Thomas Toler Jr. built this house in 1892, two blocks from Courthouse Square, when Crowley was still finding its shape in the wet prairie. The Queen Anne turret, wraparound galleries, Doric columns, spindles, and turned posts remain intact — one of the oldest residences left in the city. Homer Ed Barousse Jr. bought it in 1975 and spent the next forty years restoring it room by room. The house saw notable visitors over those decades, including Colonel Jefferson J. DeBlanc, a Medal of Honor recipient and WWII Marine fighter ace from St. Martinville. Louisiana Life featured it in May 2015. It's a private residence at 514 North Avenue H. Walk past and take in the galleries and the turret — the kind of patient work that holds a street corner steady for more than a century.
- ·Built in 1892 by Thomas Toler Jr. — one of the oldest residences in Crowley, two blocks from Courthouse Square.
- ·Queen Anne style with turret, wraparound galleries, Doric columns, spindles, and turned posts — all intact.
- ·Homer Ed Barousse Jr. bought it in 1975 and spent four decades restoring it room by room.
- ·Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Jefferson J. DeBlanc, a WWII Marine fighter ace from St. Martinville, was among notable visitors.
- ·Featured in Louisiana Life magazine in May 2015.
- ·Private residence — admire from the street at 514 North Avenue H.
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