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Neighborhoods
New
Orleans is home to many different
cultures and ethnic backgrounds,
undoubtedly due in part to its
unique history and to the present
fact that it is both a metropolis
and an international port. And
this cultural diversity is nowhere
more recognized than in the city's
remarkable collection of historic
neighborhoods, many of them so distinctive
that it's hard to believe you're
in the same town (or even country
for that matter).
Native
Orleanians grew up in separate
sections, or faubourgs (French for
suburbs). These neighborhoods
were, in effect, individual
hamlets. Since 90% of the area
originally was swamp or water,
they were scattered sites, built
where "ridges" or
natural levees offered elevation
above the recurrent floods. Most
of New Orleans is reclaimed swamp,
lacking solid land. And prior to
the 20th
Century, its principal forms of
transportation were 110 miles of
canals and 200 miles of streetcar
lines.
Until
1890, the area was still a
collection of
disconnected suburbs -
neighborhoods without neighbors.
In many cases such neighborhoods were divided by
language. The original French
Creoles spoke French and disdained
the "Americans" who
arrived 90 years later. The
Germans, Irish, Italians, and West
Indians added to the extraordinary
"babble" of about a
dozen languages and scores of
different dialects slicing the air
in the city's
marketplaces."
Perhaps
Charles Dudley Warner,
writing in Harper's Magazine 1889,
said it best when he concluded: "New Orleans is
either the most cosmopolitan of
all provincial cities... or the
most provincial of all
cosmopolitan cities."
Either way, the amalgamation of
the different neighborhoods that
make up New Orleans is a great
part of what makes this place so
magnificent. So, to learn more
about some of the Crescent City's
most distinctive communities,
click on one of our detailed links
below.
Garden District
French Quarter
Uptown / University
Faubourg Marigny
City Park /
St. John
Faubourg
Treme
Mid-City
Mel Leavitt, dean
of New Orleans' television new
commentators and leading
author-historian, contributed to
this article with the assistance
of the New Orleans
Metropolitan Convention &
Visitors Bureau Public Affairs
Department.
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