Culture

Johnny Dodds: The Clarinetist Who Helped Build the Jazz Age

The Clarinetist Who Helped Build the Jazz AgeIn the pantheon of early New Orleans jazz, the horn players get most of the glory. But Johnny Dodds, born in 1892 in the city that invented the music, m...

Kordell Stewart: The Original Slash Before Dual-Threat Was a Thing

The Original Slash Before Dual-Threat Was a ThingBefore Lamar Jackson, before Cam Newton, before anybody was talking about "dual-threat quarterbacks" as a category, there was Kordell Stewart from M...

Owen Brennan: The Man Who Started a Restaurant Dynasty

The Man Who Started a Restaurant DynastyOwen Brennan didn't live long enough to see what he started. He died in 1955 at forty-five years old, just three years after opening the restaurant that bear...

Sister Gertrude Morgan: The Bride of Christ Who Painted New Orleans Into Heaven

The Bride of Christ Who Painted New Orleans Into HeavenSister Gertrude Morgan arrived in New Orleans in 1939 with nothing but her faith and a voice loud enough to preach over the traffic on Bourbon...

George Porter Jr.: The Bassist Who Built the Floor That Funk Stands On

The Bassist Who Built the Floor That Funk Stands OnEvery building needs a foundation, and the foundation of New Orleans funk is George Porter Jr.'s bass. As one of the four founding members of The ...

Lionel Ferbos: The Man Who Played Jazz for a Hundred and Three Years

The Man Who Played Jazz for a Hundred and Three YearsLionel Ferbos was born in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans in 1911, when jazz itself was barely a teenager. He died in 2014, at one hundred and t...

August Alsina: From the Magnolia to the Billboard Charts

The Bounce Rapper Who Went From Magnolia to MainstreamAugust Alsina came out of the Magnolia Projects in New Orleans with the kind of story that bounce music was born to tell—poverty, violence, los...

Edward Livingston: The New Yorker Who Wrote Louisiana's Laws

The New Yorker Who Wrote Louisiana's LawsEdward Livingston came to New Orleans in 1804 as a disgraced New York politician running from debt and scandal. He left behind one of the most important leg...

Papa Jack Laine: The Father of White Jazz Who Didn't Care About Color

The Father of White Jazz Who Didn't Care About ColorPapa Jack Laine holds one of the more awkward titles in music history: the "Father of White Jazz." It's a title that sounds like it should be acc...

Andrés Almonaster y Rojas: The Man Who Rebuilt Jackson Square

The Man Who Rebuilt Jackson SquareIf you've ever stood in Jackson Square and looked at the St. Louis Cathedral, the Cabildo, and the Presbytere—the buildings that define the most photographed vista...

The Boswell Sisters: The New Orleans Women Who Taught Ella Fitzgerald to Sing

The New Orleans Sisters Who Taught Ella Fitzgerald to SingBefore the Andrews Sisters, before every girl group that ever harmonized into a microphone, there were the Boswell Sisters of New Orleans. ...

Patrick Surtain: Edna Karr's Lockdown Corner and His Son Who Followed

Edna Karr's Lockdown Corner and His Son Who FollowedPatrick Surtain grew up in New Orleans, attended Edna Karr High School, and became one of the best cornerbacks in NFL history. Then his son did t...

Frances Parkinson Keyes: The Woman Who Wrote Dinner at Antoine's

The Woman Who Wrote Dinner at Antoine'sFrances Parkinson Keyes came to New Orleans as an outsider and loved the city so hard that she bought one of the most historic houses in the French Quarter an...

Alice Dunbar Nelson: The Poet Who Left Paul Laurence Dunbar and Changed American Literature

The Poet Who Left Paul Laurence Dunbar and Changed American LiteratureAlice Dunbar Nelson was born in New Orleans in 1875, and the city's complicated racial landscape—the Creole hierarchies, the co...

Leon Godchaux: The Man Who Owned Canal Street

The Man Who Owned Canal StreetLeon Godchaux arrived in New Orleans as a peddler and became one of the richest men in the South. His department store on Canal Street was an institution for over a ce...

Nash Roberts: The King of New Orleans Hurricane Forecasting

The King of New Orleans Radio WeatherFor decades, when a hurricane was coming, New Orleans turned to one man: Nash Roberts. While the National Weather Service issued official forecasts and the nati...

Junkyard Dog: The Wrestling Legend Who Ruled the Superdome

The Junkyard Dog Who Became a Wrestling LegendBefore the WWE made professional wrestling a global entertainment empire, there was the Mid-South territory, and there was the Junkyard Dog. Sylvester ...

Mr. Quintron: The Ninth Ward's Masked Organ Genius

The Pioneer of Mr. Quintron's Ninth Ward DreamIn the Ninth Ward of New Orleans, there's a man who builds musical instruments out of junk, performs in a cape and mask, and created a weather-controll...

Grace King: The Woman Who Wrote New Orleans Into American Literature

The Woman Who Wrote New Orleans Into American LiteratureGrace King never left New Orleans, and New Orleans never left her writing. Born in 1852, she became one of the most important literary figure...

Vance DeGeneres: The Other DeGeneres

The Other DeGeneresEveryone knows Ellen. Far fewer people know her older brother Vance, which is a shame, because Vance DeGeneres has had the kind of quietly fascinating career that New Orleans see...

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