The electricity was not restored in the Quarter before the rest of the city-it never went off, which happened during Katrina as well.By the way, do take a moment to appreciate a well-built neighborhood with underground utilities and ask yourself why rest of the city doesn’t follow this lead?
The Quarter is NOT made up entirely of tourists with glow sticks, but many, many locals working and living in the old city as locals have since 1718. Everyone who appreciates diversity and joy and community across the city and world comes to the French Quarter to find it here as well. Stop bashing other neighborhoods and appreciate what we have-everywhere.
Category Archives: French Quarter
French Quarter Tree Damage
I’ve been working on a tree inventory of the French Quarter; guess I need to update it now!
French Quarter today (post storm)
- Antoine’s Boards
- Clever boarding of Royal Street store
- Royal Rouses closed for hurricane preparation in 2012
- Clean quiet Bourbon Street
- Tree debris in Quarter
- French Quarter banana trees downed
Individual storm gate
Snoozy Quarter
Quiet, slightly rainy day so far waiting for Isaac to hit Bourbon Street, get a daiquiri, then to get the hell out. He, like many visitors, is enjoying it and taking his sweet time in heading north.
Many business were open earlier today (and some not, like CC’s Cofffeehouse!): I saw or heard about Cafe Envie, Smallmart convenience, Fahy’s Irish Pub among others. I may go out later in a respite between bands of rain to venture further.
I love our Southern Decadence
New Orleans always comes up its it’s own version of a holiday. Labor Day, which most Americans celebrate with a cookout or a trip to a beach, is no different. Southern Decadence is a wild, joyful and colorful celebration by the gay community held in the French Quarter for the weekend, culminating with a parade next Sunday. (well, of course, activities continue past that parade, but for bystanders, it’s time to go home.)
Decadence is more than 40 years old, and my understanding is that it started with a group of friends that held a party in the lower Quarter and it morphed to the bars, as most parties held in the Quarter do.
Now, it’s a huge economic boost to the city and as much support and thanks as other event organizers get for returning to the city post Katrina, the gay community that has always spent millions visiting our city deserve thanks too! After all, many of these visitors were stuck in town in the aftermath of Katrina, and so many of the gay Quarter businesses stayed open and serving during and others reopened quickly after.
With a 70 plus year old mother living across the street from one of the wilder gay bars, I can tell you that it’s possible to live quietly and yet with some needed joi de vivre because of this community being here.
So, get to the Quarter on September 2 and watch a great time being had and have a little yourself….
Clarence John Laughlin — Indiegogo
This is an amazing, important documentary fundraiser to highlight a true French Quarter character, artist and world class collector. From the home page of the documentary:
This is a documentary about the New Orleans photographer Clarence John Laughlin, who many consider to be the father of American surrealist photography. Shot in the historic New Orleans Pontalba building where he lived for over 35 years in a garret apartment stuffed with thousands of books covering every available surface, this is the only known footage of one of our most original artists.
Clarence was a well-known eccentric with an artistic temperament. He could be both charming and difficult. He was married five times, twice to the same women. Possibly due to his strong willed personality, Clarence’s greatness was not fully recognized or appreciated during his life, though he received much acclaim and was published in major magazines and exhibited in galleries in the U.S. and Europe. There is no doubt Clarence was a photographic genius who’s life and work deserves more attention and praise. The documentary will explore Clarence the book collector and writer and how those passions influenced his life and his significant body of work.
Please support this work and pass it along to others that might also support.











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