Census records, city directories, vital records, and the blue books themselves help to illustrate the life stories of some of the women who worked in Storyville—particularly those who found success as madams.
Born Mary Anna Deubler in New Orleans, Josie Arlington (1864–1914, first image) escaped extreme poverty to become one of Storyville’s most successful madams. She took the surname Arlington from a fashionable Hot Springs, Arkansas, resort hotel she admired, and she applied the name to her brothel at 225 N. Basin Street. The Arlington is advertised in the 1905 Blue Book as “the most decorative and costly fitted out sporting palace ever placed before the American public.” In October 1906 Josie Arlington left her brothel in the care of her longtime associate, Anna Casey, and moved into a substantial private residence at 2721 Esplanade Avenue. The house was moved to its current location, 2863 Grand Route St. John, around 1922 when the school board purchased the Esplanade land for the construction of McDonogh No. 28 School.
One of Storyville’s most notorious madams, Lulu White (1868–1931, second and third images) presided over one of its most famous brothels, Mahogany Hall at 235 N. Basin, which offered only light-complexioned women of color. White’s nephew Spencer Williams immortalized her mansion in his jazz composition “Mahogany Hall Stomp.” Known as the Diamond Queen (for the diamonds she reportedly wore in excess), White was unmatched in self-promotion. She issued her own souvenir booklets, and her photograph appears in both her own guide, New Mahogany Hall, and The Red Book, though the accuracy of the depictions has been disputed. In New Mahogany Hall her likeness bears a strong resemblance to two other women in the book, and the photograph in The Red Book is of a different woman altogether. The glass transom over the entrance to Mahogany Hall, in which “Lulu White” is emblazoned in amber glass jewels, was one of the mansion’s distinguishing features.
Birthday celebration for Josie Arlington (seated at left)
February 8, 1908; gelatin silver print
by John N. Teunisson, photographer
The Historic New Orleans Collection, gift of anonymous donor, 1993.55
“Miss Lula White”
from New Mahogany Hall
New Orleans, [between 1898 and 1899]
The Historic New Orleans Collection, 56-15
“The Famous Lulu White, Queen of the Octoroons”
from The Red Book: A Complete Directory of the Tenderloin
New Orleans, [1901]
The Historic New Orleans Collection, 1969.19.5
Reclining nude woman
negative, ca. 1912; gelatin silver print, after 1970
by Ernest J. Bellocq, photographer; Lee Friedlander, photographic printer
The Historic New Orleans Collection, gift of Gary Hendershott, 2015.0221.1The New Orleans photographer Ernest J. Bellocq (1873–1949) appears to have been most active from about 1900 until about 1920. As a commercial photographer, his subjects included buildings, boats, and industrial machinery, but he is known for his photographs of Storyville’s sex workers, two examples of which are shown here. In the 1950s, following Bellocq's death, a cache of nearly one hundred glass negatives depicting women (both clothed and nude), along with a few interior views, were found among Bellocq’s belongings. New York photographer Lee Friedlander acquired the negatives in 1966 and eventually printed them using methods and materials common in Bellocq’s time. Through museum and gallery exhibitions and a book, the photographs became widely known.
Reclining nude woman
negative, ca. 1912; gelatin silver print, after 1970
by Ernest J. Bellocq, photographer; Lee Friedlander, photographic printer
The Historic New Orleans Collection, gift of Gary Hendershott, 2015.0221.2Bellocq’s residences and studio locations were near Storyville, but were not within its boundaries. Just how he came to make the photographs is unclear, but the casual look of the surroundings and the sense of confidence exuded by the subjects, along with the lack of evidence of widespread publishing, suggest this group of pictures had motives that were more personal than commercial.
Women who did sex work in Storyville
top row: Mable Brown, Cora McIntyre, Ethel Jackson
middle row: Gussie Connor, Louisa Barnes, Maude Comm
bottom row: Carrie Gross, May Morlock, Elizabeth Monnier
ca. 1910
The Historic New Orleans Collection, courtesy of Louisiana Division / City Archives, New Orleans Public Library