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- History
- Pre-Civil War New Orleans
-
- New Orleans is a city in southern Louisiana, located on the Mississippi River. Most of the city is
- situated on the east bank, between the river and Lake Pontchartrain to the north. Because it was built on a
- great turn of the river, it is known as the Crescent City. New Orleans, with a population of 496,938 (1990
- census), is the largest city in Louisiana and one of the principal cities of the South. It was established on
- the high ground nearest the mouth of the Mississippi, which is 177 km (110 mi) downstream. Elevations
- range from 3.65 m (12 ft) above sea level to 2 m (6.5 ft) below; as a result, an ingenious system of water
- pumps, drainage canals, and levees has been built to protect the city from flooding.
- New Orleans was founded in 1718 by Jean Baptiste Le Moyne, sieur de Bienville, and named for the
- regent of France, Philippe II, duc d'Orleans. It remained a French colony until 1763, when it was
- transferred to the Spanish. In 1800, Spain ceded it back to France; in 1803, New Orleans, along with the
- entire Louisiana Purchase, was sold by Napoleon I to the United States. It was the site of the Battle of New
- Orleans (1815) in the War of 1812. During the Civil War the city was besieged by Union ships under
- Adm. David Farragut; it fell on Apr. 25, 1862.
- And that's what it say's in the books, a bit more, but nothing else of interest. This is too bad,
- New Orleans , as a city, has a wide and diverse history that reads as if it were a utopian society built to
- survive the troubles of the future. New Orleans is a place where Africans, Indians and European settlers
- shared their cultures and intermingled. Encouraged by the French government, this strategy for
- producing a durable culture in a difficult place marked New Orleans as different and special from its
- inception and continues to distinguish the city today.
- Like the early American settlements along Massachusetts Bay and Chesapeake Bay, New Orleans
- served as a distinctive cultural gateway to North America, where peoples from Europe and Africa initially
- intertwined their lives and customs with those of the native inhabitants of the New World. The resulting
- way of life differed dramatically from the culture than was spawned in the English colonies of North
- America. New Orleans Creole population (those with ancestry rooted in the city's colonial era) ensured not
- only that English was not the prevailing language but also that Protestantism was scorned, public
- education unheralded, and democratic government untried. Isolation helped to nourish the differences.
- From its founding in 1718 until the early nineteenth century, New Orleans remained far removed from the
- patterns of living in early Massachusetts or Virginia. Established a century after those seminal Anglo-
- Saxon places, it remained for the next hundred years an outpost for the French and Spanish until
- Napoleon sold it to the United States with the rest of the Louisiana purchase in 1803.
- Even though steamboats and sailing ships connected French Louisiana to the rest of the country,
- New Orleans guarded its own way of life. True, it became Dixie's chief cotton and slave market, but it
- always remained a strange place in the American South. American newcomers from the South as well as
- the North recoiled when they encountered the prevailing French language of the city, its dominant
- Catholicism, its bawdy sensual delights, or its proud free black and slave inhabitants; In short, its deeply
- rooted Creole population and their peculiar traditions. Rapid influxes of non-southern population
- compounded the peculiarity of its Creole past. Until the mid-nineteenth century, a greater number of
- migrants arrived in the boomtown from northern states such as New York and Pennsylvania than from the
- Old South. And to complicate its social makeup further, more foreign immigrants than Americans came
- to take up residence in the city almost to the beginning of the twentieth century.
- The largest waves of immigrants came from Ireland and Germany. In certain neighborhoods,
- their descendants' dialects would make visitors feel like they were back in Brooklyn or Chicago. From
- 1820 to 1870, the Irish and Germans made New Orleans one of the main immigration ports in the nation,
- second only to New York, but ahead of Boston, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. New Orleans also was the
- first city in America to host a significant settlement of Italians, Greeks, Croatians, and Filipinos.
- THE AFRICANS:
- African Americans compile about half of the city of New Orleans population to date. How did
- this come about? Well, during the eighteenth century, Africans came to the city directly from West
- Africa. The majority passed neither through the West Indies nor South America, so they developed
- complicated relations with both the Indian and Europeans. Their descendants born in the colony were
- also called Creoles. The Spanish rulers (1765-1802) reached out to the black population for support
- against the French settlers; in doing so, they allowed many to buy their own freedom. These free black
- settlers along with Creole slaves formed the earliest black urban settlement in North America. Black
- American immigrants found them to be quite exotic, for the black Creoles were Catholic, French or
- Creole speakers, and accustomed to an entirely different lifestyle.
- The native Creole population and the American newcomers resolved some of their conflicts by
- living in different areas of the city. Eventually, the Americans concentrated their numbers in new uptown
- neighborhoods. For a certain period (1836-1852), they even ran separate municipal governments to avoid
- severe political, economic, and cultural clashes. Evidence of this early cleavage still survives in the city's
- oldest quarters.
- During the infamous Atlantic slave trade, thousands of Muslims from the Senegambia and Sudan
- were kidnapped or captured in local wars and sold into slavery. In America, these same Muslims
- converted other Africans and Amerindians to Islam. As the great Port of New Orleans was a major point
- of entry for merchant ships, holds bursting with human, African cargo, the Port was also, unbeknownst to
- many, a major point of entry for captured Muslims (most often prisoners of local wars) who certainly
- brought with them their only possession unable to be stripped from them by their captors, their religion,
- Islamic.
- The historical record of shipping manifests attests to the fact that the majority of slaving
- merchant vessels that deposited their goods at the mouth of the Mississippi took on their cargoes from
- those areas of West Africa with significant Muslim population. As the Islamic belief system forbids
- suicide and encourages patient perseverance, the middle-passage survival rate of captured African
- Muslims was quite high. For example, one such courageous survivor was Ibrahima Abdur Rahman, son
- of the king of the Fulani people of the Senegambia region, named "The Prince" by his master Thomas
- Foster of Natchez, Mississippi. Abdur Rahman came through the Port of New Orleans, was sold at auction
- and became a man of renown on the Foster Plantation. He eventually petitioned his freedom via President
- John Quincy Adams and returned to Africa after 46 years of enslavement.
- Free People of Color (f.p.c.) were Africans, Creoles of Color (New World-Born People of African
- descent), and persons of mixed African, European, and or Native American descent. In Louisiana, the
- first f.p.c. came from France or its Colonies in the Caribbean and in West Africa. During the French
- Colonial period in Louisiana, f.p.c. were a rather small and insignificant group. During French rule from
- 1702-1769, there are records for only 150 emancipations of slaves. The majority of slaves freed in
- Louisiana's Colonial period was during the Spanish reign from 1769-1803, with approximately 2,500
- slaves being freed.
- The majority of these slaves were Africans and unmixed Blacks who bought their freedom. Later on this
- initial group would be augmented by Haitian refugees and other f.p.c. from the Caribbean, Mexico,
- Central and South America, other parts of the United States, and from around the world.
- Besides self-purchase and donation of freedom, slaves sometimes earned freedom for meritorious
- service in battle or saving the life of their masters. A significant amount of slaves became free because
- they were the children of white native born and European fathers who sometimes openly acknowledged
- their mixed offspring and who also usually freed the mother of their children. It would be several
- generations before mulatto, quadroon, and octoroon women would become the common-law wives and
- mistresses of white men.
- The reason for the high number of f.p.c. in New Orleans was largely due to the influx of Haitian Refugees
- into the city in 1809. Approximately 10,000 people arrived in New Orleans with roughly a third being
- f.p.c., another third slaves, and the remaining were white. By the eve of the Civil War in 1860, the
- reported total population for f.p.c. in Louisiana was 18,647 people with the majority being in New Orleans
- with a census tally of 10,689 people.
- Free People of Color were highly skilled craftsmen, business people, educators, writers, planters,
- and musicians. Many free women of color were highly skilled seamstresses, hairdressers, and cooks while
- some owned property and kept boarding houses. Some f.p.c. were planters before and after the Civil War
- and owned slaves. Although shocking and incomprehensible to many people today, the fact that some
- f.p.c. owned slaves must come to light.
- CROLEAN SOCIETY:
- In eighteenth century Louisiana, the term Creole referred to locally born persons, regardless of
- status or race, and was used to distinguish American-born slaves from African-born slaves when they
- testified in court and on inventory lists of slaves. They were identified simply as Creoles if they were
- locally born, or Creoles of another region or colony if they had been born elsewhere in the Americas of
- non-American ancestry, whether African or European. However, due to the racial and cultural complexity
- of colonial Louisiana, native Americans who were born into slavery were sometimes described as
- "Creoles" or "born in country."
- After the United States took over Louisiana, the Creole cultural identity became a means of
- distinguishing who was truly native to Louisiana from those that were Anglo. Creole has to come mean
- the language and folk culture which native to the southern part of Louisiana where African, French, and
- Spanish influence were most deeply rooted historically and culturally.
- The language too, represents these traits, whereas the vocabulary of Louisiana Creole is
- overwhelmingly French in origin, its grammatical structure is largely African. The early creation of the
- Louisiana Creole language and its widespread use among whites as well as blacks up until World War II
- is strong evidence for the strength of the African ingredient in Louisiana Creole culture. The widespread
- survival of Louisiana Creole until very recent times and its use by whites of various social positions as
- well as by blacks and mixed-bloods had, no doubt, a great impact upon Africanizing Louisiana culture.
- The Louisiana Creole language became an important part of the identity, not only of African-Creoles, but
- of many whites of all classes who, seduced by its rhythm, intoxicating accent, humor and imagination,
- adopted it as their preferred means of communication. There is still a significant number of whites who
- only speak Louisiana Creole.
- MARDI GRAS:
- Many locals begin with a party on January 6 that includes a King Cake, a cake baked in the
- shape of a large doughnut, covered with icing and colored sugar of green, gold, and purple, the traditional
- Mardi Gras colors. Purple represents justice, green representing faith, and gold representing power. Inside
- the cake is a tiny plastic baby, meant to represent the Baby Jesus. Whoever gets the piece with the baby is
- crowned King or Queen ... and is expected to throw a party on the following weekend. Parties with King
- Cake continue each weekend until Mardi Gras itself finally arrives.
- The name Mardi Gras means Fat Tuesday in French. The day is known as Fat Tuesday, since it is
- the last day before Lent. Lent is the season of prayer and fasting observed by the Roman Catholic Church
- and other Christian denominations during the forty days and seven Sundays before Easter Sunday. Easter
- can be on any Sunday from March 23 to April 25, since the exact day is set to coincide with the first
- Sunday after the full moon following the Spring Equinox. Mardi Gras occurs on any Tuesday from
- February 3 through March 9. The Gregorian calendar, setup by the Catholic Church, determines the exact
- day for Mardi Gras.
- The celebration started in New Orleans around the seventeenth century, when Jean Baptiste
- LeMoyne, Sieur de Bienville, and Pierre LeMoyne, Sieur de Iberville founded the city. In 1699, the group
- set up camp 60 miles south of the present location of New Orleans on the river's West Bank. They named
- the site Point du Mardi Gras in recognition of the major French holiday happening on that day, March 3.
- The late 1700's, saw pre-Lenten balls and fetes in the infant New Orleans. The masked balls continued
- until the Spanish government took over and banned the events. The ban even continued after New
- Orleans became an American city in 1803. Eventually, the predominant Creole population revitalized the
- balls by 1823. Within the next four years, street masking was legalized.
- But it must be remembered that although costumes are worn for both, Mardi Gras is not Halloween. Gore
- and mayhem may work for All Hallow's Eve, but for Mardi Gras, glamour is de rigour. Feathers, beads,
- glitter, spangles -- all work well on Mardi Gras. Tuxedoes, ball gowns, and boas work. Fake blood and
- Freddie Krueger gloves do not.
- The early Mardi Gras consisted of citizens wearing masks on foot, in carriages, and on
- horseback. The first documented parade in 1837 was made of a costumed revelers. The Carnival season
- eventually became so wild that the authorities banned street masking by the late 1830's. This was an
- attempt to control the civil disorder arising from this annual celebration.
- This ban didn't stop the hard core celebrators. By the 1840's, a strong desire to ban all public
- celebrations was growing. Luckly, six young men from Mobile saved Mardi Gras. These men had been
- members of the Cowbellians, a group that performed New Years Eve parades in Mobile since 1831. The
- six men established the Mystick Krewe of Comus, which put together the first New Orleans Carnival
- parade on the evening of Mardi Gras in 1857. The parade consisted of two mule-driven floats. This
- promoted others to join in on this new addition to Mardi Gras. Unfortunately, the Civil War caused the
- celebration to loose some of its magic and public observance. The magic returned along with several other
- new krewes after the war.
- Rituals and traditions have also evolved with non-krewe members as well. Those in the heart of
- Carnival often begin their celebrating on January 6, and don't let up until Ash Wednesday , remember,
- Mardi Gras is the peak of the Carnival Season, but it 's only one day. Therefore, New Orleans has
- officially established Lundi Gras on the Monday before Fat Tuesday because no one can get any work
- done as of the Friday before anyway.
- NEAT FACT:
- Senegambia, where I noted earlier that a lot of the original blacks had come from, had long been
- a crossroads of the world where peoples and cultures were assimilated in warfare and the rise and fall of
- great empires. An essential feature of the cultural materials brought from Senegambia as well as from
- other parts of Africa was a willingness to add and incorporate useful aspects of new cultures encountered.
- This attitude was highly functional in a dangerous and chaotic world. New Orleans became another
- crossroads where the river, the bayous and the sea were open roads; where various nations ruled but the
- folk continued to reign. They turned inhospitable swamplands into a refuge for the independent, the
- defiant, and the creative "unimportant" people who tore down all the barriers of language and culture
- among peoples throughout the world and continue to sing to them of joy and the triumph of the human
- spirit.Put your paper here.
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