罢谤别尘茅, New Orleans, LA
罢谤别尘茅, New Orleans, LA

New Orleans,

LA

United States

罢谤别尘茅

Carved out of a portion of the Morand-Moreau plantation north of the Vieux Carr茅 and incorporated into New Orleans in 1812, 罢谤别尘茅 is considered the nation鈥檚 oldest African American neighborhood. The area鈥檚 character has been defined by the cultures of the free African Americans and the French-speaking Creoles who first settled here, attracted by the availability of cheap land along the backswamp edge of the city. Bounded by Orleans Avenue to the west, Rampart Street to the south, St. Bernard Avenue (to Claiborne Avenue) and Esplanade Avenue to the east, and Broad Street to the north, the neighborhood is characterized by houses built in the Creole-cottage or shotgun styles: closely compacted buildings with long, narrow footprints and a minimal setback from the street. Congo Square is the neighborhood鈥檚 earliest public space, where enslaved persons would meet on Sundays to perform traditional African songs and dances.

In 1946 New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses was hired to make New Orleans more accessible to vehicles, and in 1966, the North Claiborne Avenue 鈥渘eutral ground鈥 (the local term for a wide, grassy median between lanes of traffic), once home to 罢谤别尘茅鈥檚 unique Mardi Gras traditions, was destroyed to make way for an elevated highway connecting suburban New Orleans to its downtown. The large collection of mature live oaks that covered the area was removed to allow for the construction of the highway that cut through the neighborhood鈥檚 center. In the 1970s, architect Robin Riley and landscape architects Cashio Cochran designed the 31-acre Louis Armstrong Park, built to honor 罢谤别尘茅鈥檚 contributions to the city鈥檚 musical legacy. The adjacent Congo Square was redesigned simultaneously. 罢谤别尘茅 was recognized as a National Historic Landmark District in 1998.

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