose-embowered veranda looked over the strange land we had sailed through … we felt that we had been in a country not of this world.”
You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

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Terrance James Dauphine “Tackie”

November 7, 1964 — April 2, 2026

Terrance J. Dauphine, affectionately known as “Tackie” was born November 7, 1964 to the proud parents of the late Mable Myles, a native of Erath, Louisiana and Richard Wiltz, native of Port Arthur, Texas.
Services will be held this Saturday, April 11, 2026, from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. at Kinchen Funeral Home, 218 N. Saint Valerie St., in Abbeville. Burial will follow at St. Paul Cemetery, 410 Old Kaplan Hwy. in Abbeville.
Tackie was a resident at Kaplan Healthcare Rehabilitation Center for six months then briefly at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital. Tackie endured a long illness which eventually took his life and sent him home to be with “Our Lord and Savior”.
A lifelong resident of Abbeville, he enjoyed cooking, playing dominoes, and spending time with family and friends. Tackie had a unique ability to make those around him feel special, always setting aside time for his immediate family. He was truly a blessing to those who had the privilege of knowing him, and he was taken from us far too soon.
He is survived by his fiancée Deloris Murdock, one daughter, Cieonna Greene of Houston, Texas; one son, Kingsley Nwosu and his wife Angelica of Stafford, Virginia; one sister, Yetta Cormier and her husband Michael of Abbeville, Louisiana; two nephews Qualen and Montel Cormier and one niece Yasmeen Cormier, two grandchildren, Olivia Gabrielle and Na’sir Dauphine Nwosu; and a host of friends and family.
He was preceded in death by his parents, the late Mable Myles, and the late Richard Wiltz, his aunt, Exzelta Watson, Port Arthur, Texas, Aunt Eliza Davis and Aunt Eula Davis of Abbeville, Louisiana.

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Marilyn Lormand Hargrave

March 11, 1938 ~ March 21, 2026

ABBEVILLE — A memorial service officiated by Deacon William Vincent will be held at 12 p.m. on Saturday, April 11, 2026, at Vincent Funeral Home – Abbeville, honoring the life of Marilyn Lormand Hargrave, 88, who died peacefully on March 20, 2026. She will be laid to rest at St. Paul Cemetery.
A visitation will take place at Vincent Funeral Home of Abbeville, 209 S. Saint Charles St., Abbeville, on Saturday, April 11, 2026, from 9 a.m. until the time of services.
Marilyn was born on March 11, 1938, to Philip Lormand and Bernice Suire. She was the oldest of 4 children. She worked as a charge nurse at Abbeville General Hospital until an injury sidelined her. Her favorite pastimes were reading, crossword puzzles, flower gardening, playing pokeno and cards. In her older years, she worked for St. Theresa of the Child Jesus Church as a secretary. Marilyn will be remembered not only for her professional dedication but also for her warm heart and the joy she brought to those around her. Marilyn’s love for her family was unwavering, and she took great joy in being a mother and supporting her loved ones. Marilyn dedicated her life to her family, always putting her children and grandchildren first.
She leaves to mourn her children, Mark James (Alejandria), Paula Maria Rosa (Jeanne), and Patrina Rae (Judith); granddaughters, Nancy Yasmin Hargrave, Shayla Hargrave, and Brooklyn Weekly; step-grandchild, Shelby Krall; and sister, Martha Dubois.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Raymond Hargrave; parents, Philip Lormand and Bernice Vidrine; brothers, Eugene Lormand, and Arthur Gale Lormand; and son, Michael Jude Hargrave, half brother, Francis Lormand and his wife Mary; niece Susan Lormand; and her in laws Otis Hargrave and Amelia Elsie Vincent Hargrave.
All funeral arrangements are being conducted by Vincent Funeral Home - Abbeville (337) 893-4661.

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“Coach” Johnny R. Picard

September 11, 1937 - April 3, 2026

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, April 10, 2026 in St. Alphonsus Catholic Church - Maurice for Johnny Roy Picard, 88, who passed away on April 3, 2026.
Fr. Paul Bienvenu, Pastor of St. Alphonsus and Our Lady of Perpetual Help - Leroy Catholic Churches, will be Celebrant of the Mass and will conduct the funeral services.
Burial will take place in St. Alphonsus Catholic Cemetery.
Maurice, Louisiana, has never been a big place. Founded in the late 1800s by Maurice Villien. The small South Central Louisiana town that bears his name grew into a close-knit community of about four hundred souls. A place where families were bound together by blood and marriage, where everyone knew everyone, and where a neighbor’s joy or sorrow was felt as your own. It was exactly the kind of town where a high school basketball coach could become something larger than life.
They called him “Coach,” and in Maurice, that one word said everything. Johnny Roy Picard wasn’t just the head basketball coach at Maurice High School. He was a builder of young men, a shaper of character, and for a generation of Bulldogs, the voice that told them they were capable of more than they knew.
Coach Johnny arrived at Maurice High in 1966 and would remain at the helm of the Bulldogs’ basketball and track teams for 13 seasons, stepping away in 1979. In a school where graduating classes numbered fewer than fifty most years, the basketball team wasn’t some distant spectacle you watch from the bleachers. Those boys on the court were your sons, your nephews, your cousins, your neighbor’s kids. The school spirit that filled the gymnasium on game nights was real and personal in a way that only a town of four hundred can understand. When the Bulldogs won, the whole town won. And under Coach Johnny, they won a lot.
Those who played for Coach Johnny knew his formula was simple and non-negotiable. If you wanted to play basketball, you ran track too. No exceptions. Some boys grumbled. All of them got stronger. When the fourth quarter came, and the other team was dragging, the Bulldogs were still running, up and down the court, full speed, full effort, the way Coach Johnny demanded.
It showed in the results. In 1969, just his fourth season, Coach Johnny’s squad went nearly unbeaten. Their only stumble came against Gueydan, a Class A team talented enough to reach the Top 20 in their own division’s state tournament. A loss to a bigger school might have satisfied a lesser coach. Not Johnny Roy Picard. His Bulldogs met Gueydan again in the season and answered with a 94 to 68 statement that left no room for doubt.
But the ultimate test came in the Class C State Championship, where Maurice faced Ebarb, a team that battled the Bulldogs to a standstill in the Top Twenty finals. Ebarb boasted Greg Procell, the state’s most prolific scorer, who poured in 33.2 points per game, alongside Walter Meshell, a junior averaging 21 points per game. On paper, it was a mismatch that should have overwhelmed a small-town squad from Maurice. But Coach Johnny’s boys didn’t read the paper. They played their game, they held their ground, and when the final buzzer sounded, Maurice had claimed the state title by a razor-thin 70–68 victory. For a town of four hundred to knock off the state’s highest-scoring duo and hoist a championship trophy was nothing short of monumental, the kind of moment that becomes legend in a place where everyone knows your name.
The Louisiana Sports Writers Association named Coach Johnny the Class C Coach of the Year, and three of his Bulldogs earned spots on the All-State team. One can only imagine what that title meant to the people of Maurice, their boys, from their little school, standing at the top of the state.
Coach Johnny kept building, and the Bulldogs kept competing at the highest level. Four years later, he did it again.
The 1973 Bulldogs climbed to the top of Class C, and Coach Johnny earned his second Coach of the Year title, proof that the first time was no fluke, just the standard he set and refused to lower.
In 1981, the era of Maurice High School came to a close. The small school gave way to consolidation, and the Bulldogs became the Patriots of North Vermilion High School. A chapter ended. But by then, Coach Johnny had already written his part of the story, thirteen seasons that gave the Maurice Bulldogs two state championships, two Coach of the Year honors, and a legacy that no mascot change could erase. He had served during a valuable moment in time, one that the people of Maurice would hold onto long after the Bulldog name came down from the gymnasium wall.
And Coach Johnny wasn’t finished giving. After his coaching days, he poured his energy into the Future Farmers of America, dedicating years to fundraising that supported young people, quietly, faithfully, just as he always had from his home just outside the small town he had served so well. It was the same spirit that had driven him on the court: show up, do the work, and help the next generation find their footing. He carried that commitment all the way through to his retirement.
But trophies, titles, and years of service, as fine as they are, only tell part of the story. The fuller measure of Coach Johnny Roy Picard lives in the men who once were his boys. Across thirteen seasons in that small town where everyone was family in one way or another, he coached and mentored young men who learned on his court that discipline isn’t punishment, it’s a gift; that a team looks out for its own; and that a small town doesn’t have to think small. They carried those lessons off the court and into their lives, as fathers, as workers, as members of their communities, and they are better for it. The team spirit Coach Johnny built among those tight-knit groups gave his players something no scoreboard could capture: a foundation for doing better in life.
Maurice has always been a place where people take care of each other, where roots run deep, and bonds hold fast. Coach Johnny Roy Picard understood that. He drew on it, strengthened it, and gave it back to the town tenfold through the young men he shaped.
Maurice has lost its Coach. But what he built across those thirteen remarkable seasons, in wins, in character, in the quiet pride of a community that watched its own boys become champions, that endures.
Rest easy, Coach Johnny. The final buzzer has sounded, but the game you built will never be over.
He is survived by his sons, Jeffery John (Dawn) Picard, Scott Joseph (Chrissy) Picard, and Chad David Picard; grandchildren, Victoria Mary Picard, Garrett Scott Picard, Gage Hunter Picard, and Hadley Claire Picard; and his partner, Agnes Rose Broussard.
He was preceded in death by the mother of his children, Ramona Jane Korkames; his father, Ollie Picard; his mother Wilda Trahan (Leon Ceaser) Bernard; and his second wife, Johnnie Pearl Edwards.
The family requests that visiting hours be observed at Delhomme Funeral Home - Maurice on Thursday, April 9, 2026 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. A Rosary will be prayed at 6:00 PM on Thursday evening in the funeral home. Visiting hours will continue Friday, April 10, 2026 from 8 a.m. until 9:40 a.m.
Pallbearers will be the 1969 & 1973 Maurice High School Bulldogs Class C Basketball State Champions.
Honorary Pallbearers will be Tyron Picard and Lane Picard.
Personal condolences may be sent to the family of "Coach" Johnny R. Picard at: www.delhommefuneralhome.com
"Coach" Johnny R. Picard and his family were cared for and entrusted final arrangements to Delhomme Funeral Home, 200 Chief H. Fred Road, Maurice, LA.

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Dorothy Duhon

July 22, 1928 — April 2, 2026

Dorothy Broussard Duhon, devoted wife and beloved mother and grandmother passed away peacefully on April 2, 2026, at the age of 97, at her residence.
A Mass of Christian Burial officiated by Reverend Clint Trahan will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, April 8, 2026, at Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church. She will be laid to rest at Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Cemetery.
A visitation will take place at Vincent Funeral Home of Kaplan on Wednesday, April 8, 2026, from 9 a.m. until the procession departs for the church at 12:45 p.m. A rosary will be prayed at 10:30 a.m.
Dorothy graduated from Meaux High School and was an active member of her community. She dedicated many years to the Catholic Daughters and shared her love for music as a member of the church choir. Her passion for gardening earned her the prestigious garden/flower award, reflecting her nurturing spirit and talent for caring for her flowers and plants.
Dorothy was also known for her exceptional cooking skills and artistry in sewing and cross-stitching, crafting memories for her family that will be cherished forever.
She is survived by her children, Annette Duhon and Bonnie (Benny) Trahan; her grandchildren, Sonya (Doyle) LeMaire, Trenace (David) Combs, Father Clint Trahan, Angie Duhon, Natalie (Brad) Boudreaux, and Ryan Trahan; her great grandchildren, Shelby (Blake) Guidry, Davin and Cullen Combs, and Nathan and Spencer Boudreaux; one great-great grandchild, Owen Guidry; her brother, Doyce (Beverly) Broussard; her sister-in-law, Rose Broussard; and many nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Bethel Joseph Duhon; her parents, Minos Broussard and the former Ozite Vincent; and her siblings, Hilda Mullican, Numa Broussard, Zula Trahan, Jeanne Stelly, Tom Broussard, Hilliard Broussard, Paul Broussard, and Robert Broussard.
Her presence will be profoundly missed by those who had the privilege of knowing her.
The family would like to extend a special thanks to her caregivers, Anna Ramirez, Rebecca Abshire, and Vicky Castille.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that a Mass be offered for Dorothy Duhon.
All funeral arrangements are being conducted by Vincent Funeral Home - Kaplan (337) 643-7276.

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Norman Joseph Broussard

September 14, 1936 - March 21, 2026

Norman Joseph Broussard, age 89, was called home to be with our Lord on March 21, 2026, in Manvel, Texas, surrounded by his loving family. He was entrusted to Hayes Funeral Home in Santa Fe, Texas, for cremation.
Norman was born on September 14, 1936, in Erath, Louisiana, to Simon and Aurore (Langlinais) Broussard. In high school, he met the love of his life, Shirley Bertrand. They were married on June 20, 1954, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Abbeville, Louisiana. Together, they built a life rooted in love and family.
He proudly served in the Louisiana National Guard in his early adulthood. They later relocated to Port Sulphur, Louisiana, where Norman worked as an electrician for Freeport Sulphur Company for 37 years before retiring.
Norman was preceded in death by his parents and his brothers, Alvin Broussard, Tee Ray Broussard, and Tee June Broussard.
He is survived by his devoted wife of 71 years, Shirley Broussard; his brother, Paul Johnnie Broussard and wife Brenda of New Iberia, Louisiana; his son, Nathan G. Broussard of Scott, Louisiana; his daughter, Paula S. Broussard of Manvel, Texas; his grandchildren, Krissy Broussard Miller and husband Christian of Rosharon, Texas; Shanna Morales and husband Jaime of Corpus Christi, Texas; and Annabella, Olivia, and Gabriella Broussard of Youngsville, Louisiana; and his great-grandchildren, Ryan, Jordan, and Jaxon Morales of Corpus Christi, Texas.
Services will be held at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Erath, Louisiana, on April 11, 2026. Visitation will be from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., with a Rosary at 12:30 p.m. and Mass at 1:00 p.m. A gathering will follow at a family member’s home.
The family would like to recognize the following as honorary pallbearers: Brad Bertrand, Kevin Broussard, Brian Broussard, Christian Miller, Jaime Morales, Ryan Morales, Paul Allen Broussard, and Kenneth Teekel.
“Well done, good and faithful servant.” — Matthew 25:23

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Vermilion Today

Abbeville Meridional

318 N. Main St.
Abbeville, LA 70510
Phone: 337-893-4223
Fax: 337-898-9022

The Kaplan Herald

219 North Cushing Avenue
Kaplan, LA 70548