“A traditional unit history chock-full of well-organized service data and beautiful illustrations”
Civil War Book Review, 2015
Enjoy free admission every day. Visit the museum and shop or conduct research at the Williams Research Center.
Immerse yourself in America’s fight for independence in this new exhibition experience designed and produced by French technology firm Histovery. On view until January 17, 2027.
On Friday, May 8, bring your dancing shoes and enjoy classic tunes from the Great American Songbook, including hits by Louis Prima, in HNOC’s historic courtyard at 520 Royal Street.
Dive into the Collection’s holdings with image-rich previews of treasures from New Orleans history.
June 8–12, Curator Camp is a weeklong summer program for teens who get excited by history, artifacts, and storytelling! Daily hands-on workshops and experiences introduce skills that bring history and museums to life.
Captivating true stories that surprise and inspire, written and published by HNOC staff and special guest authors.
On October 29, join us in celebrating six decades of preserving, collecting, and making history. Save the date for music, memories, and more at what is sure to be a fantastic night out in the French Quarter.
by Donald Peter Moriarty II
This thoroughly researched Civil War regimental history, follows the Orleans Light Horse from its organization through its muster into active service to the war’s end.
HNOC 2014
softcover • 6" × 9" • 304 pp.
28 b&w images
ISBN 978-0-917860-67-6
$30.00
As armies formed across a splintering United States in early 1861, the call to the colors sounded and volunteer groups began to assemble. One such unit, formed in New Orleans, was the Orleans Light Horse, an independent light-cavalry troop described by the New Orleans Daily Picayune as “a fine body of men all splendidly mounted.”
In this thoroughly researched Civil War regimental history, Donald Peter Moriarty II follows the Orleans Light Horse from its organization in February 1861 through its March 1862 muster into active service with the Confederate States Army to the war’s end, in 1865. As the escort company to Lieutenant General Leonidas Polk and, later, Lieutenant General Alexander P. Stewart, the Orleans Light Horse was an integral part of the Army of Mississippi and the Army of Tennessee.
A Fine Body of Men provides service records and additional biographical information for the company’s 215 cavalrymen, while inviting readers to experience the major campaigns of the Civil War’s Western Theater alongside these brave soldiers.
“A traditional unit history chock-full of well-organized service data and beautiful illustrations”
Civil War Book Review, 2015
A native of Louisiana currently residing in California, Moriarty is a retired lieutenant colonel of the US Army.
Rev. Benjamin Palmer gained national fame—he went viral, in an 1860 sense—just as Southern states were deciding how to respond to Lincoln’s election.
Amid the American Civil War, a new civil rights movement was forming in New Orleans—in French.
Still sold today, the sharp New Orleans tonic has its roots in the Civil War.
In Union-occupied New Orleans, a Civil War general attempted to subdue a riotous populace.
translated and introduced by Clint Bruce
with a foreword by Angel Adams Parham
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