It
has been said that the state of Louisiana is comprised of three parts: North
Louisiana, Cajun Louisiana and New Orleans. That’s actually an
oversimplification – there’s also what are called the Florida parishes –
stretching from Baton Rouge eastward to Mississippi and north of Lake
Pontchartain.
My
mother was born and raised in New Orleans, down in the Ninth Ward that became
famous during Hurricane Katrina. I was born and raised in New Orleans, growing
up in the Jefferson parish suburb of Metairie. My father was from Shreveport,
in north Louisiana.
After
he was discharged from the Navy at the end of World War II, my father moved to
New Orleans to work. His parents weren’t exactly pleased. New Orleans had a
reputation, a well deserved reputation, one that today’s Bourbon Street is only
a very pale remnant of. And then he married someone from New Orleans. My
grandmother got over that, but she never got over his decision to raise her
grandson in the fetid swamp of iniquity called the Big Easy.
I
survived. My upbringing was pretty standard Baby Boomer American Suburban.
New
Orleans had a reputation for political corruption (more like a Central or South
American city than a U.S. city). And it had a reputation for, well, the loosest
of morals. That came from primarily from a section of town called Storyville, a legally
constituted district where prostitution was allowed. There were other parts of
the city where prostitution flourished, but Storyville was the epicenter. It
lasted for 20 years, from 1897 to 1917, when it was closed down at the demand
of the general commanding a nearby Army base after four soldiers were killed.
Very
little of Storyville physically remains. It encompassed 24 square blocks west
of the French Quarter and north of Canal Street. Popular legend says jazz was
born there, but actually it was born all over the city.
Last
fall, we were visiting New Orleans, and in a French Quarter shop near the Café Du
Monde (coffee au lait and beignets!) I found two mysteries by a writer named
David Fulmer. Both are set in New Orleans, and both are largely about
Storyville.
I
just finished reading the first one, Chasing
the Devil’s Tail, published in 2003. A private detective, Valentin St.
Cyr, is trying to find a serial killer who’s murdering the denizens of the
brothels. It is graphic, with some rough language, and I hesitate it recommend
it for those reasons. It is also a riveting story, and historical figures walk
through its pages, like photographer E.J. Bellocq, jazz piano player Jelly Roll
Morton, Miss Lulu (a madam), Tom Anderson, a state senator who “governed”
Storyville, and Buddy Bolden, the cornet player who was instrumental in the
birth of jazz.
It
is extraordinarily well researched. Fulmer drew from the archives of Tulane
University and scholarly historical works from LSU and the University of
Alabama. He places the reader right in the middle of New Orleans history at the
turn of the 20th century, and it’s a portrayal that’s both gripping
and accurate. It is also gritty and, as I said, graphic.
Part
of what Fulmer does is to describe the intricate and complex racial situation.
New Orleans society was highly structured, and that included the descendant of
slaves and the offspring of slaveowners and slaves. The story’s detective,
Valentin St. Cyr, has an Italian father and a mixed white-black mother. One
thing I learned by reading this story is the level of discrimination immigrant Italians
faced in New Orleans society at the time (that had largely disappeared by the time
I was born, although there were vestiges).
Reading
this story reminded me of some of the more sordid aspects of the culture I came
from. It wasn’t all great food and Mardi Grad parades. It also reminded me of my Southern Baptist grandmother in
Shreveport, who would have been a young wife with three young children living
in central Louisiana when Storyville was at its height. I understand why she
was concerned.
Sounds like quite a story!
ReplyDeleteWow -- it does sounds like quite a story. Fascinating!
ReplyDeleteSounds like Storyville is aptly named. I'm intrigued. Also, loved this line in your piece, "she never got over his decision to raise her grandson in the fetid swamp of iniquity called the Big Easy."
ReplyDelete