Historic Photos of New Orleans
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About this ebook
Birthplace of jazz, home to the beignet, city of a thousand legends, New Orleans grew out of a unique blend of cultures. Its architecture and cuisine, born of Spanish, French, Caribbean, African and other influences, created a city unlike any other in America. Its popular saying, laissez les bons temps rouler—let the good times roll—reflects the upbeat spirit of its citizens, a spirit that has at times been diminished by tragedy, but that can never be vanquished.
Historic Photos of New Orleans celebrates that spirit in nearly 200 striking, black-and-white photographs selected from local and national archives.
Here are the grand buildings and the immigrant slums, the cast-iron corn fences and the open-air markets, Mardi Gras parades and scenes of daily life. From the French Quarter and the elegant Garden District to the infamous Storyville, the people and places of New Orleans tell their unique story through these beautiful, rarely seen images.
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Reviews for Historic Photos of New Orleans
1 rating1 review
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Misinformation, but photos are amazing and gives nostalgia, being that my roots are in New Orleans.
Book preview
Historic Photos of New Orleans - Melissa Lee Smith
Turner Publishing Company
200 4th Avenue North • Suite 950
Nashville, Tennessee 37219
(615) 255-2665
www.turnerpublishing.com
Historic Photos of New Orleans
Copyright © 2007 Turner Publishing Company
All rights reserved.
This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2007929645
9781618586582
Printed in the United States of America
09 10 11 12 13 14—0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
DAWN OF A NEW ERA: RECOVERY FROM THE POSTWAR PERIOD - (1870–1899)
A CITY AT A CROSSROADS - (1900–1910)
THE GREAT WAR, THE JAZZ AGE, AND THE DEPRESSION - (1911–1939)
WORLD WAR II AND POSTWAR CHANGES - (1940–1969)
NOTES ON THE PHOTOGRAPHS
e9781618586582_i0004.jpgNew Orleans, always susceptible to fires, prides itself on the New Orleans Fire Department. Here, local photographer Leon Trice captured a training session with a man jumping from a window onto a net. In addition to his photography business, Trice, along with Pops Whitesell and Clarence McLaughlin, formed the New Orleans Camera Club, a social organization that focused on photography.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This volume, Historic Photos of New Orleans, is the result of the cooperation and efforts of many individuals, organizations, and corporations. It is with great thanks that we acknowledge the valuable contribution of the following for their generous support:
Library of Congress
Louisiana Division/City Archives, New Orleans Public Library
Louisiana State Museum
Special Collections, Tulane University
We would also like to thank the following individuals for valuable contributions and assistance in making this work possible:
Irene Wainwright, Archivist, New Orleans Public Library
Wilbur Meneray, Assistant Dean, Tulane Special Collections
Lee Miller, Manuscripts Librarian, Tulane University
Ken Owen, Louisiana Collection, Tulane University
Greg Lambousy, Director of Collections, Louisiana State Museum
Tom Lanham, Assistant Registrar, Louisiana State Museum
Steve Maklansky, Director of Curatorial Services, Louisiana State Museum
The D’Antonio family of New Orleans from their private collection
PREFACE
New Orleans. The Big Easy. Crescent City. Many names have been given to this unique metropolis where cultures, music, architecture, and food blend to create a dynamic atmosphere unlike that of any other place in America. Several native tribes called what is now Louisiana home. At various times, both Spain and France claimed the region and introduced black slaves from Africa and from Caribbean colonies. Many runaway slaves found haven among the native people, and American Indian culture intermingled with African traditions. After the United States obtained the city as part of the Louisiana Purchase, other European and purely American influences joined the mix. At one time, the city even had a Chinatown on its outskirts. All of these peoples contributed to the creation of the grand city near the mouth of the Mississippi.
In January 1815, General Andrew Jackson defeated a British force at Chalmette plantation, in what became known as the Battle of New Orleans. His mixed force of frontiersmen, Indians, freemen of color, and French pirates dealt a disastrous defeat to Britain’s professional soldiers in what would be the last invasion ever made on American soil.
The following decades saw New Orleans grow into one of the country’s premier cities. Its ideal location along the river, close to the Gulf of Mexico, ensured it would become a major shipping point, with goods coming into the country for distribution up the Mississippi and thence the Ohio River, while cotton and other goods went out to world markets. Slave labor was a significant aspect of the city, but New Orleans and all of Louisiana also had a larger population of free blacks than could be found virtually anywhere else in the South.
The city was spared destruction during the Civil War when a Union fleet moved up the river and captured it bloodlessly. While residents chafed under Federal occupation—an infamous edict by Union General Benjamin Butler declared any woman who insulted a Federal soldier would be treated as a prostitute plying her trade—the magnificent architecture of New Orleans was spared the devastation visited on Atlanta and Richmond. Even the despised General Butler contributed to the city by beginning cleanup of garbage where disease-carrying mosquitoes bred.
Additional cultures came to New Orleans with a new influx of immigrants late in the nineteenth century. Italians were especially prominent, and many became successful business leaders. Open-air markets that once provided produce to residents and income for immigrants grew into a tourist attraction. Many of these tourists discovered a new delicacy, a deep-fried pastry with confectioner’s sugar, that went by the name beignet.
A new musical sound began wafting through the streets, incubated in the city’s bars and brothels. It would give its name to the 1920s: The Jazz Age.
From all of these influences, the city continued to stir its own cultural mixing pot. Mardi Gras celebrations grew into fabulous events drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors. Famed writers including William Faulkner, Lillian Hellman, and Tennessee Williams called the city home; Truman Capote was born here.
The images within this volume—most rarely seen—capture the diversity and excitement of New Orleans while paying tribute to its storied history. The aim is to inspire, provide perspective, and evoke insight that might assist officials and citizens, who together are responsible for determining the city’s future. In addition, the book seeks to preserve the past with respect and reverence.
With the exception of cropping where necessary and touching up imperfections caused by time, no other changes to these photographs have been made. The focus and clarity of some images is limited by the technology of the day and the skill of the