34.[Illinois Central Railroad], Commercial, Industrial, and Financial Outlook for New Orleans, 4; Ross, "Resisting the New South," 71-73; New Orleans Daily Picayune, January 6, 1878, quoted in ibid., 67; Caldwell, Banking History of Louisiana, 111. On devastation and slow recovery in the Louisiana sugar industry, see Charles P. Roland, "Difficulties of Civil War Sugar Planting in Louisiana," Louisiana Historical Quarterly 38 (October 1955): 58-59; and John A. Heitmann, The Modernization of the Louisiana Sugar Industry, 1830-1910 (Baton Rouge, 1987), 68-90. On the participation of outside capital in the postwar southern agricultural sector, see C. Vann Woodward, Origins of the New South, 1877-1913 (1951; repr., Baton Rouge, 1971), 118-20. As Woodward notes, development of the lumber industry in western Louisiana during the late nineteenth century was sponsored by outside capital, and most profits were siphoned off to Texas-based interests backed by English investors. Much the same was true of the nascent rice industry concentrated in the sparsely populated coastal plains of southwestern Louisiana. Moreover, like the slow-recovering Louisiana sugar sector, rice production faced stout competition from neighboring states after the turn of the century; by 1910, both Arkansas and Texas produced more rice than Louisiana, and in terms of value, the staple accounted for less than one-third of the state’s agricultural output at its proportional peak through World War II; see Edward Hake Phillips, "The Gulf Coast Rice Industry," Agricultural History 25 (April 1951): 91-96. The postwar economic trajectories of Louisiana and Texas are suggestively compared in Linda Kay Murphy, "The Shifting Economic Relationships of the Cotton South: A Study of the Financial Relationships of the South during Its Industrial Development, 1864-1913" (PhD diss., Texas A&M University, 1999), 76-78. On the developmental symbiosis between nineteenth-century Chicago and its hinterlands, see Cronon, Nature’s Metropolis.