The ancestral home of members of the Jean Charles Choctaw Nation was once a sprawling, thriving island where self-sufficiency was rooted in growing crops, raising livestock, hunting, fishing and trapping.
Coastal erosion and subsidence, however, has all but wiped out Isle de Jean Charles, which sits 90 miles southwest of New Orleans and about 3 miles off the coast of Terrebonne Parish.
Once roughly 32,000-acres, an area about three-quarters the size of Washington, D.C., Isle de Jean Charles has dwindled to about 300 acres. With the island has gone a home to, at its peak, hundreds of Native Americans.
Four families remain, sharing an existence with a string of abandoned, dilapidated houses clinging to a strip of land as narrow as a quarter mile in spots.