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Facts at a GlanceArea: 200 sq miles (515 sq km)Population: 1.2 million Elevation: 30ft (10m) State: Louisiana Time Zone: Central Time (GMT/UTC minus 6 hours) Telephone area code: 504 HistoryWhile nomadic Paleo-Indians probably spent time in the New Orleans area over 10,000 years ago, little evidence remains of their stay. By the time the French founded the city in 1718, seven small tribes known as the Muskogeans inhabited the Florida Parishes north of Lake Pontchartrain and occasionally the banks of the Mississippi River. Other tribes south of New Orleans inhabited the bayous in Barataria and the lower course of the Mississippi River.In 1699, brothers Pierre Le Moyne and Jean-Baptist Le Moyne de Bienville became the first Europeans to ply the Mississippi upriver from the Gulf of Mexico. Guided by a Native American, they sailed north, pausing to note the narrow portage to Lake Pontchartrain. Less than twenty years later, Bienville returned to lay out Nouvelle Orleans on that same spot. Early settlers arrived mostly from France, Canada and Germany, while the French imported thousands of African slaves. Despite the influx, however, colonial mercantilism proved an economic failure in New Orleans and the harsh realities of life there kept further civilian immigration at a minimum. The colonists developed an exchange economy based on smuggling and local trade, while their city earned a reputation for its extralegal enterprise and swarthy character. Calling Louisiana a needless drain on the national treasury, French officials negotiated a secret pact - the 1762 Treaty of Fountainbleu - with Spanish King Charles III, ceding the extensive Louisiana territory west of the Mississippi, including New Orleans, in exchange for help in France's war against England. During this time, French refugees from Nova Scotia (Acadia) began arriving, following the British seizure of French Canada. (The British deported thousands of Acadians for refusing to pledge allegiance to England.) Though most were illiterate peasants, their French loyalty appealed to the same French officials who had ceded Louisiana to Spain, and by transporting the Acadians to New Orleans, France hoped to maintain its interests in Louisiana. Unfortunately for the Acadians - or Cajuns, as they are now called - no one had told them they were to become Spanish subjects, and upon arrival they found themselves likewise unwelcome in New Orleans. Creole society turned their noses up and banished the Acadians to the bayous west of the city, where they continued their livelihood of raising livestock. Like France earlier, Spanish officials soon became anxious to jettison the financial burden of Louisiana, so when Napoleon Bonaparte offered in 1800 to retake control of the territory, Spain jumped at the chance. Meanwhile, US president Thomas Jefferson saw his nation's need to seize the river capital, by force if necessary, to proceed on a path of western expansionism. Bonaparte knew he risked losing New Orleans to the British and, preferring the lands be in American hands, sold the entire Louisiana Territory at a price of US$15 million. On 20 December 1803, the French tricolor on the Place d'Armes was quietly replaced by the American flag. In town, the adjustment to American control was less than welcome. The French Creoles associated Americans with a boisterous and domineering culture that they considered vulgar. The Americans' Protestant beliefs and support for English common law were also perceived as threatening to the Creole way of life. In 1808, the territorial legislature moved to preserve Creole culture by adopting elements of Spanish and French laws - especially the Napoleonic Code - elements of which persist in Louisiana to the present. Throughout the 18th and 19th century, New Orleans was plagued by outbreaks of yellow fever. Still, by 1840 it was the nation's fourth city to exceed 100,000 inhabitants. Americans gained control of the municipal government in 1852 and further eroded Creole influence by dismissing the Code Noir (Black Code), a 1724 document that had regulated the treatment of slaves and free people of color. By 1850, New Orleans had become the South's largest slave-trading center. With the election of President Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Southern 'slave' states found cause to secede from the Union, prompting the Civil War. Though Louisiana was the sixth state to secede, New Orleans actually voted three-to-one to preserve the Union. The Union objective to control the lower Mississippi River and New Orleans' port was achieved by Admiral David G Farragut, whose squadron dramatically ran 17 vessels past a Confederate river blockade and captured New Orleans only two days later - the first Confederate city to be captured. After the fall of New Orleans, about 24,000 Louisiana blacks served in the Union forces. Many joined the Native Guard units headed by General Benjamin F Butler occupying New Orleans. Butler's force was responsible for initiating President Lincoln's Reconstruction policies, restoring states to antebellum status, minus slavery and compensation for former slaveholders. The Louisiana Constitution of 1868 granted voting and civil rights to black males, and the number of black voters swelled to over 130,000 statewide. After occupying troops left in 1877, many civil rights gains were lost as Jim Crow segregation became commonplace, with skin color serving as the ultimate arbiter for people who chose not to trace their lineage. Governor Huey Long reportedly summed up the distinction by noting that all the 'pure whites' in Louisiana could be fed 'with a nickel's worth of red beans and a dime's worth of rice.' By the early 20th century, all the cultural elements were ripe for the musical revolution that gave birth to jazz. From the earliest days of slavery, blacks had congregated at Congo Square every Sunday to dance and sing to an African drumbeat - the only place in the South where this was permitted. Eventually, the indigenous musical genre called jazz took shape, with many early jazz musicians performing in the red-light district of Storyville (ignominiously named after alderman Albert Story, who fought to restrict vice to this small quadrant).
In the 1960s, the city's historic trade connection with Latin America - responsible for bringing the scent of roasting coffee and imported tropical fruits to the city - lost ground to Miami. From 1972 to 1981, New Orleans' economy boomed with the manufacture and financing of offshore oil rigs. The economic turmoil of the 1981 oil glut and ensuing price crash reverberated throughout the state in the following years. Today, the steady growth of tourism - despite reports of the city's high crime rate - makes up an increasing share of the employment opportunities in New Orleans.
When to GoNew Orleans' climate is influenced by its subtropical latitude and proximity to the Gulf of Mexico. It's hot, wet and sticky for most of the year - other times it's just wet. February through April is the best time to visit, when an easygoing climate coincides with the city's two most spectacular events, Mardi Gras and Jazz Fest. May sees the heat begin to intensify, and June marks the official beginning of hurricane season, which lasts through September. The oppressive heat and humidity of the summer months are a misery, driving many residents to the 'redneck Riviera' of gulf coast Mississippi.
If you're visiting in summer, prepare for the 'oven' effect of going from chilly air-conditioned interiors to overwhelmingly tropical 95°F (35°C) streets. September and October tend to be much more agreeable. Christmas is an off-peak period with discounted accommodations, although the winter temperatures during the large New Year's Eve celebration and the Sugar Bowl football game can be chilly.
OrientationAt the big toe of boot-shaped Louisiana, New Orleans nestles between Lake Pontchartrain, a huge but shallow body of saltwater that forms the northern edge of town, and a meniscus-shaped bend of the Mississippi River, about 90 river miles (145km) above where it empties into the Gulf of Mexico. The original and most visited portions of the city parallel the northern riverbank. Directions upriver or downriver are relative to the water flow, which bends maddeningly to all points of the compass. The Mississippi and Lake Pontchartrain also provide 'riverside' or 'lakeside' orientation.New Orleans comprises a checkerboard of neighborhoods of different wealth and ethnicity - it's often only a few steps from ghetto to endowed estates. At the easternmost point of the city's crescent-shaped core is the heart of the original city, the French Quarter. To the southwest, the Uptown area encompasses the Garden District, universities and palatial mansions along the St Charles Ave Streetcar Line, which leads to the Riverbend area at the other end of the crescent. Older faubourgs (suburbs) border the crowded French Quarter - to the east, the Faubourg Marigny appeals to a bohemian, mostly gay crowd, while the more down-at-heels Faubourg Tremé to the north is a black neighborhood known for its music. Downriver from Faubourg Marigny is the Bywater, a burgeoning artist hangout in an otherwise marginal district. New Orleans International Airport (MSY) is 11 miles (18km) west of the city center in Kenner, while both trains and buses share New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal ('Union Station') on Loyola Ave in the Central Business District (CBD), between the French Quarter and the Uptown area.
West of New Orleans you'll find the Cajun wetlands, an area of French patois-speaking rural people who still depend on the natural resources of the swamps. The Cajuns' Spanish counterparts, the Isleños, live in the coastal fishing villages south of New Orleans. Upstream along the Mississippi River, antebellum sugar plantations attract visitors who marvel at elegant plantation homes. An occasional slave cabin remains as a reminder of how the wealth was gained.
EventsBooze, beads and bare-breasted revelers, right? Well, if you think that's all there is to Mardi Gras, then honey you're in for a treat. French for 'Fat Tuesday,' Mardi Gras is a Roman Catholic celebration ushering in the 40-day Lenten season before Easter. It takes place the day before Ash Wednesday, which can be any Tuesday from 3 February to 9 March, depending on the date of Easter. Seeing as Lent demands fasting from meat, Mardi Gras has always represented a last chance to indulge.New Orleans' ribald version of the events include several weeks' worth of fun and fabulousness leading up to Mardi Gras. Though the big masquerade balls are often private affairs, there's no shortage of public parades and gatherings. The bacchanalian nightlife really starts to heat up about two weeks before Mardi Gras, with nonstop nonsense from the Thursday before. Don't even think of showing up without a costume of some sort - even a simple mask will transform you into a worthy party peer. In homage to New Orleans' jazz traditions, on the 250th anniversary of the city's founding (1968), an all-star lineup of jazz-scene giants came together for the first ever New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. A few years later, 'Jazz Fest' expanded to include two weekends in late April and early May and a variety of musical forms besides jazz. Today, Jazz Fest features music to suit just about anybody's tastes, with thousands of performers on more than 10 stages displaying styles ranging from big band to zydeco. The 'Heritage' portion of the title refers to the army of Louisianan arts, crafts and food purveyors gathered downtown at Armstrong Park. Do yourself a favor and arrive hungry - the food on offer is a festival unto itself. If you're new to the region, this is an excellent place to get your culinary bearings. Other somewhat less boisterous celebrations include the Black Heritage Festival on the second weekend in March, the Tennessee Williams Literary Festival on the last weekend in March, the French Quarter Festival on the second weekend in April, the Greek Festival on Memorial Day weekend in May and the raucous riverfront Carnaval Latino on the last weekend in June. Independence Day (Fourth of July) features food and entertainment along the riverfront and star-studded musical performances at the Superdome, followed of course by a barrage of fireworks. AttractionsFrench QuarterThe French Quarter (or Vieux Carré, as it's sometimes called) was city's original focal point and remains its chief tourist draw. It houses nearly all New Orleans' signature tourist icons, and Bourbon Street alone, with its stormy nightlife and naughty sex shows, defines the city's bawdy character. Whether you're a teetotaler or a dipso, a walking tour of the Quarter is a must.What surprises most newcomers is that despite the name, the Quarter is noted for its Spanish, not French, architecture. With the exception of the Old Ursuline Convent - the oldest building in New Orleans, dating from 1745 - the district's French-designed buildings were destroyed by the tremendous fires of 1788 and 1794. The distinctly Spanish character that emerged in the rebuilt city is seen today in its broad window openings, crowned by graceful arches, and handsome fan-shaped transoms. Lacy ironwork railings on galleries overhanging the street are particularly emblematic. Royal Street, the 'Main Street' of the French Quarter, is the postcard image of the neighborhood: its cast-iron galleries and Greek Revival buildings make camera shutters click like locusts in heat. Jackson Square remains the central and most important starting point for visitors to the Quarter, with its nebulous assortment of street musicians, artists, fortune tellers and mimes doing their shtick on the sidewalk. On adjacent Chartres St, two notable history museums are the Cabildo and the Presbytère, the former emphasizing the external impact of New Orleans, the latter concentrating on its internal history. Even if you wouldn't give a nickel to see where the coins used to come from, the Old US Mint's Mardi Gras Museum exhibits on New Orleans Carnival history should get your attention. Upstairs, the memorabilia comprising the Mint's New Orleans Jazz Exhibit imparts a clear sense of how jazz evolved - from its roots in the rhythms brought by African slaves to recent Jazz Fest performances.
Just inside the entrance to St Louis Cemetery No 1 sits the most visited gravesite in all of New Orleans, the purported resting place of voodoo queen Marie Laveau; you'll recognize it as the unkempt tomb covered with the chalkmarked X's of devotees. If you want the city's history in a nutshell, the National Park Service's free 'History of New Orleans' tour departs from their visitor center on N Peters St.
Garden DistrictLike the French Quarter, this is a National Historic District, where architectural preservation ordinances prevent would-be developers from fiddling with its period character. The free guided National Park Service 'Faubourg Promenade' provides an overview of the Garden District, but it's more fun to explore it on your own - especially since it's an ideal zone for bicycling.
Aside from the eerie splendor of Spanish moss and the tranquil allure of the Georgian manors, other key attractions of the district are the Audubon Zoological Gardens, one of the country's richest collections of exotic wildlife; Tulane University, with repositories specializing in African-American history and New Orleans' jazz legacy; and Lafayette Cemetery No 1, where above-ground tombs let you ponder up close what makes Anne Rice's vampire novels seem so perfectly suited to their setting. The Garden District is 1.5 miles (2.5km) southwest of the French Quarter; the St Charles Ave Streetcar Line cuts right through its northern half.
Voodoo Spiritual TempleOne meaning assigned to voodoo, 'being in a trance,' is in part derived from the lack of proper burial for slaves, which was believed to result in restless souls or the walking dead, also called zombies or plat-eyes. In New Orleans, the spirits of deceased ancestors are carefully protected through common rituals such as jazz funerals, featuring brassy bands and a 'second line' of paraders in top hats and umbrellas.At the Voodoo Spiritual Temple on N Rampart St in the French Quarter, Priestess Miriam Chamani primarily practices spiritual healing rituals based on Afrocentric American Voodooism. Her temple promotes neither white nor black magic, but instead focuses on 'true spiritual power for friendly people.' She continues a tradition established by her New Orleans ancestors, Dr John (the voodoo practitioner from the 1820s, not the contemporary musician), Marie Laveau and Leafy Anderson. Drop by the small storefront temple to chat, pick up books on the occult or check out the small collection of art and artifacts from around the world.
Also in the French Quarter, look for the Historic Voodoo Museum on Dumaine St. Half market, half museum, it's a one-stop shop for all you need to get your mojo risin' and keep it there. Whether it's gris-gris you're needing for grandma's arthritis or a penis doll to stop your man from running around on you, this is your place. The museum is only worth visiting when it's uncrowded and a guide is available to talk about the potions, rituals and people, since the exhibits are not self explanatory.
Aquarium of the AmericasNew Orleans voters should be congratulated for funding the Aquarium of the Americas, operated by the Audubon Institute. Here you can go eye-to-eye with giant tropical creatures from the Amazon basin, see spotted moray eels and hawksbill turtles in a walk-through Caribbean reef tube or watch incredible specimens of Gulf species through 14ft (4m) high windows. Mr Bill, a 40 year old sawfish, even shares his tank with an oil platform (that doesn't leak). Of course, the Mississippi River and Delta wetlands environments are displayed, but the 'Americas' apparently extend to the farthest reaches of the Arctic.The air-conditioned aquarium is at the foot of Canal St, near Woldenberg Park and next to the Canal St Ferry. Use the Riverfront streetcar if you don't want to walk from the French Quarter. The Zoo Cruise also docks here, and you can get a variety of combination tickets to both the Audubon Zoo and the aquarium, including the price of the cruise. Off the Beaten TrackLafayetteFrench refugees from Nova Scotia (at the time known as Acadia) began arriving in New Orleans in 1755 after British seizure of French Canada. Mostly illiterate Catholic peasants, they soon found they were also unwelcome in New Orleans. Creole society banished them to the countryside west of the city, where most settled the upland prairie of Bayou Teche. Descendants of the Acadians, or Cajuns as they are now called, continue to occupy the area today, forming one of the nation's largest and most distinct cultural enclaves in one of its most exotic locales.
Cajun Country
Lafayette is a good destination itself and makes an easy base of operations for exploring the rest of the region. While some rural attractions might be hit-or-miss depending on the time of your visit (try to schedule your visit to coincide with a local festival), Lafayette offers a guaranteed good time throughout the year. The most picturesque of the outlying areas are along Bayou Teche (east and south of Lafayette), while the earthiest choices are Gibson in the wetlands and Mamou in the prairie. Lafayette is 130 miles (210km) west of New Orleans via I-10 (around 2.5 hours) or 165 miles (265km) and up to a full day's leisurely drive along Hwy 90. Buses and trains run between the cities frequently, and there are nice routes for bicycles if you're prepared for the frequent south Louisiana rain.
ThibodauxThe Wetlands Cajun Cultural Center in Thibodaux is a spacious National Park Service-operated museum and gallery. Professional exhibits cover virtually every aspect of Cajun life in the wetlands, from their music and the environmental impacts of trapping to the 'the time of shame' (1916 to 1968), when the Louisiana Board of Education discouraged use of the French language. Cajun musicians jam on Monday evenings. Thibodaux is 60 miles (97km) southwest of New Orleans via Hwy 90 and Hwy 1; Greyhound buses run twice daily.KraemerYou haven't seen Cajun Country until you've been out in the swamp, and you won't find a more authentic swamp tour than those given by the Cajuns of Kraemer. The road into town barely skims the swamp's surface, and once you're there, motorized boat rides bring you closer still. Tours through the surrounding bayous are led by guides who tend to overplay the hick routine but nevertheless are the real thing. Among the tours' attractions, visitors are treated to a stop by Zam's pond of 'wrestling gators.' The rancid smell? Oh, that's just the thousands of alligator heads and hides drying in the shed nearby. And if all the bayou bogginess hasn't stolen your appetite, over at Edwina's Cooking Cajun hardy eaters can test their mettle with a plateful of the house special, gator piquante over rice.
Tours, including the obligatory alligator feeding spectacle, are scheduled daily. Kraemer is about 50 miles (80km) southwest of New Orleans via Hwy 90 and Route 307. Buses wouldn't dare.
River RoadElaborate plantation homes line the banks of the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge along what's known as the River Road, a series of sinuous levees on the east and west banks of the Mississippi, between 60 and 90 minutes' drive from New Orleans.Tours of these hallmarks of antebellum ostentation tend to cater to common preconceptions about the elegance and 'Southern charm' of American planters. Past owners' deeds are sometimes outrageously embellished and supernatural happenings are frequently invoked to jazz up an otherwise mundane tour. Sadly, the history of their sizable slave populations is often ignored. Nevertheless, the scenic grounds and handsome mansions offers a potent reminder of the legacy of King Cotton. Full or part-day tours can be arranged from most hostels and hotels in New Orleans.
Interstate 10 offers the quickest access to the east bank levee roads. Parallel to I-10, slower Hwy 61 passes through suburbs and intersects rural crossroads. Ferries still outnumber bridges across the river.
Rural Life MuseumThe focus of this museum, contrary to the opulent images presented at many plantation homes, is on everyday life in the 19th century. Operated by Louisiana State University on the former Windrush Plantation near Baton Rouge, its grounds showcase a matchless collection of rural buildings typically found on sugar plantations, including slave cottages, a commissary and shotgun house, an overseer's house, a cane grinder and a sugar house with a 'Jamaica train' of open kettles.
It's not all about plantation life: there's also an Acadian house, a pioneer cabin and a functioning blacksmith shop open to visitors. In the barn museum, exhibits depict technology and folklife; especially interesting are the African artifacts and slave implements. Special demonstrations like weaving or blacksmithing are conducted on the first Saturday of the month. Baton Rouge is a two hour drive west of New Orleans on I-10; buses and trains make the run several times daily.
ActivitiesAudubon Park is an ideal in-line skating area just west of the Garden District along the banks of the Mississippi. You can circle the park or concentrate on speed near the river in adjacent Levee Park, where you are less likely to crash into other park users. Lakeshore Park, a 10 mile (16km) narrow shoreline strip fronting Lake Pontchartrain, is also a great place to blade with long, paved trails. Skates are available for rent near both parks.New Orleans is a great city for biking - it's flat and compact - just watch out for those hungry potholes that swallow skinny tires. A better bet is to hop on a fat-tire mountain bike - the perfect urban swamp cruiser. Casual bicycling is done in City Park, around the lakefront and on the bike trail around Audubon Park and Levee Park. For long-distance rides and tours, make sure you're well prepared for rain.
The good news for anglers is that Louisiana's commercial live catch leads the nation. Freshwater fishing is also appealing as the warm inland waters are incredibly productive habitats for catfish, sacalait (white perch) and bass. Casual anglers can try for the catfish and sacalait in Bayou Metairie at City Park. There's no equipment rental, but cane poles are sold cheaply at the boat rental near the Casino Building. Inexpensive daily fishing permits are required.
Getting There & AwayNew Orleans International Airport's flights are about 98% domestic - the only 'international' flights are with other North and Central American countries. Its proximity to major hubs at Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and Atlanta make it easy to find a convenient flight or connection to and from just about anywhere in North America.As is typical throughout the South, you can rely on good bus service to New Orleans. Greyhound is the only regular long-distance bus company operating to the city. All trains and Greyhound buses share the New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal, seven blocks upriver from Canal St. Three Amtrak trains serve New Orleans at the Union Passenger Terminal. The City of New Orleans runs to Memphis, Jackson and Chicago; the Crescent Route serves Birmingham, Atlanta, Washington and New York City; and the Sunset Limited rolls between Los Angeles and Miami. Interstate 10 is the nation's major east-west route along the southern boundary linking Jacksonville with Los Angeles via New Orleans. The north-south routes, I-55 to Chicago and I-59 to Chattanooga, meet I-10 to the west and east of New Orleans on either side of Lake Pontchartrain. As it is across the US, driving is done on the right.
Visitors to New Orleans during Mark Twain's time arrived by boat via the Mississippi River. This once-common mode of travel continues to be offered by a few paddlewheel river boats and ocean-going cruise ships. Costs are high compared to other travel modes - the era of steerage passage is over - and river travel is now typically offered as a package tour or excursion that includes top-end food and lodging.
Getting AroundNew Orleans International Airport (MSY) is 11 miles (18km) west of the city center in Kenner. For getting to and from the airport, most visitors rely on Airport Shuttle, whose tickets are available from agents in the baggage area below the arrival gates. Taxi service to downtown is relatively cheap if you have two or more in your party. Taxis queue on the lower level just outside the baggage claim area.Bringing a car to downtown New Orleans is a costly proposition, and traffic and parking congestion may actually hinder your visit. That said, all the big rental companies can be found in the city or at the airport. The Regional Transit Authority (RTA) offers decent bus and streetcar service. From the French Quarter, most destinations are served by buses that stop at the intersection of Basin and Canal Sts. All stops have signs noting the route name and number - you may have to explore all four corners of an intersection to find the stop you want. The free New Orleans Street Map, available from information booths at the airport and downtown, shows most route numbers and lists the route names you can expect to see displayed on the front of the bus. New Orleans has two streetcar lines in operation. The 1923-24 vintage cars of the St Charles Ave Streetcar Line still rumble through streetcar-era suburbs full of Georgian architecture and ornate churches. The Riverfront Streetcar Line operates vintage red cars on the old dockside rail corridor. Its two-mile run connects the Old US Mint, in the lower end of the French Quarter near the Faubourg Marigny, and the upriver Convention Center, passing Canal St on the way. The guides offering mule-drawn carriage rides through the French Quarter are certified by the city to have at least a modest understanding of the quarter's history. However, be aware that 'historical embellishment' is commonplace. Carriages depart day and night, until midnight, from Jackson Square.
Anyone who's flipped through a Mark Twain novel knows what it's like to pine for a riverboat ride on the mighty Mississippi. This once-common mode of travel continues to be offered on a few paddlewheel boats and ocean-going cruise ships, though costs are comparatively high. River travel is now typically offered as a package tour or excursion, including top-end food and lodging. Day and dinner cruises are also on offer.
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