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Where We Practice: The
History of New Orleans
Any New Orleans Attorney or Louisiana Attorney that
Practices Law in New Orleans will tell you that
first-time visitors are often struck by the European
flavor of New Orleans, and little wonder. It's
everywhere! Visitors see it in the architecture, taste
it in the food, hear it in the music that abounds, and
experience it in the hospitality and characteristic
accent of our locals.
Louisiana was claimed for
French king Louis XIV in 1699 and is the only state that
was once a French royal colony. "La Nouvelle
Orleans" was founded in 1718 and ruled by France
and then Spain for nearly 100 years. It is the only U.S.
city where French was the predominant language for more
than one century.
The Louisiana Purchase
was signed in New Orleans in 1803. Last year, 2003, the
200th anniversary of the signing was commemorated in a
year-long, statewide celebration of activities.
New Orleans depended for
185 years on a canal system (108 miles) much more
extensive than that of Venice, Italy. By 1914, Baldwin
Wood's mammoth pumping and drainage system made canals
obsolete.
In a unique partitioning
in 1835, the City of New Orleans was literally split
into three separate municipalities, each with its own
mayor and council. After 17 years, the city was
reunited, becoming the third largest and second richest
in the nation.
New Orleans is often
called the "Crescent City" because it was
founded on the bend of the Mississippi River. This
unusual shape causes locals and visitors to become
confused occasionally, as there is no traditional
"north, south, east, or west" mode of getting
around. Some streets in the city begin at one end
parallel, and end up perpendicular.
New Orleans has more than
35,000 buildings listed on the National Register of
Historic Places, more than any other U.S. city.
Washington, D.C. is the closest contender with just over
20,000. Many of these architectural treasures are
located in the 120 blocks of the French Quarter.
St. Louis Cathedral,
located in the historic French Quarter, is the oldest
continuously active Roman Catholic Cathedral in the
United States. It was originally built in 1724 and
rebuilt twice after a hurricane and a fire. The present
church overlooks beautiful Jackson Square and was
dedicated in 1794.
The Old Ursuline Convent,
also located in the historic French Quarter, dates to
1745, and is the oldest building in the Mississippi
River Valley.
As Americans settled in
New Orleans, they built exquisite antebellum mansions in
the Garden District and Uptown. These architectural gems
fill our residential areas. Locals who recognize their
architectural significance have restored many of these
homes in grand fashion.
Many of the tens of
thousands of live oak trees that line our streets and
boulevards date back to before the Civil War. They have
survived hurricanes, droughts, insects and fires.
The New Orleans Streetcar
line is the oldest continuously operating rail system in
the world. It currently transports locals and tourists
from uptown to the business district along St. Charles
Avenue. By 2003, the Streetcar will be brought back to
life along Canal Street, after an absence of several
decades.
New Orleans is known as
the birthplace of jazz, and rightfully so. Early jazz
greats like Louis Armstrong, Buddy Bolden, Jelly Roll
Morton and King Oliver got their starts in the
nightclubs of Storyville, a red-light district that
flourished between 1897 and 1917. The city's musical
tradition remains strong with the Neville Brothers, the
Marsalis family, Harry Connick, Jr., and many others.
Events such as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage
Festival, the French Quarter Festival, Satchmo Summer
Fest and others share these gifts with the world.
The Louisiana
Philharmonic Orchestra is the only full-time,
player-managed symphony in the United States. Musicians
from all over the world come to New Orleans to study the
LPO's success.
New Orleans has a
well-deserved reputation for food. There are more than
3000 restaurants in the city, many of which have been
owned and operated by the same families for generations.
The predominant foods are Creole and Cajun, but there
are many ethnic restaurants that feature foods from
throughout the world. The city consistently is rated one
of the top cities for food by national and international
publications.
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