Загрузка страницы

New Orleans Louisiana Culture| The History of New Orleans|The Culture of New Orleans| New Orleans|

New Orleans Louisiana Culture| The History of New Orleans|The Culture of New Orleans| New Orleans|

📧 Please SUBSCRIBE to my email list to stay connected for updates in the case I get taken down from a censorship purge. https://rb.gy/4lywc3

📕 NEW BOOK OUT NOW!!!
Link to Purchase: https://amzn.to/36QhHe2
Sports Secrets: Uncovering the Conspiracies and Finding the Facts in the Sports World

🎥 Links To Purchase ‘The Endless Season’ Documentary (Official Feature Film):
📀 Physical DVD (Amazon):https://amzn.to/3cVSUI3
💻 Itunes: https://apple.co/2ZPOYnf
Available on Amazon Prime as well!!
Please Consider purchasing these products as supporting the channel, so I can continue to provide awesome content for everyone!!!
Click the link in the description to purchase. Available on Kindle and Paperback and soon with Audible.

Writer William Faulkner summarizes it best in regards to New Orleans., the past isn’t dead. It’s not even past. No other city in America keeps its history as vital or as accessible as New Orleans. Entire neighborhoods, whole buildings, cemetery crypts, manhole covers, cobblestone streets and ancient oaks serve as touchstones to vanished eras. Look for it. In New Orleans, history can strut as loudly as a Carnival walking krewe or creep as softly as a green lizard on a courtyard wall. Thrilling. Colorful. Tragic. Inspiring. Discover a little about the sweep of the city’s history.

La Nouvelle-Orleans has French and Spanish roots. Spain took control of New Orleans in 1763 after the signing of the Treaty of Paris, which left lasting marks on the city’s street names and architecture. In 1800, the Spanish ceded Louisiana back to France but Napoleon sold the city and what was the Louisiana territory to the United States three years later as part of the $15 million Louisiana Purchase, April 30,1803. Although the French sold Louisiana, the native residents held tight to their Francophile ways, The Creoles, the American-born offspring of European settlers, many with French blood, created a sophisticated and cosmopolitan society in colonial New Orleans. From the streets of the French Quarter to Creole cottages, vestiges of the French still remain . 

As Americans prospered, the French and Creoles of New Orleans still socially rejected the Nuevo riche American plantation owners. So the Americans simply stayed across the neutral ground of Canal Street and carved out their own neighborhoods, from what is now the Central Business District, the Warehouse District and all the way up through the Garden District and Uptown. 

In the mid-1800s, the highest concentration of millionaires in America could be found between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, fortunes fueled by to slave economy and massive sugar plantations along the Mississippi River. 

In the 1850s alone, Louisiana sugar plantations produced an estimated 450 million pounds of sugar per year, worth more than $20 million annually.
Yet these elegant mansions hid the misery of the enslaved and could not shelter fortunes from the coming storm that divided the nation. War destroyed the world of antebellum New Orleans, but much remains to uncover today.

In the late 19th century, jazz emerged. combing ragtime, blues, spirituals and the American songbook into something brand new and soul stirring.
Music is a birthright in New Orleans and it’s always been that way. The French, Spanish, African, Italian, German, and Irish found common ground in their love of listening to and making music. While the 1920s is considered the Jazz Age in America, in New Orleans that age dawned in the late 1800s. 

While the roaring 20s were in full swing. New Orleans roared back ignoring Prohibition and welcoming travelers. It was a time of cultural excitement. Artists, authors and the adventurous discovered the French Quarter. Nola provided the soundtrack of the decade! And if you ask a young person, New Orleans was the sound track of the 2000s. with Hip Hop Legend Lil Wayne’s peak of his career and with his rap group the Hot boys.

TAGS:
The History of New Orleans
The Culture of New Orleans
Travel to New Orleans
New Orleans Culture
New Orleans Lifestyle
Life in New Orleans
Soul Food in New Orleans
Jazz History in New Orleans
New Orleans Food
Mardi Gras
Mardi Gras New Orleans
Music in New Orleans
New Orleans Bayou
Hurricane Katrina History
Hurricane Katrina History New Orleans
new orleans culture documentary
New Orleans Louisiana Culture

Видео New Orleans Louisiana Culture| The History of New Orleans|The Culture of New Orleans| New Orleans| канала D.A.T.A Productions Media
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Введите заголовок:

Введите адрес ссылки:

Введите адрес видео с YouTube:

Зарегистрируйтесь или войдите с
Информация о видео
31 мая 2020 г. 7:07:20
00:10:37
Другие видео канала
Яндекс.Метрика