Skip to content
The Historic New Orleans Collection

First Draft

Stories from the Historic New Orleans Collection

1975 130 web

Latest Post

First Draft

East Meets West

Explore the Blog

Browse our latest posts or search by topic.

Al Jackson at the Treme Petit Jazz Museum

Tremé’s Homegrown Historian

Founder Al Jackson’s scholarship and personal history come together in Treme’s Petit Jazz Museum.

French Market coffee stand, between 1885 and 1900.

Murder Before Breakfast: The French Market Killing That Shook New Orleans

Coffee maven Rose Nicaud declared that “everybody takes coffee at my stand,” regardless of race. After a man was shot near her stand, she entered the roiling Reconstruction-era debate over the limits of integration.

A black-and-white photo of a man wearing a fedora and holding a shotgun standing at the edge of a porch, silhouetted against the porch light behind him.

Louisiana v. Voting Rights, Then and Now

With a Louisiana redistricting case on the Supreme Court’s 2025–26 docket, the Voting Rights Act is once again under scrutiny. It’s not the first time Louisiana has tested the boundaries of the franchise.

An exterior mural painted by Max Bernardi, located on the side of Breaux Mart grocery at 3233 Magazine Street, depicts composer Edmond  Dédé and Rose Nicaud.

The Untold Story of Rose Nicaud, Coffee Queen of New Orleans

New research about New Orleans’s famed coffee seller shows both the precariousness and the possibilities of urban enslavement.

A black and white photo shows Freedom Riders Julia Aaron Humbles and David Dennis sitting near two armed National Guardsmen on a bus from Montgomery, Alabama to Jackson, Mississippi in May of 1961.

Into the Heart of the Beast

As the 1961 Freedom Rides transfixed the nation, New Orleans civil rights activists played a crucial role.

A vintage black and white photo shows Larry on the day of his first Communion as a young boy in 1954. He is smiling while wearing an all-white suit.

When Praying the Gay Away Didn’t Work, He Turned to Activism

In an excerpt from his new memoir, activist Larry Bagneris recounts how his adolescent struggle to shed his homosexuality led to a political awakening and a lifelong purpose.

A yellowed print illustration of "At the Opera," 1872, an engraving by Alfred Rudolph Waud.

Staging Race in Edmond Dédé’s “Morgiane”

What can we learn about portrayals of the “other” from the first known Black American opera?

A painting featuring an eye within a radiant sun above two classical columns. In the center are a square and compass with sprouting plants. A trowel and a beehive are on either side, on a tiled floor.

Tall Orders

Masonic art and influence are all around us, but Freemasonry’s outsized mystique can make it difficult to separate fact from fiction. HNOC explains the real history of a world hidden in plain sight.

A historic, multi-story Gothic Revival building with pointed arches and ornate detailing. The corner structure features towers and large windows. A horse-drawn cart is parked on the cobblestone street nearby.

Masonic and Odd Fellows Buildings in New Orleans

Society halls and temples have had a lasting impact on the local architectural landscape. Here’s where to find them.

1 2
...
FIRST DRAFT NEWSLETTER

New Orleans Stories,
Delivered to Your Inbox

LI 000486 1 header resize

Cajuns & Creoles

A historical illustration depicts a group of men in suits and top hats standing against a wall, while a separate group of women in long dresses gathers nearby. A child with a dog stands in the foreground, and a sign reads Slave Depot.

Sally Miller or Salomé Müller?

An enslaved woman named Sally Miller went to the Louisiana Supreme Court to sue for her freedom. She won, then she was forgotten.

A detailed close-up of a painting showing the expressive eyes of a person. The skin tone is warm, and the eyebrows are dark and prominent. The person is looking slightly to the side, showcasing the artists skill in capturing emotion and detail.

Identity Theft

Nearly 35 years ago, a heedless conservator altered a rare portrait of a free woman of color. Now, it has been restored and is on view again—and this time, HNOC is telling the story. 

A vintage sepia-toned image shows a large group of people in historical costumes dancing in a circle outdoors. Spectators in period attire surround the dancers, with trees and a rustic wooden building in the background.

What’s the Difference Between Cajun and Creole—Or Is There One?

The answers are tied up in race, class, language, and, of course, history.

New Orleans Icons

A smiling person with curly hair, wearing a vibrant blue tank top, is surrounded by colorful balloons with various patterns, including stars and stripes, against a bright background.

Richard Simmons, New Orleans’s Hometown Hero

How a native son who grew up in the French Quarter sweated his way into the spotlight

A woman with long braided hair and a pink scarf smiles while gesturing indoors. She is surrounded by framed black-and-white photos on a dark wall.

Shades of Blanche

An experimental theater production sheds new light on one of Tennessee Williams’s most beloved characters.

A man in a white suit and hat leads a festive parade, holding a cigar and a card. Behind him, a band plays brass instruments, and a group of people, including a trombone player, follows in celebration. The atmosphere is lively and cheerful.

Danny Barker’s Folk Heroes

The jazzman was also a gifted writer and storyteller who put his own spin on the archetypes of African American folklore, from badmen and blues mamas to “day people and night people.” 

Carnival Chronicles

First Draft

DJ Soul Sister’s Personal Mardi Gras Playlist

First Draft

The Renaissance Man Who Changed Mardi Gras

First Draft

Carnival Couture

First Draft

North Side Skull and Bone Gang: “You Next!”

First Draft

The Defiance of New Orleans’s Black Debutante Tradition

First Draft

Krewe FAQ

First Draft

The Breadth of Carnival Artistry in Nine Photographs

First Draft

How to Catch Beads during Mardi Gras (No, Not That Way)

Publishing

HNOC Quarterly

FIRST DRAFT NEWSLETTER

New Orleans Stories,
Delivered to Your Inbox

1941 1 o6