Culture

F. Edward Hébert: The Streetcar Conductor's Son Who Ran the Pentagon

The Streetcar Conductor's Son Who Ran the PentagonF. Edward Hébert was born in New Orleans in 1901, the son of a streetcar conductor and a schoolteacher, and he grew up to become one of the most po...

Avery Alexander: The Man They Dragged Down the Stairs at City Hall

The Man They Dragged Down the StairsThere's a piece of footage from 1963 that every New Orleanian should see. Avery Alexander, a Baptist minister and civil rights activist, walks into the cafeteria...

Cedric Richmond: From New Orleans East to the White House

From New Orleans East to the White HouseCedric Richmond grew up in New Orleans East, the sprawling subdivision that represents a particular chapter of Black middle-class aspiration in the city. His...

Michael Hahn: The Bavarian Immigrant Who Became Lincoln's Governor

The Bavarian Immigrant Who Became Lincoln's GovernorMichael Hahn was born in Bavaria in 1830 and arrived in New Orleans as a ten-year-old immigrant. By 1864, he was governor of Louisiana—appointed ...

Sidney Barthelemy: The Quiet Mayor Who Held the City Together

The Quiet Mayor Who Held the City TogetherSidney Barthelemy never got the credit he deserved. He was the second Black mayor of New Orleans, serving from 1986 to 1994, and he took office at the wors...

Henry Warmoth: The Twenty-Six-Year-Old Governor of Reconstruction Louisiana

The Twenty-Six-Year-Old Governor of Reconstruction LouisianaHenry Clay Warmoth was twenty-six years old when he became governor of Louisiana in 1868. Let that sink in. A twenty-six-year-old Union A...

William Jefferson: The Ninety Thousand Dollars in the Freezer

The Ninety Thousand Dollars in the FreezerIn the long and colorful history of Louisiana political corruption, few images have been as unforgettable as the one from William Jefferson's kitchen: nine...

Sidney Bechet: The New Orleans Genius Paris Loved More Than America Did

The Genius Who Left New Orleans and Conquered ParisSidney Joseph Bechet was born on May 14, 1897, in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans, into a Creole family of musicians. He was a prodigy — playing c...

Mel Ott: The Gretna Kid Who Hit 511 Home Runs for the Giants

The Gretna Kid Who Hit 511 Home RunsMelvin Thomas Ott was born on March 2, 1909, in Gretna, Louisiana — just across the river from New Orleans, close enough to hear the steamboat whistles and feel ...

Pistol Pete Maravich: The Greatest Show on the Basketball Court

Pistol Pete and the Basketball That Went EverywherePete Maravich wasn't born in New Orleans — he was born in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, in 1947. But New Orleans is where he became "Pistol Pete," and ...

Essence Festival: The Largest Celebration of Black Culture in America

The Party with a PurposeEvery Fourth of July weekend, New Orleans hosts the largest annual gathering of African American culture in the United States. The Essence Festival of Culture — originally t...

The St. Charles Streetcar: The Oldest Ride in America

The Oldest Continuously Operating Streetcar in the WorldThe St. Charles streetcar line has been running since 1835, making it the oldest continuously operating street railway system on Earth. The o...

Girod Street Cemetery: The Protestant Graveyard They Paved Over

Girod Street Cemetery: The Protestant Graveyard They Paved OverGirod Street Cemetery no longer exists. Demolished in 1957 to make way for a parking lot and eventually the Superdome complex, it was ...

The Hurricane Katrina Memorial: New Orleans’ Newest City of the Dead

The Hurricane Katrina Memorial: New Orleans’ Newest City of the DeadThe Hurricane Katrina Memorial is the newest and most heartbreaking cemetery in New Orleans. Completed on August 29, 2008—exactly...

St. Patrick Cemetery: The Irish Story Written in Stone

St. Patrick Cemetery: The Irish Story Written in StoneSt. Patrick Cemetery tells one of the great immigration stories of New Orleans—the arrival of the Irish, who came by the tens of thousands in t...

The Times-Picayune and New Orleans Media: How a City Tells Its Own Story

The Picayune: Named After the Smallest CoinThe Times-Picayune has been the newspaper of record for New Orleans since 1837, when it launched as The Picayune — named after the Spanish half-real coin,...

Audubon Park and Zoo: New Orleans' Green Heart Uptown

340 Acres of Green in a City Below Sea LevelAudubon Park stretches across 340 acres of Uptown New Orleans, from St. Charles Avenue to the Mississippi River, and it is one of the great urban parks i...

Creole vs. Cajun: The Difference, the Overlap, and Why It Matters

The Question Every Visitor Gets Wrong"Is this Creole or Cajun?" It's the question tourists ask at every restaurant in New Orleans, and the answer is almost always more complicated than they want it...

New Orleans Square: When Disney Built a French Quarter in California

Walt Disney Fell in Love with New OrleansIn the early 1960s, Walt Disney visited New Orleans and was captivated. The wrought iron balconies, the hidden courtyards, the gas lamps, the sense that eve...

Jackson Square: Three Hundred Years at the Heart of New Orleans

The Heart of the City Since 1721Jackson Square is the living room of New Orleans. It has been the center of civic life since Adrien de Pauger laid out the original Place d'Armes in 1721, three year...

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