In 1974, the Baton Rouge Historical Museum, one of Louisiana’s oldest institutions, unveiled a new centerpiece for its Civil War exhibit: a wax figure of an unnamed Black Union soldier, lauded for its “haunting realism.” For five decades, the statue—depicting a young man in a tattered blue uniform, musket in hand, eyes fixed with stoic resolve—drew praise from visitors and historians alike. Guidebooks called it “eerily lifelike,” a testament to the unsung heroes of the 1st Louisiana Native Guard, Black troops who fought bravely in the 1860s. But in the summer of 2025, a new curator, Dr. Amara Thibodeaux, hired to modernize the museum’s aging displays, made a chilling discovery: The figure’s realism wasn’t artistry—it was human. Hidden beneath layers of wax and preservation lies a real body, sparking a 50-year-old cold case that could rewrite the museum’s legacy and expose a forgotten tragedy.

The Unveiling: A 1974 Sensation
The figure debuted on June 14, 1974, during a bicentennial buildup, when Baton Rouge was eager to showcase its Civil War history. The museum, housed in a 19th-century cotton warehouse near the Mississippi River, had long focused on Confederate relics but faced pressure to diversify its narrative. Enter the Black Union soldier, commissioned from a New Orleans-based sculptor, Marcel Dubois, known for hyper-realistic waxworks. The statue, standing 5’10” in a dimly lit diorama of a Port Hudson battlefield, was an instant hit. Its details—calloused hands, a scar above the left brow, a frayed kepi cap—drew gasps. “It’s like he’s staring through you,” a Times-Picayune review raved, crediting Dubois’s “genius.” The museum’s then-director, Clarence Webb, claimed it was molded from “historical references,” with no named soldier attached. By 1975, it was a local icon, drawing 10,000 visitors annually, per museum logs.
For decades, the figure stood untouched, a silent sentinel amid muskets and faded letters. School groups posed with it; historians cited its “authenticity.” Minor upkeep—wax touch-ups, costume repairs—kept it pristine, handled by Dubois’s studio until his death in 1998. But whispers persisted: Staff reported the figure’s eyes seeming to “follow” them, and a 1980s janitor swore it “felt warm” during a cleaning. Urban legends grew, with Baton Rouge teens daring each other to touch it at night. Yet, no one questioned its origins—until Dr. Thibodeaux arrived.
The Curator’s Discovery: A Crack in the Wax
Dr. Amara Thibodeaux, a 38-year-old historian with a Ph.D. from Tulane and a focus on African American Civil War contributions, joined the museum in April 2025 to revamp its exhibits for inclusivity. Tasked with digitizing collections, she turned to the soldier figure, hoping to identify its inspiration—perhaps a real member of the 1st Louisiana Native Guard, whose records she’d studied. “It felt off,” she told NPR in a September 2025 interview. “The details were too precise—pores, a chipped tooth, uneven nails.” Her first clue came during a routine inspection on June 10, 2025, when she noticed a faint seam under the figure’s neck, unlike typical wax molds.
Thibodeaux, trained in forensic history, requested a non-invasive scan. On July 15, a portable X-ray, borrowed from LSU’s archaeology department, revealed the unthinkable: a human skeleton encased within the wax. The skull showed a healed fracture matching the figure’s “scar”; dental patterns suggested a man in his 20s. “My heart stopped,” she recalled. “This wasn’t a statue—it was someone.” She alerted Baton Rouge PD, who launched a discreet investigation, cordoning off the exhibit under the guise of “renovations.” A CT scan on July 20 confirmed soft tissue remnants, preserved by an unknown chemical process, and traces of early-1970s fabric beneath the Union uniform. The figure wasn’t just lifelike—it was a preserved body, hidden for 50 years.
The Cold Case: A Missing Man Emerges
Investigators turned to missing persons records from 1973-74, zeroing in on Black men aged 20-30 in the Baton Rouge-New Orleans corridor. A promising lead surfaced: Isaiah Turner, a 24-year-old drifter and part-time dockworker, last seen in New Orleans’ French Quarter in March 1974. Turner, a Vietnam War veteran with a documented head injury from shrapnel, had no family ties and vanished after a bar fight, per NOPD files. His description—5’10”, lean build, chipped front tooth—aligned with the figure’s features. DNA extraction, underway as of October 2025, awaits comparison with distant relatives traced via ancestry databases, but coroners estimate a 70% match probability.
Suspicion fell on Marcel Dubois, the sculptor, whose studio records—seized from a Metairie storage unit—revealed cryptic 1974 invoices for “special preservatives” and “anatomical study materials.” Dubois, who died childless at 67, had ties to a shady New Orleans mortician, Leon Carter, known for supplying unclaimed bodies to medical schools. A 1975 States-Item article noted Carter’s arrest for illegal cadaver sales, though charges were dropped. Detectives now hypothesize Dubois, strapped for cash amid a studio fire, may have used a real body—possibly Turner’s—to meet the museum’s tight deadline, coating it in wax and chemicals to mimic a mannequin. “It’s grotesque but plausible,” lead investigator Sgt. LaToya Evans told The Advocate. “Museums in the ‘70s rarely vetted sources.”
The museum’s 1974 staff, including Webb (deceased 1992), claimed ignorance in archived memos, praising Dubois’s “miracle work.” But a retired docent, Ella Mae Johnson, 82, told WBRZ in August 2025: “We all wondered why it looked so real. Nobody asked too hard.” The exhibit’s dim lighting and “do not touch” signs hid flaws, preserving the secret through decades of dust.
The Fallout: A City Grapples with Truth
The discovery rocked Baton Rouge. The museum, shuttered for two weeks in August 2025, reopened with the exhibit sealed off, sparking protests from local NAACP chapters demanding transparency and respect for the unidentified man. “He’s not an artifact—he’s someone’s son,” Thibodeaux said at a community forum, pushing for a memorial. X posts under #BatonRougeColdCase hit 500,000, with locals sharing Turner’s story and others speculating on Dubois’s motives. TikTok videos, blending eerie museum footage with Civil War tunes, amassed 3 million views, fueling true-crime buzz.
Critics fault the museum’s lax oversight, citing a 1970s trend of “exotic” exhibits ignoring ethics. “This was an era of spectacle over scrutiny,” historian Dr. Jamal Carter told NPR. Yet, Thibodeaux’s diligence—praised as “heroic” by Louisiana Weekly—has reframed the soldier as a symbol of forgotten Black veterans. Plans for a 2026 exhibit on the 1st Louisiana Native Guard, using real archival photos, are underway, funded by a $200,000 CLF grant inspired by Rihanna’s education advocacy.
If confirmed as Turner, the case could close a family’s long grief. His cousin, traced in Atlanta, told WWL-TV: “Isaiah deserved better than being a prop.” As DNA results loom, Baton Rouge faces a reckoning: a haunting “statue” wasn’t just art—it was a man, hidden in plain sight, demanding justice after 50 years.
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