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The Historic New Orleans Collection
Announcement

Fourteen Highlights from Our Work in 2018

December 28, 2018

A dramatic seascape painting depicts a fleet of old sailing ships at sunset. The sky is filled with dark, billowing clouds, with rays of sunlight breaking through, illuminating the calm water. A small boat with people is seen in the foreground.

It’s been quite the year at the Historic New Orleans Collection. To commemorate the city’s tricentennial, we did our best to present three centuries of history in just 12 months of exhibitions, publications, and programming. Looking back, 14 HNOC staff members highlight moments, discoveries, and innovations that stood out this year, some routine and others that could only have happened in 2018.

Black and white photo of a street view in 1947. A few people walk along the sidewalk near a bar with a Budweiser sign. A vintage car is parked on the road. Large trees line the street. Handwritten notes indicate location and date in the bottom right.
A dramatic seascape painting depicts a fleet of old sailing ships at sunset. The sky is filled with dark, billowing clouds, with rays of sunlight breaking through, illuminating the calm water. A small boat with people is seen in the foreground.
A historic theater building with classical architecture is flanked by two vintage posters announcing an opera event. The scene includes people in period clothing walking and gathering in front of the theater.
A historic photograph depicts four uniformed men standing beside the Liberty Bell, which is mounted on a railcar platform. The platform is labeled Philadelphia and New Orleans, showing the bells transport.
A historic painting depicting a large, four-story building engulfed in flames, with billowing smoke. People are gathered outside, observing and responding to the fire. The foreground shows debris and ongoing chaos during the event.
A man sits at a typewriter in an office, concentrating while holding a pencil. Papers and a model dinosaur are on the desk. Beside this, theres a colorful painting of a nude figure amidst ladders, clouds, and abstract elements in a wooden frame.
The image is split; on the left, a man holds a baby, both looking away. On the right, theres a large, two-story house with ivy-covered walls and gardens in front.
Vintage photograph of young girls in dresses skipping rope under a covered colonnade. Other girls and women observe. The setting appears to be a historical or educational institution. Signs of age are visible on the photo.
Vintage advertisement for B. & J. Abrams, wholesale druggists in New Orleans, listing medicines like chloroform, quinine, morphine, and others. Includes surgical instruments and various medical supplies. Address: 42 and 44 Camp Street.

Echoes of the New Orleans Slave Trade

As the curator and research coordinator for HNOC’s Classical Institute of the South, I travel with two fellows each summer to catalog objects in private collections in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. General Nathan Whitfield’s home, Gaineswood, in Demopolis, Alabama, was one of our stops this year—and investigating the general’s papers in the Auburn University special collections led to some sobering information about his life as a slaveowner. Whitfield’s receipts and correspondence were full of details like buying “negro clothing” in bulk from Mobile wholesalers, or hiring slave catchers to track down runaways.

A large, white neoclassical mansion with tall columns and a central pediment. The building has multiple chimneys and a circular railing on the roof. It is situated on a grassy lawn under a clear blue sky.
A handwritten legal document from the State of Louisiana, dated 1858, detailing a land transaction. It includes formal phrases such as To Have and to Hold and signatures at the bottom.

But nothing drove home the harsh reality that he enslaved other people like finding a group of notarized receipts from New Orleans slave sales. Gen. Whitfield spent three days here in May 1852 (left image), spending thousands of dollars buying human beings. This likely happened just blocks from my Royal Street office. Most chilling was how the notarial forms described Whitfield’s ownership as “to have and to hold,” twisting the language around both slavery and marriage (right image).

—Sarah Duggan, coordinator, Classical Institute of the South, and research curator

A vintage ledger page with handwritten entries in blue and black ink, detailing dates, names, codes, and notes. A sharpened orange pencil lies diagonally across the page. One entry circled with Student written next to it.
A bustling street festival scene at dusk, with string lights overhead and lively crowd mingling. American and other flags hang above, and colorful balloons add festive flair. Historic buildings line the street under a deepening blue sky.
An old, sepia-toned handwritten letter with a torn black seal at the top. The paper is worn and slightly wrinkled, featuring ornate script on one side and addressed to My Lord Newbathe. Visible creases suggest it was folded.
A large audience sits in rows of chairs facing a panel of speakers in a formal room. The room has green walls, art, and columns. The panel members sit at a table covered with a yellow cloth, engaged in discussion.

Thank you for reflecting on 2018 with us, and be sure to continue to follow HNOC in 2019. We are sure it will be another banner year, for HNOC, New Orleans, and our visitors. For daily updates and highlights from our work, follow us on Facebook and Instagram.

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