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Sulphur, Louisiana

Sulphur (French: Soufre) is a city in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, United States. The population was 21,809 in 2020. Sulphur is part of the Lake Charles metropolitan statistical area.

Not to be confused with Port Sulphur, Louisiana.

Sulphur, Louisiana

United States

Louisiana

Mike Danahay (D) (first elected 2010)

11.24 sq mi (29.10 km2)

11.22 sq mi (29.06 km2)

0.02 sq mi (0.04 km2)

16 ft (5 m)

21,809

1,943.59/sq mi (750.42/km2)

70663, 70665

22-73640

556163[2]

History[edit]

Sulphur is named for the sulfur mines that were operated in the area in the 1900s. In 1867, Professor Eugene W. Hilgard, an experienced geologist who was prospecting for oil and other minerals, conducted exploratory borings in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana and discovered sulfur in the caprock of a salt dome. However, the sulfur was beneath several hundred feet of muck and quicksand containing deadly hydrogen sulfide gas, which made mining extremely hazardous. Repeated unsuccessful attempts to sink conventional mining shafts in the 1870s and 1880s resulted in the loss of many lives.


In 1890, the German immigrant Herman Frasch invented and patented the Frasch Process of mining sulfur, using concentric pipes to pump superheated water into the ground, liquefy the mineral, and force the liquid to the surface with compressed air. The first molten sulfur was brought to the surface on Christmas Eve of 1894. Sulfur soon began to be mined on an industrial scale, with the molten mineral allowed to solidify and dry in enormous vats 100 by 400 feet, then blasted and hauled by rail to the Sabine River for shipment.[3] Frasch's invention greatly facilitated sulfur mining, and the Union Sulphur Company, a joint venture of Dr. Frasch and the American Sulphur Company that owned the land, sparked a period of booming growth in the decades that followed.[4] The elementary school on South Huntington Street in downtown Sulphur is named after Frasch.


With the addition of the Cities Service (Citgo) oil refinery in 1943, the areas of Maplewood and Hollywood were developed to house refinery workers. The Sulphur area is still mostly dependent on the oil refineries and petrochemical plants for employment.

Economy[edit]

Tourism[edit]

Tourist attractions as well as local destinations in Sulphur include:

Arts and culture[edit]

In 2014 Sulphur was named the third best city in Louisiana to raise a family.[20]

Recreation[edit]

Sulphur Parks and Recreation (SPAR) includes Frasch Park and Golf Course, North Frasch Park, the SPAR Water Park, The Grove at Heritage Square, Kyle Park, Pattison Park, McMurry Park, Center Circle Park, and Carlyss Park,[21][22][23]

Education[edit]

Most of Sulphur's schools are under the Calcasieu Parish School Board. One high school, Sulphur High School, serves the city, along with the Sulphur High Ninth Grade Campus that was completed in 2004. Elementary schools include Frasch, E.K. Key, W.T. Henning, R.W. Vincent, Maplewood, and Vincent Settlement (Carlyss). D.S. Perkins Elementary, one of the area's most challenged schools, closed in 2010, and all students and teachers were transferred to Cypress Cove, a completely new facility located in Carlyss. This represented a move from one of the more impoverished areas of old Sulphur (North Sulphur, a.k.a. "Portie Town" [Portie is pronounced pō-chay]) to one of the wealthier, emerging communities south of town. Middle schools include Leblanc Middle School, the W.W. Lewis Middle School, and Maplewood (K-8th grade). There are some private schools in the area as well, including Our Lady's Catholic School on Cypress Street.


Frasch Elementary, W.W. Lewis Middle, and Sulphur High School offer Spanish Immersion classes in which students take Spanish language as well as core classes totally in Spanish from kindergarten all the way to eighth grade, and Spanish language classes up to Spanish V or VI in High School. The program has been praised for giving children a fluency in the Spanish language as well as an understanding of other cultures at an early age. Most of the Immersion teachers come from Hispanic countries or are of Hispanic descent.

(born 1955), former Sulphur High School and Texas A&M University quarterback.

David Walker

justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, born in Sulphur in 1956[24]

Marcus R. Clark

former pitcher in MLB. He graduated from Sulphur High School.[25]

Casey Daigle

Louisiana state representative for Calcasieu Parish since 2008; sales representative in Lake Charles, reared in Sulphur, elected city mayor 2018[26]

Mike Danahay

Michael Lynn Durham, born in Sulphur, was an American professional wrestler, better known by his ring name, . He has held the ECW and WCW tag titles with his partner, Rocco Rock, who are together known as The Public Enemy.

Johnny Grunge

inventor of the "Frasch Method" of mining sulphur, was head of Union Sulphur Company. Its headquarters were at the Sulphur Mines, a company town just west of present-day Sulphur. Herman Frasch Elementary School is named after him.

Herman Frasch

lived in Sulphur in the late 1930s before moving to Jennings. She was a member of Louisiana Board of Regents from 1978 to 1990.

Edith Killgore Kirkpatrick

actress, original cast member of the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless for three years, then went on to ABC's One Life to Live and NBC's Another World

Janice Lynde

NFL quarterback, professional football player with the Dallas Cowboys

Dak Prescott

former football player: Kansas City Chiefs quarterback, UCLA college football radio analyst[27]

Matt Stevens

members of the Louisiana House of Representatives

Les Farnum

City of Sulphur official website