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New Orleans

New Orleans (/ˈɔːrl(i)ənz/ OR-l(ee)ənz, /ɔːrˈlnz/ or-LEENZ,[3] locally /ˈɔːrlənz/ OR-lənz;[4] French: La Nouvelle-Orléans [la nuvɛlɔʁleɑ̃] (listen), Spanish: Nueva Orleans) is a consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the southeastern region of the U.S. state of Louisiana. With a population of 383,997 according to the 2020 U.S. census,[5] it is the most populous city in Louisiana and the twelfth-most populous city in the southeastern United States. Serving as a major port, New Orleans is considered an economic and commercial hub for the broader Gulf Coast region of the United States.

New Orleans, Louisiana
La Nouvelle-Orléans (French)
City of New Orleans
Nickname(s): 
"The Crescent City", "The Big Easy", "The City That Care Forgot", "NOLA", "The City of Yes", "Hollywood South"
Interactive map of New Orleans
Coordinates: 29°57′N 90°05′W / 29.95°N 90.08°W / 29.95; -90.08Coordinates: 29°57′N 90°05′W / 29.95°N 90.08°W / 29.95; -90.08
CountryUnited States
StateLouisiana
ParishOrleans
Founded1718; 305 years ago (1718)
Founded byJean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville
Named forPhilippe II, Duke of Orléans (1674–1723)
Government
 • TypeMayor–council
 • MayorLaToya Cantrell (D)
 • CouncilNew Orleans City Council
Area
 • Consolidated city-parish349.85 sq mi (906.10 km2)
 • Land169.42 sq mi (438.80 km2)
 • Water180.43 sq mi (467.30 km2)
 • Metro
3,755.2 sq mi (9,726.6 km2)
Elevation
−6.5 to 20 ft (−2 to 6 m)
Population
 • Consolidated city-parish383,997
 • Density2,267/sq mi (875/km2)
 • Urban
914,531 (US: 51st)
 • Urban density3,818.9/sq mi (1,474.5/km2)
 • Metro
1,270,530 (US: 45th)
DemonymNew Orleanian
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
Area code504
FIPS code22-55000
GNIS feature ID1629985
Interstates
U.S. Highways
State highways
Public transportNew Orleans Regional Transit Authority
Primary airportLouis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
Websitenola.gov

New Orleans is world-renowned for its distinctive music, Creole cuisine, unique dialects, and its annual celebrations and festivals, most notably Mardi Gras. The historic heart of the city is the French Quarter, known for its French and Spanish Creole architecture and vibrant nightlife along Bourbon Street. The city has been described as the "most unique" in the United States,[6][7][8][9] owing in large part to its cross-cultural and multilingual heritage.[10] Additionally, New Orleans has increasingly been known as "Hollywood South" due to its prominent role in the film industry and in pop culture.[11][12]

Founded in 1718 by French colonists, New Orleans was once the territorial capital of French Louisiana before becoming part of the United States in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. New Orleans in 1840 was the third most populous city in the United States,[13] and it was the largest city in the American South from the Antebellum era until after World War II. The city has historically been very vulnerable to flooding, due to its high rainfall, low lying elevation, poor natural drainage, and proximity to multiple bodies of water. State and federal authorities have installed a complex system of levees and drainage pumps in an effort to protect the city.[14][15]

New Orleans was severely affected by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, which flooded more than 80% of the city, killed more than 1,800 people, and displaced thousands of residents, causing a population decline of over 50%.[16] Since Katrina, major redevelopment efforts have led to a rebound in the city's population. Concerns about gentrification, new residents buying property in formerly closely knit communities, and displacement of longtime residents have been expressed.[17][18][19][20]

The city and Orleans Parish (French: paroisse d'Orléans) are coterminous.[21] As of 2017, Orleans Parish is the third most populous parish in Louisiana, behind East Baton Rouge Parish and neighboring Jefferson Parish.[22] The city and parish are bounded by St. Tammany Parish and Lake Pontchartrain to the north, St. Bernard Parish and Lake Borgne to the east, Plaquemines Parish to the south, and Jefferson Parish to the south and west.

The city anchors the larger Greater New Orleans metropolitan area, which had a population of 1,271,845 in 2020.[23] Greater New Orleans is the most populous metropolitan statistical area in Louisiana and, since the 2020 census, has been the 46th most populous MSA in the United States.[24]

Etymology and nicknames

 
The New Orleans cityscape in early February 2007

The name of New Orleans derives from the original French name (La Nouvelle-Orléans), which was given to the city in honor of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, who served as Louis XV's regent from 1715 to 1723.[25] The city of Orleans itself is named after the Roman emperor Aurelian, originally being known as Aurelianum. Thus, by extension, New Orleans is also named after Aurelian, and in Latin would translate to Nova Aurelianum.

Following France's defeat in the Seven Years' War and the Treaty of Paris, which was signed in 1763, France transferred possession of Louisiana to Spain. The Spanish renamed the city to Nueva Orleans (pronounced [ˌnweβa oɾleˈans]), which was used until 1800.[26] When the United States acquired possession from France in 1803, the French name was adopted and anglicized to become the modern name, which is still in use today.

New Orleans has several nicknames, including these:

  • Crescent City, alluding to the course of the Lower Mississippi River around and through the city.[27]
  • The Big Easy, possibly a reference by musicians in the early 20th century to the relative ease of finding work there.[28][29]
  • The City that Care Forgot, used since at least 1938,[30] referring to the outwardly easygoing, carefree nature of the residents.[29]
  • NOLA, the acronym for New Orleans, Louisiana.

History

French–Spanish colonial era

Historical affiliations

  Kingdom of France 1718–1763
  Kingdom of Spain 1763–1802
  French First Republic 1802–1803
  United States of America 1803–1861
  State of Louisiana 1861
  Confederate States of America 1861–1862
  United States of America 1862–present

La Nouvelle-Orléans (New Orleans) was founded in the spring of 1718 (May 7 has become the traditional date to mark the anniversary, but the actual day is unknown)[31] by the French Mississippi Company, under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, on land inhabited by the Chitimacha. It was named for Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, who was regent of the Kingdom of France at the time.[25] His title came from the French city of Orléans. The French colony of Louisiana was ceded to the Spanish Empire in the 1763 Treaty of Paris, following France's defeat by Great Britain in the Seven Years' War. During the American Revolutionary War, New Orleans was an important port for smuggling aid to the American revolutionaries, and transporting military equipment and supplies up the Mississippi River. Beginning in the 1760s, Filipinos began to settle in and around New Orleans.[32] Bernardo de Gálvez y Madrid, Count of Gálvez successfully directed a southern campaign against the British from the city in 1779.[33] Nueva Orleans (the name of New Orleans in Spanish)[34] remained under Spanish control until 1803, when it reverted briefly to French rule. Nearly all of the surviving 18th-century architecture of the Vieux Carré (French Quarter) dates from the Spanish period, notably excepting the Old Ursuline Convent.[35]

 
The Revolt took place in what is now Natchez National Historical Park in Natchez, Mississippi.

As a French colony, Louisiana faced struggles with numerous Native American tribes, who were navigating the competing interests of France, Spain, and England, as well as traditional rivals. Notably, the Natchez, whose traditional lands were along the Mississippi near the modern city of Natchez, Mississippi, had a series of wars culminating in the Natchez Revolt that began in 1729 with the Natchez overrunning Fort Rosalie. Approximately 230 French colonists were killed and the Natchez settlement destroyed, causing fear and concern in New Orleans and the rest of the territory.[36] In retaliation, then-governor Étienne Perier launched a campaign to completely destroy the Natchez nation and its Native allies.[37] By 1731, the Natchez people had been killed, enslaved, or dispersed among other tribes, but the campaign soured relations between France and the territory's Native Americans leading directly into the Chickasaw Wars of the 1730s.[38]

Relations with Louisiana's Native American population remained a concern into the 1740s for governor Marquis de Vaudreuil. In the early 1740s traders from the Thirteen Colonies crossed into the Appalachian Mountains. The Native American tribes would now operate dependent on which of various European colonists would most benefit them. Several of these tribes and especially the Chickasaw and Choctaw would trade goods and gifts for their loyalty.[39] The economic issue in the colony, which continued under Vaudreuil, resulted in many raids by Native American tribes, taking advantage of the French weakness. In 1747 and 1748, the Chickasaw would raid along the east bank of the Mississippi all the way south to Baton Rouge. These raids would often force residents of French Louisiana to take refuge in New Orleans proper.

Inability to find labor was the most pressing issue in the young colony. The colonists turned to sub-Saharan African slaves to make their investments in Louisiana profitable. In the late 1710s the transatlantic slave trade imported enslaved Africans into the colony. This led to the biggest shipment in 1716 where several trading ships appeared with slaves as cargo to the local residents in a one-year span.

By 1724, the large number of blacks in Louisiana prompted the institutionalizing of laws governing slavery within the colony.[40] These laws required that slaves be baptized in the Roman Catholic faith, slaves be married in the church, and gave slaves no legal rights. The slave law formed in the 1720s is known as the Code Noir, which would bleed into the antebellum period of the American South as well. Louisiana slave culture had its own distinct Afro-Creole society that called on past cultures and the situation for slaves in the New World. Afro-Creole was present in religious beliefs and the Louisiana Creole language. The religion most associated with this period for was called Voodoo.[41][42]

In the city of New Orleans an inspiring mixture of foreign influences created a melting pot of culture that is still celebrated today. By the end of French colonization in Louisiana, New Orleans was recognized commercially in the Atlantic world. Its inhabitants traded across the French commercial system. New Orleans was a hub for this trade both physically and culturally because it served as the exit point to the rest of the globe for the interior of the North American continent.

In one instance the French government established a chapter house of sisters in New Orleans. The Ursuline sisters after being sponsored by the Company of the Indies, founded a convent in the city in 1727.[43] At the end of the colonial era, the Ursuline Academy maintained a house of 70 boarding and 100 day students. Today numerous schools in New Orleans can trace their lineage from this academy.

 
1724 plan for Saint Louis Parish Church, New Orleans, Louisiana, by Adrien de Pauger

Another notable example is the street plan and architecture still distinguishing New Orleans today. French Louisiana had early architects in the province who were trained as military engineers and were now assigned to design government buildings. Pierre Le Blond de Tour and Adrien de Pauger, for example, planned many early fortifications, along with the street plan for the city of New Orleans.[44] After them in the 1740s, Ignace François Broutin, as engineer-in-chief of Louisiana, reworked the architecture of New Orleans with an extensive public works program.

French policy-makers in Paris attempted to set political and economic norms for New Orleans. It acted autonomously in much of its cultural and physical aspects, but also stayed in communication with the foreign trends as well.

After the French relinquished West Louisiana to the Spanish, New Orleans merchants attempted to ignore Spanish rule and even re-institute French control on the colony. The citizens of New Orleans held a series of public meetings during 1765 to keep the populace in opposition of the establishment of Spanish rule. Anti-Spanish passions in New Orleans reached their highest level after two years of Spanish administration in Louisiana. On October 27, 1768, a mob of local residents, spiked the guns guarding New Orleans and took control of the city from the Spanish.[45] The rebellion organized a group to sail for Paris, where it met with officials of the French government. This group brought with them a long memorial to summarize the abuses the colony had endured from the Spanish. King Louis XV and his ministers reaffirmed Spain's sovereignty over Louisiana.

United States territorial era

The Third Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800 restored French control of New Orleans and Louisiana, but Napoleon sold both to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.[46] Thereafter, the city grew rapidly with influxes of Americans, French, Creoles and Africans. Later immigrants were Irish, Germans, Poles and Italians. Major commodity crops of sugar and cotton were cultivated with slave labor on nearby large plantations.

Between 1791 and 1810, thousands of St. Dominican refugees from the Haitian Revolution, both whites and free people of color (affranchis or gens de couleur libres), arrived in New Orleans; a number brought their slaves with them, many of whom were native Africans or of full-blood descent.[47] While Governor Claiborne and other officials wanted to keep out additional free black people, the French Creoles wanted to increase the French-speaking population. In addition to bolstering the territory's French-speaking population, these refugees had a significant impact on the culture of Louisiana, including developing its sugar industry and cultural institutions.[48]

As more refugees were allowed into the Territory of Orleans, St. Dominican refugees who had first gone to Cuba also arrived.[49] Many of the white Francophones had been deported by officials in Cuba in 1809 as retaliation for Bonapartist schemes.[50] Nearly 90 percent of these immigrants settled in New Orleans. The 1809 migration brought 2,731 whites, 3,102 free people of color (of mixed-race European and African descent), and 3,226 slaves of primarily African descent, doubling the city's population. The city became 63 percent black, a greater proportion than Charleston, South Carolina's 53 percent at that time.[49]

Battle of New Orleans

 
Plan of the city and suburbs of New Orleans: from a survey made in 1815[51]

During the final campaign of the War of 1812, the British sent a force of 11,000 in an attempt to capture New Orleans. Despite great challenges, General Andrew Jackson, with support from the U.S. Navy, successfully cobbled together a force of militia from Louisiana and Mississippi, U.S. Army regulars, a large contingent of Tennessee state militia, Kentucky frontiersmen and local privateers (the latter led by the pirate Jean Lafitte), to decisively defeat the British, led by Sir Edward Pakenham, in the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815.[52]

The armies had not learned of the Treaty of Ghent, which had been signed on December 24, 1814 (however, the treaty did not call for cessation of hostilities until after both governments had ratified it. The U.S. government ratified it on February 16, 1815). The fighting in Louisiana began in December 1814 and did not end until late January, after the Americans held off the Royal Navy during a ten-day siege of Fort St. Philip (the Royal Navy went on to capture Fort Bowyer near Mobile, before the commanders received news of the peace treaty).[52]

Port

 
Mississippi River steamboats at New Orleans, 1853

As a port, New Orleans played a major role during the antebellum period in the Atlantic slave trade. The port handled commodities for export from the interior and imported goods from other countries, which were warehoused and transferred in New Orleans to smaller vessels and distributed along the Mississippi River watershed. The river was filled with steamboats, flatboats and sailing ships. Despite its role in the slave trade, New Orleans at the time also had the largest and most prosperous community of free persons of color in the nation, who were often educated, middle-class property owners.[53][54]

Dwarfing the other cities in the Antebellum South, New Orleans had the U.S.'s largest slave market. The market expanded after the United States ended the international trade in 1808. Two-thirds of the more than one million slaves brought to the Deep South arrived via forced migration in the domestic slave trade. The money generated by the sale of slaves in the Upper South has been estimated at 15 percent of the value of the staple crop economy. The slaves were collectively valued at half a billion dollars. The trade spawned an ancillary economy—transportation, housing and clothing, fees, etc., estimated at 13.5% of the price per person, amounting to tens of billions of dollars (2005 dollars, adjusted for inflation) during the antebellum period, with New Orleans as a prime beneficiary.[55]

According to historian Paul Lachance,

the addition of white immigrants [from Saint-Domingue] to the white creole population enabled French-speakers to remain a majority of the white population until almost 1830. If a substantial proportion of free persons of color and slaves had not also spoken French, however, the Gallic community would have become a minority of the total population as early as 1820.[56]

After the Louisiana Purchase, numerous Anglo-Americans migrated to the city. The population doubled in the 1830s and by 1840, New Orleans had become the nation's wealthiest and the third-most populous city, after New York and Baltimore.[57] German and Irish immigrants began arriving in the 1840s, working as port laborers. In this period, the state legislature passed more restrictions on manumissions of slaves and virtually ended it in 1852.[58]

In the 1850s, white Francophones remained an intact and vibrant community in New Orleans. They maintained instruction in French in two of the city's four school districts (all served white students).[59] In 1860, the city had 13,000 free people of color (gens de couleur libres), the class of free, mostly mixed-race people that expanded in number during French and Spanish rule. They set up some private schools for their children. The census recorded 81 percent of the free people of color as mulatto, a term used to cover all degrees of mixed race.[58] Mostly part of the Francophone group, they constituted the artisan, educated and professional class of African Americans. The mass of blacks were still enslaved, working at the port, in domestic service, in crafts, and mostly on the many large, surrounding sugarcane plantations.

After growing by 45 percent in the 1850s, by 1860, the city had nearly 170,000 people.[60] It had grown in wealth, with a "per capita income [that] was second in the nation and the highest in the South."[60] The city had a role as the "primary commercial gateway for the nation's booming midsection."[60] The port was the nation's third largest in terms of tonnage of imported goods, after Boston and New York, handling 659,000 tons in 1859.[60]

Civil War–Reconstruction era

 
The starving people of New Orleans under Union occupation during the Civil War, 1862

As the Creole elite feared, the American Civil War changed their world. In April 1862, following the city's occupation by the Union Navy after the Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip, Gen. Benjamin F. Butler – a respected Massachusetts lawyer serving in that state's militia – was appointed military governor. New Orleans residents supportive of the Confederacy nicknamed him "Beast" Butler, because of an order he issued. After his troops had been assaulted and harassed in the streets by women still loyal to the Confederate cause, his order warned that such future occurrences would result in his men treating such women as those "plying their avocation in the streets", implying that they would treat the women like prostitutes. Accounts of this spread widely. He also came to be called "Spoons" Butler because of the alleged looting that his troops did while occupying the city, during which time he himself supposedly pilfered silver flatware.[61]

Significantly, Butler abolished French-language instruction in city schools. Statewide measures in 1864 and, after the war, 1868 further strengthened the English-only policy imposed by federal representatives. With the predominance of English speakers, that language had already become dominant in business and government.[59] By the end of the 19th century, French usage had faded. It was also under pressure from Irish, Italian and German immigrants.[62] However, as late as 1902 "one-fourth of the population of the city spoke French in ordinary daily intercourse, while another two-fourths was able to understand the language perfectly,"[63] and as late as 1945, many elderly Creole women spoke no English.[64] The last major French language newspaper, L'Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans (New Orleans Bee), ceased publication on December 27, 1923, after ninety-six years.[65] According to some sources, Le Courrier de la Nouvelle Orleans continued until 1955.[66]

As the city was captured and occupied early in the war, it was spared the destruction through warfare suffered by many other cities of the American South. The Union Army eventually extended its control north along the Mississippi River and along the coastal areas. As a result, most of the southern portion of Louisiana was originally exempted from the liberating provisions of the 1863 "Emancipation Proclamation" issued by President Abraham Lincoln. Large numbers of rural ex-slaves and some free people of color from the city volunteered for the first regiments of Black troops in the War. Led by Brigadier General Daniel Ullman (1810–1892), of the 78th Regiment of New York State Volunteers Militia, they were known as the "Corps d'Afrique." While that name had been used by a militia before the war, that group was composed of free people of color. The new group was made up mostly of former slaves. They were supplemented in the last two years of the War by newly organized United States Colored Troops, who played an increasingly important part in the war.[67]

Violence throughout the South, especially the Memphis Riots of 1866 followed by the New Orleans Riot in the same year, led Congress to pass the Reconstruction Act and the Fourteenth Amendment, extending the protections of full citizenship to freedmen and free people of color. Louisiana and Texas were put under the authority of the "Fifth Military District" of the United States during Reconstruction. Louisiana was readmitted to the Union in 1868. Its Constitution of 1868 granted universal male suffrage and established universal public education. Both blacks and whites were elected to local and state offices. In 1872, lieutenant governor P.B.S. Pinchback, who was of mixed race, succeeded Henry Clay Warmouth for a brief period as Republican governor of Louisiana, becoming the first governor of African descent of a U.S. state (the next African American to serve as governor of a U.S. state was Douglas Wilder, elected in Virginia in 1989). New Orleans operated a racially integrated public school system during this period.

Wartime damage to levees and cities along the Mississippi River adversely affected southern crops and trade. The federal government contributed to restoring infrastructure. The nationwide financial recession and Panic of 1873 adversely affected businesses and slowed economic recovery.

From 1868, elections in Louisiana were marked by violence, as white insurgents tried to suppress black voting and disrupt Republican Party gatherings. The disputed 1872 gubernatorial election resulted in conflicts that ran for years. The "White League", an insurgent paramilitary group that supported the Democratic Party, was organized in 1874 and operated in the open, violently suppressing the black vote and running off Republican officeholders. In 1874, in the Battle of Liberty Place, 5,000 members of the White League fought with city police to take over the state offices for the Democratic candidate for governor, holding them for three days. By 1876, such tactics resulted in the white Democrats, the so-called Redeemers, regaining political control of the state legislature. The federal government gave up and withdrew its troops in 1877, ending Reconstruction.

Jim Crow era

Dixiecrats passed Jim Crow laws, establishing racial segregation in public facilities. In 1889, the legislature passed a constitutional amendment incorporating a "grandfather clause" that effectively disfranchised freedmen as well as the propertied people of color manumitted before the war. Unable to vote, African Americans could not serve on juries or in local office, and were closed out of formal politics for generations. The Southern U.S. was ruled by a white Democratic Party. Public schools were racially segregated and remained so until 1960.

New Orleans' large community of well-educated, often French-speaking free persons of color (gens de couleur libres), who had been free prior to the Civil War, fought against Jim Crow. They organized the Comité des Citoyens (Citizens Committee) to work for civil rights. As part of their legal campaign, they recruited one of their own, Homer Plessy, to test whether Louisiana's newly enacted Separate Car Act was constitutional. Plessy boarded a commuter train departing New Orleans for Covington, Louisiana, sat in the car reserved for whites only, and was arrested. The case resulting from this incident, Plessy v. Ferguson, was heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1896. The court ruled that "separate but equal" accommodations were constitutional, effectively upholding Jim Crow measures.

In practice, African American public schools and facilities were underfunded across the South. The Supreme Court ruling contributed to this period as the nadir of race relations in the United States. The rate of lynchings of black men was high across the South, as other states also disfranchised blacks and sought to impose Jim Crow. Nativist prejudices also surfaced. Anti-Italian sentiment in 1891 contributed to the lynchings of 11 Italians, some of whom had been acquitted of the murder of the police chief. Some were shot and killed in the jail where they were detained. It was the largest mass lynching in U.S. history.[68][69] In July 1900 the city was swept by white mobs rioting after Robert Charles, a young African American, killed a policeman and temporarily escaped. The mob killed him and an estimated 20 other blacks; seven whites died in the days-long conflict, until a state militia suppressed it.

Throughout New Orleans' history, until the early 20th century when medical and scientific advances ameliorated the situation, the city suffered repeated epidemics of yellow fever and other tropical and infectious diseases.

20th century

 
Esplanade Avenue at Burgundy Street, looking lakewards (north) towards Lake Pontchartrain in 1900
 
1943 waiting line at wartime Rationing Board office in New Orleans
 
Richard Nixon in New Orleans, August 1970. Royal at Iberville Streets, heading to Canal Street.

New Orleans' economic and population zenith in relation to other American cities occurred in the antebellum period. It was the nation's fifth-largest city in 1860 (after New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Baltimore) and was significantly larger than all other southern cities.[70] From the mid-19th century onward rapid economic growth shifted to other areas, while New Orleans' relative importance steadily declined. The growth of railways and highways decreased river traffic, diverting goods to other transportation corridors and markets.[70] Thousands of the most ambitious people of color left the state in the Great Migration around World War II and after, many for West Coast destinations. From the late 1800s, most censuses recorded New Orleans slipping down the ranks in the list of largest American cities (New Orleans' population still continued to increase throughout the period, but at a slower rate than before the Civil War).

By the mid-20th century, New Orleanians recognized that their city was no longer the leading urban area in the South. By 1950, Houston, Dallas, and Atlanta exceeded New Orleans in size, and in 1960 Miami eclipsed New Orleans, even as the latter's population reached its historic peak.[70] As with other older American cities, highway construction and suburban development drew residents from the center city to newer housing outside. The 1970 census recorded the first absolute decline in population since the city became part of the United States in 1803. The Greater New Orleans metropolitan area continued expanding in population, albeit more slowly than other major Sun Belt cities. While the port remained one of the nation's largest, automation and containerization cost many jobs. The city's former role as banker to the South was supplanted by larger peer cities. New Orleans' economy had always been based more on trade and financial services than on manufacturing, but the city's relatively small manufacturing sector also shrank after World War II. Despite some economic development successes under the administrations of DeLesseps "Chep" Morrison (1946–1961) and Victor "Vic" Schiro (1961–1970), metropolitan New Orleans' growth rate consistently lagged behind more vigorous cities.

Civil Rights movement

During the later years of Morrison's administration, and for the entirety of Schiro's, the city was a center of the Civil Rights movement. The Southern Christian Leadership Conference was founded in New Orleans, and lunch counter sit-ins were held in Canal Street department stores. A prominent and violent series of confrontations occurred in 1960 when the city attempted school desegregation, following the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education (1954). When six-year-old Ruby Bridges integrated William Frantz Elementary School in the Ninth Ward, she was the first child of color to attend a previously all-white school in the South. Much controversy preceded the 1956 Sugar Bowl at Tulane Stadium, when the Pitt Panthers, with African-American fullback Bobby Grier on the roster, met the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.[71] There had been controversy over whether Grier should be allowed to play due to his race, and whether Georgia Tech should even play at all due to Georgia's Governor Marvin Griffin's opposition to racial integration.[72][73][74] After Griffin publicly sent a telegram to the state's Board Of Regents requesting Georgia Tech not to engage in racially integrated events, Georgia Tech's president Blake R. Van Leer rejected the request and threatened to resign. The game went on as planned [75]

The Civil Rights movement's success in gaining federal passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 renewed constitutional rights, including voting for blacks. Together, these resulted in the most far-reaching changes in New Orleans' 20th century history.[76] Though legal and civil equality were re-established by the end of the 1960s, a large gap in income levels and educational attainment persisted between the city's White and African American communities.[77] As the middle class and wealthier members of both races left the center city, its population's income level dropped, and it became proportionately more African American. From 1980, the African American majority elected primarily officials from its own community. They struggled to narrow the gap by creating conditions conducive to the economic uplift of the African American community.

New Orleans became increasingly dependent on tourism as an economic mainstay during the administrations of Sidney Barthelemy (1986–1994) and Marc Morial (1994–2002). Relatively low levels of educational attainment, high rates of household poverty, and rising crime threatened the city's prosperity in the later decades of the century.[77] The negative effects of these socioeconomic conditions aligned poorly with the changes in the late-20th century to the economy of the United States, which reflected a post-industrial, knowledge-based paradigm in which mental skills and education were more important to advancement than manual skills.

Drainage and flood control

 
A view of the New Orleans Central Business District, as seen from the Mississippi River. USS New Orleans (LPD-18) in foreground (2007).

In the 20th century, New Orleans' government and business leaders believed they needed to drain and develop outlying areas to provide for the city's expansion. The most ambitious development during this period was a drainage plan devised by engineer and inventor A. Baldwin Wood, designed to break the surrounding swamp's stranglehold on the city's geographic expansion. Until then, urban development in New Orleans was largely limited to higher ground along the natural river levees and bayous.

Wood's pump system allowed the city to drain huge tracts of swamp and marshland and expand into low-lying areas. Over the 20th century, rapid subsidence, both natural and human-induced, resulted in these newly populated areas subsiding to several feet below sea level.[78][79]

New Orleans was vulnerable to flooding even before the city's footprint departed from the natural high ground near the Mississippi River. In the late 20th century, however, scientists and New Orleans residents gradually became aware of the city's increased vulnerability. In 1965, flooding from Hurricane Betsy killed dozens of residents, although the majority of the city remained dry. The rain-induced flood of May 8, 1995, demonstrated the weakness of the pumping system. After that event, measures were undertaken to dramatically upgrade pumping capacity. By the 1980s and 1990s, scientists observed that extensive, rapid, and ongoing erosion of the marshlands and swamp surrounding New Orleans, especially that related to the Mississippi River–Gulf Outlet Canal, had the unintended result of leaving the city more vulnerable than before to hurricane-induced catastrophic storm surges.

21st century

Hurricane Katrina

 
Hurricane Katrina at its New Orleans landfall

New Orleans was catastrophically affected by what Raymond B. Seed called "the worst engineering disaster in the world since Chernobyl", when the federal levee system failed during Hurricane Katrina on August 29, 2005.[80] By the time the hurricane approached the city on August 29, 2005, most residents had evacuated. As the hurricane passed through the Gulf Coast region, the city's federal flood protection system failed, resulting in the worst civil engineering disaster in American history at the time.[81] Floodwalls and levees constructed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers failed below design specifications and 80% of the city flooded. Tens of thousands of residents who had remained were rescued or otherwise made their way to shelters of last resort at the Louisiana Superdome or the New Orleans Morial Convention Center. More than 1,500 people were recorded as having died in Louisiana, most in New Orleans, while others remain unaccounted for.[82][83] Before Hurricane Katrina, the city called for the first mandatory evacuation in its history, to be followed by another mandatory evacuation three years later with Hurricane Gustav.

Hurricane Rita

The city was declared off-limits to residents while efforts to clean up after Hurricane Katrina began. The approach of Hurricane Rita in September 2005 caused repopulation efforts to be postponed,[84] and the Lower Ninth Ward was reflooded by Rita's storm surge.[83]

Post-disaster recovery

 
An aerial view from a United States Navy helicopter showing floodwaters around the Louisiana Superdome (stadium) and surrounding area (2005)

Because of the scale of damage, many people resettled permanently outside the area. Federal, state, and local efforts supported recovery and rebuilding in severely damaged neighborhoods. The U.S. Census Bureau in July 2006 estimated the population to be 223,000; a subsequent study estimated that 32,000 additional residents had moved to the city as of March 2007, bringing the estimated population to 255,000, approximately 56% of the pre-Katrina population level. Another estimate, based on utility usage from July 2007, estimated the population to be approximately 274,000 or 60% of the pre-Katrina population. These estimates are somewhat smaller to a third estimate, based on mail delivery records, from the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center in June 2007, which indicated that the city had regained approximately two-thirds of its pre-Katrina population.[85] In 2008, the U.S. Census Bureau revised its population estimate for the city upward, to 336,644.[86] Most recently, by July 2015, the population was back up to 386,617—80% of what it was in 2000.[87]

Several major tourist events and other forms of revenue for the city have returned. Large conventions returned.[88][89] College bowl games returned for the 2006–2007 season. The New Orleans Saints returned that season. The New Orleans Hornets (now named the Pelicans) returned to the city for the 2007–2008 season. New Orleans hosted the 2008 NBA All-Star Game. Additionally, the city hosted Super Bowl XLVII.

Major annual events such as Mardi Gras, Voodoo Experience, and the Jazz & Heritage Festival were never displaced or canceled. A new annual festival, "The Running of the Bulls New Orleans", was created in 2007.[90]

Hurricane Ida

On August 29, 2021, Hurricane Ida, a category 4 hurricane, made landfall West of New Orleans, where the Hurricane Ida tornado outbreak caused damage.

Geography

 
A true-color satellite image taken on NASA's Landsat 7, 2004

New Orleans is located in the Mississippi River Delta, south of Lake Pontchartrain, on the banks of the Mississippi River, approximately 105 miles (169 km) upriver from the Gulf of Mexico. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city's area is 350 square miles (910 km2), of which 169 square miles (440 km2) is land and 181 square miles (470 km2) (52%) is water.[91] The area along the river is characterized by ridges and hollows.

Elevation

 
Vertical cross-section, showing maximum levee height of 23 feet (7.0 m)

New Orleans was originally settled on the river's natural levees or high ground. After the Flood Control Act of 1965, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built floodwalls and man-made levees around a much larger geographic footprint that included previous marshland and swamp. Over time, pumping of water from marshland allowed for development into lower elevation areas. Today, half of the city is at or below local mean sea level, while the other half is slightly above sea level. Evidence suggests that portions of the city may be dropping in elevation due to subsidence.[92]

A 2007 study by Tulane and Xavier University suggested that "51%... of the contiguous urbanized portions of Orleans, Jefferson, and St. Bernard parishes lie at or above sea level," with the more densely populated areas generally on higher ground. The average elevation of the city is currently between 1 foot (0.30 m) and 2 feet (0.61 m) below sea level, with some portions of the city as high as 20 feet (6 m) at the base of the river levee in Uptown and others as low as 7 feet (2 m) below sea level in the farthest reaches of Eastern New Orleans.[93][94] A study published by the ASCE Journal of Hydrologic Engineering in 2016, however, stated:

...most of New Orleans proper—about 65%—is at or below mean sea level, as defined by the average elevation of Lake Pontchartrain[95]

The magnitude of subsidence potentially caused by the draining of natural marsh in the New Orleans area and southeast Louisiana is a topic of debate. A study published in Geology in 2006 by an associate professor at Tulane University claims:

While erosion and wetland loss are huge problems along Louisiana's coast, the basement 30 feet (9.1 m) to 50 feet (15 m) beneath much of the Mississippi Delta has been highly stable for the past 8,000 years with negligible subsidence rates.[96]

The study noted, however, that the results did not necessarily apply to the Mississippi River Delta, nor the New Orleans metropolitan area proper. On the other hand, a report by the American Society of Civil Engineers claims that "New Orleans is subsiding (sinking)":[97]

Large portions of Orleans, St. Bernard, and Jefferson parishes are currently below sea level—and continue to sink. New Orleans is built on thousands of feet of soft sand, silt, and clay. Subsidence, or settling of the ground surface, occurs naturally due to the consolidation and oxidation of organic soils (called "marsh" in New Orleans) and local groundwater pumping. In the past, flooding and deposition of sediments from the Mississippi River counterbalanced the natural subsidence, leaving southeast Louisiana at or above sea level. However, due to major flood control structures being built upstream on the Mississippi River and levees being built around New Orleans, fresh layers of sediment are not replenishing the ground lost by subsidence.[97]

In May 2016, NASA published a study which suggested that most areas were, in fact, experiencing subsidence at a "highly variable rate" which was "generally consistent with, but somewhat higher than, previous studies."[98]

Cityscape

 
Bourbon Street, New Orleans, in 2003, looking towards Canal Street
 
New Orleans contains many distinctive neighborhoods.

The Central Business District is located immediately north and west of the Mississippi and was historically called the "American Quarter" or "American Sector." It was developed after the heart of French and Spanish settlement. It includes Lafayette Square. Most streets in this area fan out from a central point. Major streets include Canal Street, Poydras Street, Tulane Avenue and Loyola Avenue. Canal Street divides the traditional "downtown" area from the "uptown" area.

Every street crossing Canal Street between the Mississippi River and Rampart Street, which is the northern edge of the French Quarter, has a different name for the "uptown" and "downtown" portions. For example, St. Charles Avenue, known for its street car line, is called Royal Street below Canal Street, though where it traverses the Central Business District between Canal and Lee Circle, it is properly called St. Charles Street.[99] Elsewhere in the city, Canal Street serves as the dividing point between the "South" and "North" portions of various streets. In the local parlance downtown means "downriver from Canal Street", while uptown means "upriver from Canal Street". Downtown neighborhoods include the French Quarter, Tremé, the 7th Ward, Faubourg Marigny, Bywater (the Upper Ninth Ward), and the Lower Ninth Ward. Uptown neighborhoods include the Warehouse District, the Lower Garden District, the Garden District, the Irish Channel, the University District, Carrollton, Gert Town, Fontainebleau and Broadmoor. However, the Warehouse and the Central Business District are frequently called "Downtown" as a specific region, as in the Downtown Development District.

Other major districts within the city include Bayou St. John, Mid-City, Gentilly, Lakeview, Lakefront, New Orleans East and Algiers.

Historic and residential architecture

New Orleans is world-famous for its abundance of architectural styles that reflect the city's multicultural heritage. Though New Orleans possesses numerous structures of national architectural significance, it is equally, if not more, revered for its enormous, largely intact (even post-Katrina) historic built environment. Twenty National Register Historic Districts have been established, and fourteen local historic districts aid in preservation. Thirteen of the districts are administered by the New Orleans Historic District Landmarks Commission (HDLC), while one—the French Quarter—is administered by the Vieux Carre Commission (VCC). Additionally, both the National Park Service, via the National Register of Historic Places, and the HDLC have landmarked individual buildings, many of which lie outside the boundaries of existing historic districts.[100]

Housing styles include the shotgun house and the bungalow style. Creole cottages and townhouses, notable for their large courtyards and intricate iron balconies, line the streets of the French Quarter. American townhouses, double-gallery houses, and Raised Center-Hall Cottages are notable. St. Charles Avenue is famed for its large antebellum homes. Its mansions are in various styles, such as Greek Revival, American Colonial and the Victorian styles of Queen Anne and Italianate architecture. New Orleans is also noted for its large, European-style Catholic cemeteries.

Tallest buildings

 
Skyline of the Central Business District of New Orleans

For much of its history, New Orleans' skyline displayed only low- and mid-rise structures. The soft soils are susceptible to subsidence, and there was doubt about the feasibility of constructing high rises. Developments in engineering throughout the 20th century eventually made it possible to build sturdy foundations in the foundations that underlie the structures. In the 1960s, the World Trade Center New Orleans and Plaza Tower demonstrated skyscrapers' viability. One Shell Square became the city's tallest building in 1972. The oil boom of the 1970s and early 1980s redefined New Orleans' skyline with the development of the Poydras Street corridor. Most are clustered along Canal Street and Poydras Street in the Central Business District.

Name Stories Height
One Shell Square 51 697 ft (212 m)
Place St. Charles 53 645 ft (197 m)
Plaza Tower 45 531 ft (162 m)
Energy Centre 39 530 ft (160 m)
First Bank and Trust Tower 36 481 ft (147 m)

Climate

 
Snow falls on St. Charles Avenue in December 2008.

The climate of New Orleans is humid subtropical (Köppen: Cfa), with short, generally mild winters and hot, humid summers; in the 1991-2020 climate normals the USDA hardiness zone is 9b, with the coldest temperature in most years being about 27.6 °F (−2.4 °C). The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 54.3 °F (12.4 °C) in January to 84 °F (28.9 °C) in August. Officially, as measured at New Orleans International Airport, temperature records range from 11 to 102 °F (−12 to 39 °C) on December 23, 1989, and August 22, 1980, respectively; Audubon Park has recorded temperatures ranging from 6 °F (−14 °C) on February 13, 1899, up to 104 °F (40 °C) on June 24, 2009.[101] Dewpoints in the summer months (June–August) are relatively high, ranging from 71.1 to 73.4 °F (21.7 to 23.0 °C).[102]

The average precipitation is 62.5 inches (1,590 mm) annually; the summer months are the wettest, while October is the driest month.[101] Precipitation in winter usually accompanies the passing of a cold front. There are a median of over 80 days of 90 °F (32 °C)+ highs, 9 days per winter where the high does not exceed 50 °F (10 °C), and less than 8 nights with freezing lows annually, although it is not uncommon for entire winter seasons to pass with no freezing temperatures at all, such as the 2003-04 winter, the 2012-13 winter, the 2015-16 winter and the consecutive winters of 2018-19 and 2019-20. It is rare for the temperature to reach 20 or 100 °F (−7 or 38 °C), with the last occurrence of each being January 17, 2018, and June 26, 2016, respectively.[101]

New Orleans experiences snowfall only on rare occasions. A small amount of snow fell during the 2004 Christmas Eve Snowstorm and again on Christmas (December 25) when a combination of rain, sleet, and snow fell on the city, leaving some bridges icy. The New Year's Eve 1963 snowstorm affected New Orleans and brought 4.5 inches (11 cm). Snow fell again on December 22, 1989, during the December 1989 United States cold wave, when most of the city received 1–2 inches (2.5–5.1 cm).

The last significant snowfall in New Orleans was on the morning of December 11, 2008.[103]

Climate data for Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport (1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1946–present)[b]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 83
(28)
85
(29)
89
(32)
92
(33)
97
(36)
101
(38)
101
(38)
102
(39)
101
(38)
97
(36)
90
(32)
85
(29)
102
(39)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 77.5
(25.3)
79.7
(26.5)
82.9
(28.3)
86.5
(30.3)
91.9
(33.3)
95.2
(35.1)
96.6
(35.9)
96.7
(35.9)
94.3
(34.6)
89.8
(32.1)
83.8
(28.8)
80.3
(26.8)
97.6
(36.4)
Average high °F (°C) 62.5
(16.9)
66.4
(19.1)
72.3
(22.4)
78.5
(25.8)
85.3
(29.6)
90.0
(32.2)
91.4
(33.0)
91.3
(32.9)
88.1
(31.2)
80.6
(27.0)
71.2
(21.8)
64.8
(18.2)
78.5
(25.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 54.3
(12.4)
58.0
(14.4)
63.8
(17.7)
70.1
(21.2)
77.1
(25.1)
82.4
(28.0)
83.9
(28.8)
84.0
(28.9)
80.8
(27.1)
72.5
(22.5)
62.4
(16.9)
56.6
(13.7)
70.5
(21.4)
Average low °F (°C) 46.1
(7.8)
49.7
(9.8)
55.3
(12.9)
61.7
(16.5)
69.0
(20.6)
74.7
(23.7)
76.5
(24.7)
76.6
(24.8)
73.5
(23.1)
64.3
(17.9)
53.7
(12.1)
48.4
(9.1)
62.5
(16.9)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 29.5
(−1.4)
33.4
(0.8)
38.0
(3.3)
47.1
(8.4)
57.3
(14.1)
67.4
(19.7)
71.4
(21.9)
71.1
(21.7)
63.3
(17.4)
47.7
(8.7)
37.7
(3.2)
32.6
(0.3)
27.6
(−2.4)
Record low °F (°C) 14
(−10)
16
(−9)
25
(−4)
32
(0)
41
(5)
50
(10)
60
(16)
60
(16)
42
(6)
35
(2)
24
(−4)
11
(−12)
11
(−12)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 5.18
(132)
4.13
(105)
4.36
(111)
5.22
(133)
5.64
(143)
7.62
(194)
6.79
(172)
6.91
(176)
5.11
(130)
3.70
(94)
3.87
(98)
4.82
(122)
63.35
(1,609)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 9.5 9.0 8.1 7.3 7.8 12.7 13.9 13.6 9.8 7.1 7.1 9.2 115.1
Average relative humidity (%) 75.6 73.0 72.9 73.4 74.4 76.4 79.2 79.4 77.8 74.9 77.2 76.9 75.9
Mean monthly sunshine hours 153.0 161.5 219.4 251.9 278.9 274.3 257.1 251.9 228.7 242.6 171.8 157.8 2,648.9
Percent possible sunshine 47 52 59 65 66 65 60 62 62 68 54 50 60
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961–1990)[c][101][105][102]
Climate data for Audubon Park, New Orleans (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1893–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 84
(29)
86
(30)
91
(33)
93
(34)
99
(37)
104
(40)
102
(39)
103
(39)
101
(38)
97
(36)
92
(33)
85
(29)
104
(40)
Average high °F (°C) 64.3
(17.9)
68.4
(20.2)
74.5
(23.6)
80.9
(27.2)
87.9
(31.1)
92.5
(33.6)
93.9
(34.4)
94.0
(34.4)
90.1
(32.3)
82.6
(28.1)
72.9
(22.7)
66.4
(19.1)
80.7
(27.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 55.4
(13.0)
59.4
(15.2)
65.2
(18.4)
71.4
(21.9)
78.6
(25.9)
83.7
(28.7)
85.2
(29.6)
85.5
(29.7)
81.8
(27.7)
73.6
(23.1)
63.7
(17.6)
57.7
(14.3)
71.8
(22.1)
Average low °F (°C) 46.5
(8.1)
50.5
(10.3)
55.8
(13.2)
62.0
(16.7)
69.3
(20.7)
74.9
(23.8)
76.6
(24.8)
76.9
(24.9)
73.6
(23.1)
64.7
(18.2)
54.6
(12.6)
49.0
(9.4)
62.9
(17.2)
Record low °F (°C) 13
(−11)
6
(−14)
26
(−3)
32
(0)
46
(8)
54
(12)
61
(16)
60
(16)
49
(9)
35
(2)
26
(−3)
12
(−11)
6
(−14)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 4.95
(126)
4.14
(105)
4.60
(117)
4.99
(127)
5.39
(137)
7.37
(187)
8.77
(223)
6.80
(173)
5.72
(145)
3.58
(91)
3.78
(96)
4.51
(115)
64.60
(1,641)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 9.8 8.9 7.5 7.0 7.4 12.6 15.1 13.3 10.0 6.8 7.3 8.8 114.5
Source: NOAA[101][106]

Threat from tropical cyclones

 
Hurricanes of Category 3 or greater passing within 100 miles, from 1852 to 2005 (NOAA)

Hurricanes pose a severe threat to the area, and the city is particularly at risk because of its low elevation, because it is surrounded by water from the north, east, and south and because of Louisiana's sinking coast.[107] According to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, New Orleans is the nation's most vulnerable city to hurricanes.[108] Indeed, portions of Greater New Orleans have been flooded by the Grand Isle Hurricane of 1909,[109] the New Orleans Hurricane of 1915,[109] 1947 Fort Lauderdale Hurricane,[109] Hurricane Flossy[110] in 1956, Hurricane Betsy in 1965, Hurricane Georges in 1998, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, Hurricane Gustav in 2008, and Hurricane Zeta in 2020 (Zeta was also the most intense hurricane to pass over New Orleans) with the flooding in Betsy being significant and in a few neighborhoods severe, and that in Katrina being disastrous in the majority of the city.[111][112][113]

On August 29, 2005, storm surge from Hurricane Katrina caused catastrophic failure of the federally designed and built levees, flooding 80% of the city.[114][115] A report by the American Society of Civil Engineers says that "had the levees and floodwalls not failed and had the pump stations operated, nearly two-thirds of the deaths would not have occurred".[97]

New Orleans has always had to consider the risk of hurricanes, but the risks are dramatically greater today due to coastal erosion from human interference.[116] Since the beginning of the 20th century, it has been estimated that Louisiana has lost 2,000 square miles (5,000 km2) of coast (including many of its barrier islands), which once protected New Orleans against storm surge. Following Hurricane Katrina, the Army Corps of Engineers has instituted massive levee repair and hurricane protection measures to protect the city.

In 2006, Louisiana voters overwhelmingly adopted an amendment to the state's constitution to dedicate all revenues from off-shore drilling to restore Louisiana's eroding coast line.[117] U.S. Congress has allocated $7 billion to bolster New Orleans' flood protection.[118]

According to a study by the National Academy of Engineering and the National Research Council, levees and floodwalls surrounding New Orleans—no matter how large or sturdy—cannot provide absolute protection against overtopping or failure in extreme events. Levees and floodwalls should be viewed as a way to reduce risks from hurricanes and storm surges, not as measures that eliminate risk. For structures in hazardous areas and residents who do not relocate, the committee recommended major floodproofing measures—such as elevating the first floor of buildings to at least the 100-year flood level.[119]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
17693,190—    
17783,060−4.1%
17915,497+79.6%
181017,242+213.7%
182027,176+57.6%
183046,082+69.6%
1840102,193+121.8%
1850116,375+13.9%
1860168,675+44.9%
1870191,418+13.5%
1880216,090+12.9%
1890242,039+12.0%
1900287,104+18.6%
1910339,075+18.1%
1920387,219+14.2%
1930458,762+18.5%
1940494,537+7.8%
1950570,445+15.3%
1960627,525+10.0%
1970593,471−5.4%
1980557,515−6.1%
1990496,938−10.9%
2000484,674−2.5%
2010343,829−29.1%
2020383,997+11.7%
Population given for the City of New Orleans, not for Orleans Parish, before New Orleans absorbed suburbs and rural areas of Orleans Parish in 1874, since which time the city and parish have been coterminous.
Population for Orleans Parish was 41,351 in 1820; 49,826 in 1830; 102,193 in 1840; 119,460 in 1850; 174,491 in 1860; and 191,418 in 1870.
Source: U.S. Decennial Census[120]
Historical Population Figures[86][121][122][123][124]
1790–1960[125] 1900–1990[126]
1990–2000[127] 2010–2013[128]
2020 estimate[129]

From the 2010 U.S. census to 2014 census estimates the city grew by 12%, adding an average of more than 10,000 new residents each year following the official decennial census.[121] According to the 2020 United States census, there were 383,997 people, 151,753 households, and 69,370 families residing in the city. Prior to 1960, the population of New Orleans steadily increased to a historic 627,525.

Beginning in 1960, the population decreased due to factors such as the cycles of oil production and tourism,[130][131] and as suburbanization increased (as with many cities),[132] and jobs migrated to surrounding parishes.[133] This economic and population decline resulted in high levels of poverty in the city; in 1960 it had the fifth-highest poverty rate of all U.S. cities,[134] and was almost twice the national average in 2005, at 24.5%.[132] New Orleans experienced an increase in residential segregation from 1900 to 1980, leaving the disproportionately Black and African American poor in older, low-lying locations.[133] These areas were especially susceptible to flood and storm damage.[135]

The last population estimate before Hurricane Katrina was 454,865, as of July 1, 2005.[136] A population analysis released in August 2007 estimated the population to be 273,000, 60% of the pre-Katrina population and an increase of about 50,000 since July 2006.[137] A September 2007 report by The Greater New Orleans Community Data Center, which tracks population based on U.S. Postal Service figures, found that in August 2007, just over 137,000 households received mail. That compares with about 198,000 households in July 2005, representing about 70% of pre-Katrina population.[138] In 2010, the U.S. Census Bureau revised upward its 2008 population estimate for the city, to 336,644 inhabitants.[86] Estimates from 2010 showed that neighborhoods that did not flood were near or even greater than 100% of their pre-Katrina populations.[139]

Katrina displaced 800,000 people, contributing significantly to the decline.[140] Black and African Americans, renters, the elderly, and people with low income were disproportionately affected by Katrina, compared to affluent and white residents.[141][142] In Katrina's aftermath, city government commissioned groups such as Bring New Orleans Back Commission, the New Orleans Neighborhood Rebuilding Plan, the Unified New Orleans Plan, and the Office of Recovery Management to contribute to plans addressing depopulation. Their ideas included shrinking the city's footprint from before the storm, incorporating community voices into development plans, and creating green spaces,[141] some of which incited controversy.[143][144]

A 2006 study by researchers at Tulane University and the University of California, Berkeley determined that as many as 10,000 to 14,000 undocumented immigrants, many from Mexico, resided in New Orleans.[145] In 2016, the Pew Research Center estimated at least 35,000 undocumented immigrants lived in New Orleans and its metropolitan area.[146] The New Orleans Police Department began a new policy to "no longer cooperate with federal immigration enforcement" beginning on February 28, 2016.[147]

As of 2010, 90.3% of residents age 5 and older spoke English at home as a primary language, while 4.8% spoke Spanish, 1.9% Vietnamese, and 1.1% spoke French. In total, 9.7% population age 5 and older spoke a mother language other than English.[148]

Race and ethnicity

Racial and ethnic composition 2020[149] 2010[150] 1990[151] 1970[151] 1940[151]
White n/a 33.0% 34.9% 54.5% 69.7%
Non-Hispanic 31.61% 30.5% 33.1% 50.6%[152] n/a
Black or African American 53.61% 60.2% 61.9% 45.0% 30.1%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 8.08% 5.2% 3.5% 4.4%[152] n/a
Asian 2.75% 2.9% 1.9% 0.2% 0.1%
Pacific Islander 0.03% n/a n/a n/a n/a
Two or more races 3.71% 1.7% n/a n/a n/a
 
Map of racial distribution in the Greater New Orleans area, 2010 U.S. census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

Growing into a predominantly Black and African American city by race and ethnicity since 1990,[151] in 2010 the racial and ethnic makeup of New Orleans was 60.2% Black and African American, 33.0% White, 2.9% Asian (1.7% Vietnamese, 0.3% Indian, 0.3% Chinese, 0.1% Filipino, 0.1% Korean), 0.0% Pacific Islander, and 1.7% people of two or more races.[153] People of Hispanic or Latino American origin made up 5.3% of the population; 1.3% were Mexican, 1.3% Honduran, 0.4% Cuban, 0.3% Puerto Rican, and 0.3% Nicaraguan. In 2020, the racial and ethnic makeup of the city was 53.61% Black or African American, 31.61% non-Hispanic white, 0.2% American Indian and Alaska Native, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 3.71% multiracial or of another race, and 8.08% Hispanic and Latino American of any race.[149] The growth of the Hispanic and Latino population in New Orleans proper from 2010 to 2020 reflected national demographic trends of diversification throughout regions once predominantly non-Hispanic white.[154] Additionally, the 2020 census revealed the city now has a more diverse population than it did before Katrina; yet 21% fewer people than it had in 2000.[155]

As of 2011, the Hispanic and Latino American population had also grown in the Greater New Orleans area alongside Black and African American residents, including in Kenner, central Metairie, and Terrytown in Jefferson Parish and Eastern New Orleans and Mid-City in New Orleans proper.[156] Janet Murguía, president and chief executive officer of the UnidosUS, stated that up to 120,000 Hispanic and Latino Americans workers lived in New Orleans. In June 2007, one study stated that the Hispanic and Latino American population had risen from 15,000, pre-Katrina, to over 50,000.[157]

After Katrina the small Brazilian American population expanded. Portuguese speakers were the second most numerous group to take English as a second language classes in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans, after Spanish speakers. Many Brazilians worked in skilled trades such as tile and flooring, although fewer worked as day laborers than other Hispanic and Latino Americans. Many had moved from Brazilian communities in the northeastern United States, and Florida and Georgia. Brazilians settled throughout the metropolitan area; most were undocumented. In January 2008, the New Orleans Brazilian population had a mid-range estimate of 3,000 people. By 2008, Brazilians had opened many small churches, shops and restaurants catering to their community.[158]

Among the growing Asian American community, the earliest Filipino Americans to live within the city arrived in the early 1800s.[159] The Vietnamese American community grew to become the largest by 2010 as many fled the aftermath of the Vietnam War in the 1970s.[160]

Sexual orientation and gender identity

 
2016 New Orleans Pride

New Orleans and its metropolitan area have historically been popular destinations for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender communities.[161][162] In 2015, a Gallup survey determined New Orleans was one of the largest cities in the American South with a large LGBT population.[163][164] Much of the LGBT New Orleans population live near the Central Business District, Mid-City, and Uptown; many gay bars and night clubs are present in those areas.[165]

Religion

 
Beth Israel synagogue building on Carondelet Street

New Orleans' colonial history of French and Spanish settlement generated a strong Roman Catholic tradition. Catholic missions ministered to slaves and free people of color and established schools for them. In addition, many late 19th and early 20th century European immigrants, such as the Irish, some Germans, and Italians were Catholic. Within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans (which includes not only the city but the surrounding parishes as well), 40% percent of the population was Roman Catholic since 2016.[166] Catholicism is reflected in French and Spanish cultural traditions, including its many parochial schools, street names, architecture and festivals, including Mardi Gras. Within the city and metropolitan area, Catholicism is also reflected in the Black and African cultural traditions with Gospel Mass.[167]

Influenced by the Bible Belt's prominent Protestant population, New Orleans also has a sizable non-Catholic Christian demographic. Roughly the majority of Protestant Christians were Baptist, and the city proper's largest non-Catholic bodies were the Southern Baptist Convention, National Missionary Baptist Convention of America, non-denominationals, National Baptist Convention, the United Methodist Church, Episcopal Church USA, African Methodist Episcopal Church, National Baptist Convention of America, and the Church of God in Christ according to the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020.[168]

New Orleans displays a distinctive variety of Louisiana Voodoo, due in part to syncretism with African and Afro-Caribbean Roman Catholic beliefs. The fame of voodoo practitioner Marie Laveau contributed to this, as did New Orleans' Caribbean cultural influences.[169][170][171] Although the tourism industry strongly associated Voodoo with the city, only a small number of people are serious adherents.

New Orleans was also home to the occultist Mary Oneida Toups, who was nicknamed the "Witch Queen of New Orleans". Toups' coven, The Religious Order of Witchcraft, was the first coven to be officially recognized as a religious institution by the state of Louisiana.[172]

Jewish settlers, primarily Sephardim, settled in New Orleans from the early nineteenth century. Some migrated from the communities established in the colonial years in Charleston, South Carolina and Savannah, Georgia. The merchant Abraham Cohen Labatt helped found the first Jewish congregation in New Orleans in the 1830s, which became known as the Portuguese Jewish Nefutzot Yehudah congregation (he and some other members were Sephardic Jews, whose ancestors had lived in Portugal and Spain). Ashkenazi Jews from eastern Europe immigrated in the late 19th and 20th centuries.

By the beginning of the 21st century, 10,000 Jews lived in New Orleans. This number dropped to 7,000 after Hurricane Katrina, but rose again after efforts to incentivize the community's growth resulted in the arrival of about an additional 2,000 Jews.[173] New Orleans synagogues lost members, but most re-opened in their original locations. The exception was Congregation Beth Israel, the oldest and most prominent Orthodox synagogue in the New Orleans region. Beth Israel's building in Lakeview was destroyed by flooding. After seven years of holding services in temporary quarters, the congregation consecrated a new synagogue on land purchased from the Reform Congregation Gates of Prayer in Metairie.[174]

A visible religious minority,[175][176] Muslims constituted 0.6% of the religious population as of 2019 according to Sperling's BestPlaces.[177] The Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 estimated that there were 6,150 Muslims in the city proper. The Islamic demographic in New Orleans and its metropolitan area have been mainly made up of Middle Eastern immigrants and African Americans.

Economy

 
A tanker on the Mississippi River in New Orleans
 
Intracoastal Waterway near New Orleans

New Orleans operates one of the world's largest and busiest ports and metropolitan New Orleans is a center of maritime industry.[178] The region accounts for a significant portion of the nation's oil refining and petrochemical production, and serves as a white-collar corporate base for onshore and offshore petroleum and natural gas production. Since the beginning of the 21st century, New Orleans has also grown into a technology hub.[179][180]

New Orleans is also a center for higher learning, with over 50,000 students enrolled in the region's eleven two- and four-year degree-granting institutions. Tulane University, a top-50 research university, is located in Uptown. Metropolitan New Orleans is a major regional hub for the health care industry and boasts a small, globally competitive manufacturing sector. The center city possesses a rapidly growing, entrepreneurial creative industries sector and is renowned for its cultural tourism. Greater New Orleans, Inc. (GNO, Inc.)[181] acts as the first point-of-contact for regional economic development, coordinating between Louisiana's Department of Economic Development and the various business development agencies.

Port

New Orleans began as a strategically located trading entrepôt and it remains, above all, a crucial transportation hub and distribution center for waterborne commerce. The Port of New Orleans is the fifth-largest in the United States based on cargo volume, and second-largest in the state after the Port of South Louisiana. It is the twelfth-largest in the U.S. based on cargo value. The Port of South Louisiana, also located in the New Orleans area, is the world's busiest in terms of bulk tonnage. When combined with Port of New Orleans, it forms the 4th-largest port system in volume. Many shipbuilding, shipping, logistics, freight forwarding and commodity brokerage firms either are based in metropolitan New Orleans or maintain a local presence. Examples include Intermarine,[182] Bisso Towboat,[183] Northrop Grumman Ship Systems,[184] Trinity Yachts, Expeditors International,[185] Bollinger Shipyards, IMTT, International Coffee Corp, Boasso America, Transoceanic Shipping, Transportation Consultants Inc., Dupuy Storage & Forwarding and Silocaf.[186] The largest coffee-roasting plant in the world, operated by Folgers, is located in New Orleans East.[187][188]

 
The steamboat Natchez operates out of New Orleans.

New Orleans is located near to the Gulf of Mexico and its many oil rigs. Louisiana ranks fifth among states in oil production and eighth in reserves. It has two of the four Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) storage facilities: West Hackberry in Cameron Parish and Bayou Choctaw in Iberville Parish. The area hosts 17 petroleum refineries, with a combined crude oil distillation capacity of nearly 2.8 million barrels per day (450,000 m3/d), the second highest after Texas. Louisiana's numerous ports include the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP), which is capable of receiving the largest oil tankers. Given the quantity of oil imports, Louisiana is home to many major pipelines: Crude Oil (Exxon, Chevron, BP, Texaco, Shell, Scurloch-Permian, Mid-Valley, Calumet, Conoco, Koch Industries, Unocal, U.S. Dept. of Energy, Locap); Product (TEPPCO Partners, Colonial, Plantation, Explorer, Texaco, Collins); and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (Dixie, TEPPCO, Black Lake, Koch, Chevron, Dynegy, Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, Dow Chemical Company, Bridgeline, FMP, Tejas, Texaco, UTP).[189] Several energy companies have regional headquarters in the area, including Royal Dutch Shell, Eni and Chevron. Other energy producers and oilfield services companies are headquartered in the city or region, and the sector supports a large professional services base of specialized engineering and design firms, as well as a term office for the federal government's Minerals Management Service.

Business

The city is the home to a single Fortune 500 company: Entergy, a power generation utility and nuclear power plant operations specialist.[190] After Katrina, the city lost its other Fortune 500 company, Freeport-McMoRan, when it merged its copper and gold exploration unit with an Arizona company and relocated that division to Phoenix. Its McMoRan Exploration affiliate remains headquartered in New Orleans.[191]

Companies with significant operations or headquarters in New Orleans include: Pan American Life Insurance, Pool Corp, Rolls-Royce, Newpark Resources, AT&T, TurboSquid, iSeatz, IBM, Navtech, Superior Energy Services, Textron Marine & Land Systems, McDermott International, Pellerin Milnor, Lockheed Martin, Imperial Trading, Laitram, Harrah's Entertainment, Stewart Enterprises, Edison Chouest Offshore, Zatarain's, Waldemar S. Nelson & Co., Whitney National Bank, Capital One, Tidewater Marine, Popeyes Chicken & Biscuits, Parsons Brinckerhoff, MWH Global, CH2M Hill, Energy Partners Ltd, The Receivables Exchange, GE Capital, and Smoothie King.

Tourist and convention business

Tourism is a staple of the city's economy. Perhaps more visible than any other sector, New Orleans' tourist and convention industry is a $5.5 billion industry that accounts for 40 percent of city tax revenues. In 2004, the hospitality industry employed 85,000 people, making it the city's top economic sector as measured by employment.[192] New Orleans also hosts the World Cultural Economic Forum (WCEF). The forum, held annually at the New Orleans Morial Convention Center, is directed toward promoting cultural and economic development opportunities through the strategic convening of cultural ambassadors and leaders from around the world. The first WCEF took place in October 2008.[193]

Federal and military agencies

 
Aerial view of NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility

Federal agencies and the Armed forces operate significant facilities there. The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals operates at the US. Courthouse downtown. NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility is located in New Orleans East and has multiple tenants including Lockheed Martin and Boeing. It is a huge manufacturing complex that produced the external fuel tanks for the Space Shuttles, the Saturn V first stage, the Integrated Truss Structure of the International Space Station, and is now used for the construction of NASA's Space Launch System. The rocket factory lies within the enormous New Orleans Regional Business Park, also home to the National Finance Center, operated by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), and the Crescent Crown distribution center. Other large governmental installations include the U.S. Navy's Space and Naval Warfare (SPAWAR) Systems Command, located within the University of New Orleans Research and Technology Park in Gentilly, Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans; and the headquarters for the Marine Force Reserves in Federal City in Algiers.

Culture and contemporary life

Tourism

New Orleans has many visitor attractions, from the world-renowned French Quarter to St. Charles Avenue, (home of Tulane and Loyola universities, the historic Pontchartrain Hotel and many 19th-century mansions) to Magazine Street with its boutique stores and antique shops.

 
 
Street artist in the French Quarter (1988)

According to current travel guides, New Orleans is one of the top ten most-visited cities in the United States; 10.1 million visitors came to New Orleans in 2004.[192][194] Prior to Katrina, 265 hotels with 38,338 rooms operated in the Greater New Orleans Area. In May 2007, that had declined to some 140 hotels and motels with over 31,000 rooms.[195]

A 2009 Travel + Leisure poll of "America's Favorite Cities" ranked New Orleans first in ten categories, the most first-place rankings of the 30 cities included. According to the poll, New Orleans was the best U.S. city as a spring break destination and for "wild weekends", stylish boutique hotels, cocktail hours, singles/bar scenes, live music/concerts and bands, antique and vintage shops, cafés/coffee bars, neighborhood restaurants, and people watching. The city ranked second for: friendliness (behind Charleston, South Carolina), gay-friendliness (behind San Francisco), bed and breakfast hotels/inns, and ethnic food. However, the city placed near the bottom in cleanliness, safety and as a family destination.[196][197]

The French Quarter (known locally as "the Quarter" or Vieux Carré), which was the colonial-era city and is bounded by the Mississippi River, Rampart Street, Canal Street, and Esplanade Avenue, contains popular hotels, bars and nightclubs. Notable tourist attractions in the Quarter include Bourbon Street, Jackson Square, St. Louis Cathedral, the French Market (including Café du Monde, famous for café au lait and beignets) and Preservation Hall. Also in the French Quarter is the old New Orleans Mint, a former branch of the United States Mint which now operates as a museum, and The Historic New Orleans Collection, a museum and research center housing art and artifacts relating to the history and the Gulf South.

Close to the Quarter is the Tremé community, which contains the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park and the New Orleans African American Museum—a site which is listed on the Louisiana African American Heritage Trail.

The Natchez is an authentic steamboat with a calliope that cruises the length of the city twice daily. Unlike most other places in the United States, New Orleans has become widely known for its elegant decay. The city's historic cemeteries and their distinct above-ground tombs are attractions in themselves, the oldest and most famous of which, Saint Louis Cemetery, greatly resembles Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.

 
The New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) located in City Park

The National WWII Museum offers a multi-building odyssey through the history of the Pacific and European theaters. Nearby, Confederate Memorial Hall Museum, the oldest continually operating museum in Louisiana (although under renovation since Hurricane Katrina), contains the second-largest collection of Confederate memorabilia. Art museums include the Contemporary Arts Center, the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) in City Park, and the Ogden Museum of Southern Art.

New Orleans is home to the Audubon Nature Institute (which consists of Audubon Park, the Audubon Zoo, the Aquarium of the Americas and the Audubon Insectarium), and home to gardens which include Longue Vue House and Gardens and the New Orleans Botanical Garden. City Park, one of the country's most expansive and visited urban parks, has one of the largest stands of oak trees in the world.

Other points of interest can be found in the surrounding areas. Many wetlands are found nearby, including Honey Island Swamp and Barataria Preserve. Chalmette Battlefield and National Cemetery, located just south of the city, is the site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans.

Entertainment and performing arts

 
New Orleans Mardi Gras in the early 1890s
 
Mounted krewe officers in the Thoth Parade during Mardi Gras

The New Orleans area is home to numerous annual celebrations. The most well known is Carnival, or Mardi Gras. Carnival officially begins on the Feast of the Epiphany, also known in some Christian traditions as the "Twelfth Night" of Christmas. Mardi Gras (French for "Fat Tuesday"), the final and grandest day of traditional Catholic festivities, is the last Tuesday before the Christian liturgical season of Lent, which commences on Ash Wednesday.

The largest of the city's many music festivals is the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. Commonly referred to simply as "Jazz Fest", it is one of the nation's largest music festivals. The festival features a variety of music, including both native Louisiana and international artists. Along with Jazz Fest, New Orleans' Voodoo Experience ("Voodoo Fest") and the Essence Music Festival also feature local and international artists.

Other major festivals include Southern Decadence, the French Quarter Festival, and the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival. The American playwright lived and wrote in New Orleans early in his career, and set his play, Streetcar Named Desire, there.

In 2002, Louisiana began offering tax incentives for film and television production. This has resulted in a substantial increase in activity and brought the nickname of "Hollywood South" for New Orleans. Films produced in and around the city include Ray, Runaway Jury, The Pelican Brief, Glory Road, All the King's Men, Déjà Vu, Last Holiday, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, 12 Years a Slave, and Project Power. In 2006, work began on the Louisiana Film & Television studio complex, based in the Tremé neighborhood.[198] Louisiana began to offer similar tax incentives for music and theater productions in 2007, and some commentators began to refer to New Orleans as "Broadway South."[199]

 
Louis Armstrong, famous New Orleans jazz musician

The first theatre in New Orleans was the French-language Theatre de la Rue Saint Pierre, which opened in 1792. The first opera in New Orleans was performed there in 1796. In the nineteenth century, the city was the home of two of America's most important venues for French opera, the Théâtre d'Orléans and later the French Opera House. Today, opera is performed by the New Orleans Opera. The Marigny Opera House is home to the Marigny Opera Ballet and also hosts opera, jazz, and classical music performances.

 
Frank Ocean is a musician from New Orleans.

New Orleans has long been a significant center for music, showcasing its intertwined European, African and Latino American cultures. The city's unique musical heritage was born in its colonial and early American days from a unique blending of European musical instruments with African rhythms. As the only North American city to have allowed slaves to gather in public and play their native music (largely in Congo Square, now located within Louis Armstrong Park), New Orleans gave birth in the early 20th century to an epochal indigenous music: jazz. Soon, African American brass bands formed, beginning a century-long tradition. The Louis Armstrong Park area, near the French Quarter in Tremé, contains the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park. The city's music was later also significantly influenced by Acadiana, home of Cajun and Zydeco music, and by Delta blues.

New Orleans' unique musical culture is on display in its traditional funerals. A spin on military funerals, New Orleans' traditional funerals feature sad music (mostly dirges and hymns) in processions on the way to the cemetery and happier music (hot jazz) on the way back. Until the 1990s, most locals preferred to call these "funerals with music." Visitors to the city have long dubbed them "jazz funerals."

Much later in its musical development, New Orleans was home to a distinctive brand of rhythm and blues that contributed greatly to the growth of rock and roll. An example of the New Orleans' sound in the 1960s is the #1 U.S. hit "Chapel of Love" by the Dixie Cups, a song which knocked the Beatles out of the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100. New Orleans became a hotbed for funk music in the 1960s and 1970s, and by the late 1980s, it had developed its own localized variant of hip hop, called bounce music. While not commercially successful outside of the Deep South, bounce music was immensely popular in poorer neighborhoods throughout the 1990s.

A cousin of bounce, New Orleans hip hop achieved commercial success locally and internationally, producing Lil Wayne, Master P, Birdman, Juvenile, Suicideboys, Cash Money Records and No Limit Records. Additionally, the popularity of cowpunk, a fast form of southern rock, originated with the help of several local bands, such as The Radiators, Better Than Ezra, Cowboy Mouth and Dash Rip Rock. Throughout the 1990s, many sludge metal bands started. New Orleans' heavy metal bands such as Eyehategod,[200] Soilent Green,[201] Crowbar,[202] and Down incorporated styles such as hardcore punk,[203] doom metal, and southern rock to create an original and heady brew of swampy and aggravated metal that has largely avoided standardization.[200][201][202][203]

New Orleans is the southern terminus of the famed Highway 61, made musically famous by musician Bob Dylan in his song, "Highway 61 Revisited".

Cuisine

 
Steamship Bienville on-board restaurant menu (April 7, 1861)

New Orleans is world-famous for its cuisine. The indigenous cuisine is distinctive and influential. New Orleans food combined local Creole, haute Creole and New Orleans French cuisines. Local ingredients, French, Spanish, Italian, African, Native American, Cajun, Chinese, and a hint of Cuban traditions combine to produce a truly unique and easily recognizable New Orleans flavor.

New Orleans is known for specialties including beignets (locally pronounced like "ben-yays"), square-shaped fried dough that could be called "French doughnuts" (served with café au lait made with a blend of coffee and chicory rather than only coffee); and po' boy[204] and Italian muffuletta sandwiches; Gulf oysters on the half-shell, fried oysters, boiled crawfish and other seafood; étouffée, jambalaya, gumbo and other Creole dishes; and the Monday favorite of red beans and rice (Louis Armstrong often signed his letters, "Red beans and ricely yours"). Another New Orleans specialty is the praline locally /ˈprɑːln/, a candy made with brown sugar, granulated sugar, cream, butter, and pecans. The city offers notable street food[205] including the Asian inspired beef Yaka mein.

Dialect

 
Café du Monde, a landmark New Orleans beignet cafe established in 1862

New Orleans developed a distinctive local dialect that is neither Cajun English nor the stereotypical Southern accent that is often misportrayed by film and television actors. Like earlier Southern Englishes, it features frequent deletion of the pre-consonantal "r", though the local white dialect also came to be quite similar to New York accents.[206] No consensus describes how this happened, but it likely resulted from New Orleans' geographic isolation by water and the fact that the city was a major immigration port throughout the 19th century and early 20th century. Specifically, many members of European immigrant families originally raised in the cities of the Northeast, namely New York, moved to New Orleans during this time frame, bringing their Northeastern accents along with their Irish, Italian (especially Sicilian), German, and Jewish culture.[207]

One of the strongest varieties of the New Orleans accent is sometimes identified as the Yat dialect, from the greeting "Where y'at?" This distinctive accent is dying out in the city, but remains strong in the surrounding parishes.

Less visibly, various ethnic groups throughout the area have retained distinct language traditions. Since Louisiana became the first U.S. state to join the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie in 2018, New Orleans has reemerged as an important center for the state’s francophone and creolophone cultures and languages, as seen in new organizations such as the Nous Foundation.[208] Although rare, Louisiana French and Louisiana Creole are still spoken in the city. There is also Louisiana-Canarian Spanish dialect spoken by the Isleño people and older members of the population.

Sports

Club Sport League Venue (capacity) Founded Titles Record attendance
New Orleans Saints American football NFL Caesars Superdome (73,208) 1967 1 73,373
New Orleans Pelicans Basketball NBA Smoothie King Center (16,867) 2002 0 18,444
New Orleans Jesters Soccer NPSL Pan American Stadium (5,000) 2003 0 5,000
NOLA Gold Rugby Union MLR Goldmine on Airline (10,000) 2017 0
 
The fleur-de-lis is often a symbol of New Orleans and its sports teams.

New Orleans' professional sports teams include the 2009 Super Bowl XLIV champion New Orleans Saints (NFL) and the New Orleans Pelicans (NBA).[209][210][211] It is also home to the Big Easy Rollergirls, an all-female flat track roller derby team, and the New Orleans Blaze, a women's football team.[212][213] New Orleans is also home to two NCAA Division I athletic programs, the Tulane Green Wave of the American Athletic Conference and the UNO Privateers of the Southland Conference.

The Caesars Superdome is the home of the Saints, the Sugar Bowl, and other prominent events. It has hosted the Super Bowl a record seven times (1978, 1981, 1986, 1990, 1997, 2002, and 2013). The Smoothie King Center is the home of the Pelicans, VooDoo, and many events that are not large enough to need the Superdome. New Orleans is also home to the Fair Grounds Race Course, the nation's third-oldest thoroughbred track. The city's Lakefront Arena has also been home to sporting events.

Each year New Orleans plays host to the Sugar Bowl, the New Orleans Bowl, the Bayou Classic, and the Zurich Classic, a golf tournament on the PGA Tour. In addition, it has often hosted major sporting events that have no permanent home, such as the Super Bowl, ArenaBowl, NBA All-Star Game, BCS National Championship Game, and the NCAA Final Four. The Rock 'n' Roll Mardi Gras Marathon and the Crescent City Classic are two annual road running events.

In 2017 Major League Rugby had its inaugural season, and NOLA Gold were one of the first teams in the league.[214] They play at the Gold mine on Airline, a former minor league baseball stadium in the suburb of Metairie. In 2022, a consortium started an attempt to bring professional soccer to New Orleans, hoping to place teams in the male USL Championship and women's USL Super League by 2025.[215]

National protected areas

Government

United States presidential election results for Orleans Parish, Louisiana[216]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 26,664 15.00% 147,854 83.15% 3,301 1.86%
2016 24,292 14.65% 133,996 80.81% 7,524 4.54%
2012 28,003 17.74% 126,722 80.30% 3,088 1.96%
2008 28,130 19.08% 117,102 79.42% 2,207 1.50%
2004 42,847 21.74% 152,610 77.43% 1,646 0.84%
2000 39,404 21.74% 137,630 75.95% 4,187 2.31%
1996 39,576 20.84% 144,720 76.20% 5,615 2.96%
1992 52,019 26.36% 133,261 67.53% 12,069 6.12%
1988 64,763 35.24% 116,851 63.58% 2,186 1.19%
1984 86,316 41.71% 119,478 57.73% 1,162 0.56%
1980 74,302 39.54% 106,858 56.87% 6,744 3.59%
1976 70,925 42.14% 93,130 55.33% 4,249 2.52%
1972 88,075 54.55% 60,790 37.65% 12,581 7.79%
1968 47,728 26.71% 72,451 40.55% 58,489 32.74%
1964 81,049 49.69% 82,045 50.31% 0 0.00%
1960 47,111 26.80% 87,242 49.64% 41,414 23.56%
1956 93,082 56.54% 64,958 39.46% 6,594 4.01%
1952 85,572 48.74% 89,999 51.26% 0 0.00%
1948 29,442 23.78% 41,900 33.85% 52,443 42.37%
1944 20,190 18.25% 90,411 81.74% 7 0.01%
1940 16,406 14.35% 97,930 85.63% 28 0.02%
1936 10,254 8.67% 108,012 91.32% 16 0.01%
1932 5,407 5.95% 85,288 93.87% 165 0.18%
1928 14,424 20.51% 55,919 79.49% 0 0.00%
1924 7,865 16.46% 37,785 79.06% 2,141 4.48%
1920 17,819 35.26% 32,724 64.74% 0 0.00%
1916 2,531 7.45% 30,936 91.03% 516 1.52%
1912 904 2.74% 26,433 80.03% 5,692 17.23%

The city is a political subdivision of the U.S. state of Louisiana. It has a mayor-council government, following a home rule charter adopted in 1954, as later amended. The city council consists of seven members, who are elected by single-member districts and two members elected at-large, that is, across the city-parish. LaToya Cantrell assumed the mayor's office in 2018 as the first female mayor of the city. An ordinance in 2006 established an Office of Inspector General to review city government activities.

The city and the parish of Orleans operate as a merged city-parish government.[217] The original city was composed of what are now the 1st through 9th wards. The city of Lafayette (including the Garden District) was added in 1852 as the 10th and 11th wards. In 1870, Jefferson City, including Faubourg Bouligny and much of the Audubon and University areas, was annexed as the 12th, 13th, and 14th wards. Algiers, on the west bank of the Mississippi, was also annexed in 1870, becoming the 15th ward.

New Orleans' government is largely centralized in the city council and mayor's office, but it maintains earlier systems from when various sections of the city managed their affairs separately. For example, New Orleans had seven elected tax assessors, each with their own staff, representing various districts of the city, rather than one centralized office. A constitutional amendment passed on November 7, 2006, consolidated the seven assessors into one in 2010.[218]

The City of New Orleans, used Archon Information Systems software and services to host multiple online tax sales. The first tax sale was held after Hurricane Katrina.[219] The New Orleans government operates both a fire department and the New Orleans Emergency Medical Services.

New Orleans is the only city in Louisiana that refuses to pay court-ordered judgements when it loses a case that were awarded to the other party.[220] The city uses a provision in the Louisiana Constitution that prohibits the seizure of a city's property to pay a judgment when it loses a lawsuit. According to an article, "The constitution says the funds can’t be seized and can only be paid out if the government appropriates the money. In other words, if the City of New Orleans doesn’t budget the funds for judgments, no judge can force the city to pay."[221] Only if the city council chooses to vote to pay a judgment can the other party be paid. Since the city can't be forced to pay judgments unless it chooses to do so, it simply doesn't pay. More than $36 million in over 500 unpaid judgements issued against the city are simply ignored, some going as far back as 1996.[222]

The Orleans Parish Civil Sheriff's Office serves papers involving lawsuits, provides court security, and operates the city's correctional facilities, including Orleans Parish Prison. The sheriff's office shares legal jurisdiction with the New Orleans Police Department and provides it with backup on an as-needed basis. Before 2010, New Orleans (and all other parishes in Louisiana) had separate criminal and civil sheriff's offices, corresponding to the separate criminal and civil courts: these were merged in 2010 by Louisiana Revised Statute 33:1500.[223] As of 2022 the sheriff is Susan Hutson, who defeated 17-year incumbent Marlin Gusman in the 2021 New Orleans City Election.[224][225]

Crime

Crime is a notable ongoing problem in New Orleans. As in comparable U.S. cities, the incidence of homicide and other violent crimes is highly concentrated in certain impoverished neighborhoods.[226] Arrested offenders in New Orleans are almost exclusively black males from impoverished communities: in 2011, 97% were black and 95% were male; 91% of victims were black as well.[227] The city's murder rate has been historically high and consistently among the highest rates nationwide since the 1970s. From 1994 to 2013, New Orleans was the country's "Murder Capital", annually averaging over 200 murders.[228] The first record was broken in 1979 when the city reached 242 homicides.[229] The record was broken again reaching 250 by 1989 to 345 by the end of 1991.[230][231] By 1993, New Orleans had 395 murders: 80.5 for every 100,000 residents.[232] In 1994, the city was officially named the "Murder Capital of America", hitting a historic peak of 424 murders. The murder count was one of the highest in the world and surpassed that of such cities as Gary, Indiana, Washington D.C. and Baltimore.[233][234][235][236] In 1999, the city's murder rate dropped down to a low of 158 and climbed to the high 200s in the early 2000s. Between 2000 and 2004, New Orleans had the highest homicide rate per capita of any city in the U.S., with 59 people killed per year per 100,000 citizens.[237][238][239][235]

In 2006, with nearly half the population gone and widespread disruption and dislocation because of deaths and refugee relocations from Hurricane Katrina, the city hit another record of homicides. It was ranked as the most dangerous city in the country.[240][241] By 2009, there was a 17% decrease in violent crime, a decrease seen in other cities across the country. But the homicide rate remained among the highest[242] in the United States, at between 55 and 64 per 100,000 residents.[243] In 2010, New Orleans' homicide rate dropped to 49.1 per 100,000, but increased again in 2012, to 53.2,[244][245] the highest rate among cities of 250,000 population or larger.[246]

The violent crime rate was a key issue in the 2010 mayoral race. In January 2007, several thousand New Orleans residents marched to City Hall for a rally demanding police and city leaders tackle the crime problem. Then-Mayor Ray Nagin said he was "totally and solely focused" on addressing the problem. Later, the city implemented checkpoints during late night hours in problem areas.[247] The murder rate climbed 14% in 2011 to 57.88 per 100,000[248] rising to #21 in the world.[249] In 2016, according to annual crime statistics released by the New Orleans Police Department (NOPD), 176 were murdered.[250][251][244] In 2017, New Orleans had the highest rate of gun violence, surpassing the more populated Chicago and Detroit.[252][253] In 2020, murders increased 68% from 2019 with a total of 202 murders. Criminal justice observers blamed impacts from COVID-19 and changes in police strategies for the uptick.[254][255] In 2022, New Orleans' homicide rate skyrocketed, leading every major city, hence the city again being declared as the "Murder Capital of America". The NOPD dropped to under 1,000 officers in 2022 which means the department is severely understaffed for the city's population.[256] NOPD is actively working to reduce violent crime by offering attractive incentives to recruit and retain more officers. [257]

Education

Colleges and universities

 
A view of Gibson Hall at Tulane University

New Orleans has the highest concentration of colleges and universities in Louisiana and one of the highest in the Southern United States. New Orleans also has the third highest concentration of historically black collegiate institutions in the U.S.

 
University of New Orleans
 
Xavier University of Louisiana, 2019

Colleges and universities based within the city include:

Primary and secondary schools

Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB), also known as New Orleans Public Schools (NOPS), is the public school district for the entire city.[258] Katrina was a watershed moment for the school system. Pre-Katrina, NOPS was one of the area's largest systems (along with the Jefferson Parish public school system). It was also the lowest-performing school district in Louisiana. According to researchers Carl L. Bankston and Stephen J. Caldas, only 12 of the 103 public schools within the city limits showed reasonably good performance.[259]

Following Hurricane Katrina, the state of Louisiana took over most of the schools within the system (all schools that matched a nominal "worst-performing" metric). Many of these schools (and others) were subsequently granted operating charters giving them administrative independence from the Orleans Parish School Board, the Recovery School District and/or the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE). At the start of the 2014 school year, all public school students in the NOPS system attended these independent public charter schools, the nation's first to do so.[260]

The charter schools made significant and sustained gains in student achievement, led by outside operators such as KIPP, the Algiers Charter School Network, and the Capital One–University of New Orleans Charter School Network. An October 2009 assessment demonstrated continued growth in the academic performance of public schools. Considering the scores of all public schools in New Orleans gives an overall school district performance score of 70.6. This score represents a 24% improvement over an equivalent pre-Katrina (2004) metric, when a district score of 56.9 was posted.[261] Notably, this score of 70.6 approaches the score (78.4) posted in 2009 by the adjacent, suburban Jefferson Parish public school system, though that system's performance score is itself below the state average of 91.[262]

One particular change was that parents could choose which school to enroll their children in, rather than attending the school nearest them.[263]

Libraries

Academic and public libraries as well as archives in New Orleans include Monroe Library at Loyola University, Howard-Tilton Memorial Library at Tulane University,[264] the Law Library of Louisiana,[265] and the Earl K. Long Library at the University of New Orleans.[266]

The New Orleans Public Library operates in 13 locations.[267] The main library includes a Louisiana Division that houses city archives and special collections.[268]

Other research archives are located at the Historic New Orleans Collection[269] and the Old U.S. Mint.[270]

An independently operated lending library called Iron Rail Book Collective specializes in radical and hard-to-find books. The library contains over 8,000 titles and is open to the public.

The Louisiana Historical Association was founded in New Orleans in 1889. It operated first at Howard Memorial Library. A separate Memorial Hall for it was later added to Howard Library, designed by New Orleans architect Thomas Sully.[271]

Media

Historically, the major newspaper in the area was The Times-Picayune. The paper made headlines of its own in 2012 when owner Advance Publications cut its print schedule to three days each week, instead focusing its efforts on its website, NOLA.com. That action briefly made New Orleans the largest city in the country without a daily newspaper, until the Baton Rouge newspaper The Advocate began a New Orleans edition in September 2012. In June 2013, the Times-Picayune resumed daily printing with a condensed newsstand tabloid edition, nicknamed TP Street, which is published on the three days each week that its namesake broadsheet edition is not printed (the Picayune has not returned to daily delivery). With the resumption of daily print editions from the Times-Picayune and the launch of the New Orleans edition of The Advocate, now The New Orleans Advocate, the city had two daily newspapers for the first time since the afternoon States-Item ceased publication on May 31, 1980. In 2019, the papers merged to form The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate.

In addition to the daily newspaper, weekly publications include The Louisiana Weekly and Gambit Weekly.[272] Also in wide circulation is the Clarion Herald, the newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans.

Greater New Orleans is the 54th largest designated market area (DMA) in the U.S., serving at least 566,960 homes.[273] Major television network affiliates serving the area include:

WWOZ,[274] the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Station, broadcasts[275] modern and traditional jazz, blues, rhythm and blues, brass band, gospel, cajun, zydeco, Caribbean, Latin, Brazilian, African and bluegrass 24 hours per day.

WTUL is Tulane University's radio station.[276] Its programming includes 20th century classical, reggae, jazz, showtunes, indie rock, electronic music, soul/funk, goth, punk, hip hop, New Orleans music, opera, folk, hardcore, Americana, country, blues, Latin, cheese, techno, local, world, ska, swing and big band, kids' shows, and news programming. WTUL is listener-supported and non-commercial. The disc jockeys are volunteers, many of them college students.

Louisiana's film and television tax credits spurred growth in the television industry, although to a lesser degree than in the film industry. Many films and advertisements were set there, along with television programs such as The Real World: New Orleans in 2000,[277] The Real World: Back to New Orleans in 2009 and 2010,[278][279] and Bad Girls Club: New Orleans in 2011.[280]

Two radio stations that were influential in promoting New Orleans-based bands and singers were 50,000-watt WNOE (1060) and 10,000-watt WTIX (690 AM). These two stations competed head-to-head from the late 1950s to the late 1970s.

Transportation

Public transportation

Hurricane Katrina devastated transit service in 2005. The New Orleans Regional Transit Authority (RTA) was quicker to restore the streetcars to service, while bus service had only been restored to 35% of pre-Katrina levels as recently as the end of 2013. During the same period, streetcars arrived at an average of once every seventeen minutes, compared to bus frequencies of once every thirty-eight minutes. The same priority was demonstrated in RTA's spending, increasing the proportion of its budget devoted to streetcars to more than three times compared to its pre-Katrina budget.[281] Through the end of 2017, counting both streetcar and bus trips, only 51% of service had been restored to pre-Katrina levels.[282]

In 2017, the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority began operation on the extension of the Rampart–St. Claude streetcar line. Another change to transit service that year was the re-routing of the 15 Freret and 28 Martin Luther King bus routes to Canal Street. These increased the number of jobs accessible by a thirty-minute walk or transit ride: from 83,722 in 2016 to 89,216 in 2017. This resulted in a regional increase in such job access by more than a full percentage point.[282]

Streetcars

 
A New Orleans streetcar traveling down Canal Street
 
Streetcar network

New Orleans has four active streetcar lines:

  • The St. Charles Streetcar Line is the oldest continuously operating streetcar line in the U.S.[283] The line first operated as local rail service in 1835 between Carrollton and downtown New Orleans. Operated by the Carrollton & New Orleans R.R. Co., the locomotives were then powered by steam engines, and a one-way fare cost 25 cents.[284] Each car is a historic landmark. It runs from Canal Street to the other end of St. Charles Avenue, then turns right into South Carrollton Avenue to its terminal at Carrollton and Claiborne.
  • The Riverfront Streetcar Line runs parallel to the river from Esplanade Street through the French Quarter to Canal Street to the Convention Center above Julia Street in the Arts District.
  • The Canal Streetcar Line uses the Riverfront line tracks from the intersection of Canal Street and Poydras Street, down Canal Street, then branches off and ends at the cemeteries at City Park Avenue, with a spur running from the intersection of Canal and Carrollton Avenue to the entrance of City Park at Esplanade, near the entrance to the New Orleans Museum of Art.
  • The Rampart–St. Claude Streetcar Line opened on January 28, 2013, as the Loyola-UPT Line running along Loyola Avenue from New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal to Canal Street, then continuing along Canal Street to the river, and on weekends on the Riverfront line tracks to French Market. The French Quarter Rail Expansion extended the line from the Loyola Avenue/Canal Street intersection along Rampart Street and St. Claude Avenue to Elysian Fields Avenue. It no longer runs along Canal Street to the river, or on weekends on the Riverfront line tracks to French Market.

The city's streetcars were featured in the Tennessee Williams play A Streetcar Named Desire. The streetcar line to Desire Street became a bus line in 1948.

Buses

Public transportation is operated by the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority ("RTA"). Many bus routes connect the city and suburban areas. The RTA lost 200+ buses in the flood. Some of the replacement buses operate on biodiesel.[285] The Jefferson Parish Department of Transit Administration[286] operates Jefferson Transit, which provides service between the city and its suburbs.[287]

Ferries

 
Ferries connecting New Orleans with Algiers (left) and Gretna (right)

New Orleans has had continuous ferry service since 1827,[288] operating three routes as of 2017. The Canal Street Ferry (or Algiers Ferry) connects downtown New Orleans at the foot of Canal Street with the National Historic Landmark District of Algiers Point across the Mississippi ("West Bank" in local parlance). It services passenger vehicles, bicycles and pedestrians. This same terminal also serves the Canal Street/Gretna Ferry, connecting Gretna, Louisiana for pedestrians and bicyclists only. A third auto/bicycle/pedestrian connects Chalmette, Louisiana and Lower Algiers.[289]

Bicycling

The city's flat landscape, simple street grid and mild winters facilitate bicycle ridership, helping to make New Orleans eighth among U.S. cities in its rate of bicycle and pedestrian transportation as of 2010,[290] and sixth in terms of the percentage of bicycling commuters.[291] New Orleans is located at the start of the Mississippi River Trail, a 3,000-mile (4,800 km) bicycle path that stretches from the city's Audubon Park to Minnesota.[292] Since Katrina the city has actively sought to promote bicycling by constructing a $1.5 million bike trail from Mid-City to Lake Pontchartrain,[293] and by adding over 37 miles (60 km) of bicycle lanes to various streets, including St. Charles Avenue.[290] In 2009, Tulane University contributed to these efforts by converting the main street through its Uptown campus, McAlister Place, into a pedestrian mall open to bicycle traffic.[294] The Lafitte Greenway bicycle and pedestrian trail opened in 2015, and is ultimately planned to extend 3.1-mile (5.0 km) from the French Quarter to Lakeview. New Orleans has been recognized for its abundance of uniquely decorated and uniquely designed bicycles.[295]

Roads

New Orleans is served by Interstate 10, Interstate 610 and Interstate 510. I-10 travels east–west through the city as the Pontchartrain Expressway. In New Orleans East it is known as the Eastern Expressway. I-610 provides a direct shortcut for traffic passing through New Orleans via I-10, allowing that traffic to bypass I-10's southward curve.

In addition to the interstates, U.S. 90 travels through the city, while U.S. 61 terminates downtown. In addition, U.S. 11 terminates in the eastern portion of the city.

New Orleans is home to many bridges; Crescent City Connection is perhaps the most notable. It serves as New Orleans' major bridge across the Mississippi, providing a connection between the city's downtown on the eastbank and its westbank suburbs. Other Mississippi crossings are the Huey P. Long Bridge, carrying U.S. 90 and the Hale Boggs Memorial Bridge, carrying Interstate 310.

The Twin Span Bridge, a five-mile (8 km) causeway in eastern New Orleans, carries I-10 across Lake Pontchartrain. Also in eastern New Orleans, Interstate 510/LA 47 travels across the Intracoastal Waterway/Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet Canal via the Paris Road Bridge, connecting New Orleans East and suburban Chalmette.

The tolled Lake Pontchartrain Causeway, consisting of two parallel bridges are, at 24 miles (39 km) long, the longest bridges in the world. Built in the 1950s (southbound span) and 1960s (northbound span), the bridges connect New Orleans with its suburbs on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain via Metairie.

Taxi service

United Cab is the city's largest taxi service, with a fleet of over 300 cabs.[296] It has operated 365 days a year since its establishment in 1938, with the exception of the month after Hurricane Katrina, in which operations were temporarily shut down due to disruptions in radio service.[297]

United Cab's fleet was once larger than 450 cabs, but has been reduced in recent years due to competition from services like Uber and Lyft, according to owner Syed Kazmi.[296] In January 2016, New Orleans-based sweet shop Sucré approached United Cab with to deliver its king cakes locally on-demand. Sucré saw this partnership as a way to alleviate some of the financial pressure being placed on taxi services due to Uber's presence in the city.[298]

Airports

The metropolitan area is served by the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, located in the suburb of Kenner. Regional airports include the Lakefront Airport, Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans (Callender Field) in the suburb of Belle Chasse and Southern Seaplane Airport, also located in Belle Chasse. Southern Seaplane has a 3,200-foot (980 m) runway for wheeled planes and a 5,000-foot (1,500 m) water runway for seaplanes.

Armstrong International is the busiest airport in Louisiana and the only to handle scheduled international passenger flights. As of 2018, more than 13 million passengers passed through Armstrong, on nonstops flights from more than 57 destinations, including foreign nonstops from the United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, Mexico, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic.

Rail

The city is served by Amtrak. The New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal is the central rail depot and is served by the Crescent, operating between New Orleans and New York City; the City of New Orleans, operating between New Orleans and Chicago and the Sunset Limited, operating between New Orleans and Los Angeles. Up until August 2005 (when Hurricane Katrina struck), the Sunset Limited's route continued east to Orlando.

With the strategic benefits of both the port and its double-track Mississippi River crossings, the city attracted six of the seven Class I railroads in North America: Union Pacific Railroad, BNSF Railway, Norfolk Southern Railway, Kansas City Southern Railway, CSX Transportation and Canadian National Railway. The New Orleans Public Belt Railroad provides interchange services between the railroads.

Modal characteristics

According to the 2016 American Community Survey, 67.4% of working city of New Orleans residents commuted by driving alone, 9.7% carpooled, 7.3% used public transportation, and 4.9% walked. About 5% used all other forms of transportation, including taxicab, motorcycle, and bicycle. About 5.7% of working New Orleans residents worked at home.[299]

Many city of New Orleans households own no personal automobiles. In 2015, 18.8% of New Orleans households were without a car, which increased to 20.2% in 2016. The national average was 8.7 percent in 2016. New Orleans averaged 1.26 cars per household in 2016, compared to a national average of 1.8 per household.[300]

New Orleans ranks high among cities in terms of the percentage of working residents who commute by walking or bicycling. In 2013, 5% of working people from New Orleans commuted by walking and 2.8% commuted by cycling. During the same period, New Orleans ranked thirteenth for percentage of workers who commuted by walking or biking among cities not included within the fifty most populous cities. Only nine of the most fifty most populous cities had a higher percentage of commuters who walked or biked than did New Orleans in 2013.[301]

Notable people

Sister cities

Sister cities of New Orleans are:[302]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  2. ^ Official records for New Orleans have been kept at MSY since May 1, 1946.[104] Additional records from Audubon Park dating back to 1893 have also been included.
  3. ^ Sunshine normals are based on only 20 to 22 years of data.

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orleans, easy, nola, city, redirect, here, other, uses, easy, disambiguation, nola, disambiguation, city, disambiguation, disambiguation, ɔːr, ənz, ɔːr, leenz, locally, ɔːr, lənz, french, nouvelle, orléans, nuvɛlɔʁleɑ, listen, spanish, nueva, orleans, consolid. The Big Easy NOLA and City of New Orleans redirect here For other uses see The Big Easy disambiguation NOLA disambiguation City of New Orleans disambiguation and New Orleans disambiguation New Orleans ˈ ɔːr l i e n z OR l ee enz ɔːr ˈ l iː n z or LEENZ 3 locally ˈ ɔːr l e n z OR lenz 4 French La Nouvelle Orleans la nuvɛlɔʁleɑ listen Spanish Nueva Orleans is a consolidated city parish located along the Mississippi River in the southeastern region of the U S state of Louisiana With a population of 383 997 according to the 2020 U S census 5 it is the most populous city in Louisiana and the twelfth most populous city in the southeastern United States Serving as a major port New Orleans is considered an economic and commercial hub for the broader Gulf Coast region of the United States New Orleans Louisiana La Nouvelle Orleans French Consolidated city parishCity of New OrleansFrom top left to right Central Business District Bourbon Street St Louis Cathedral in Jackson Square a streetcar in New Orleans Caesars Superdome University of New Orleans Crescent City ConnectionFlagSealNickname s The Crescent City The Big Easy The City That Care Forgot NOLA The City of Yes Hollywood South Interactive map of New OrleansCoordinates 29 57 N 90 05 W 29 95 N 90 08 W 29 95 90 08 Coordinates 29 57 N 90 05 W 29 95 N 90 08 W 29 95 90 08CountryUnited StatesStateLouisianaParishOrleansFounded1718 305 years ago 1718 Founded byJean Baptiste Le Moyne de BienvilleNamed forPhilippe II Duke of Orleans 1674 1723 Government TypeMayor council MayorLaToya Cantrell D CouncilNew Orleans City CouncilArea 1 Consolidated city parish349 85 sq mi 906 10 km2 Land169 42 sq mi 438 80 km2 Water180 43 sq mi 467 30 km2 Metro3 755 2 sq mi 9 726 6 km2 Elevation 6 5 to 20 ft 2 to 6 m Population 2020 2 Consolidated city parish383 997 Density2 267 sq mi 875 km2 Urban914 531 US 51st Urban density3 818 9 sq mi 1 474 5 km2 Metro1 270 530 US 45th DemonymNew OrleanianTime zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT Area code504FIPS code22 55000GNIS feature ID1629985InterstatesI 10 I 510 I 610U S HighwaysUS 11 US 61 US 90 US 90 Bus State highwaysLA 39 LA 46 LA 47 LA 406 LA 407 LA 428 LA 611 9 LA 1253 LA 1264 LA 3021 LA 3139Public transportNew Orleans Regional Transit AuthorityPrimary airportLouis Armstrong New Orleans International AirportWebsitenola govNew Orleans is world renowned for its distinctive music Creole cuisine unique dialects and its annual celebrations and festivals most notably Mardi Gras The historic heart of the city is the French Quarter known for its French and Spanish Creole architecture and vibrant nightlife along Bourbon Street The city has been described as the most unique in the United States 6 7 8 9 owing in large part to its cross cultural and multilingual heritage 10 Additionally New Orleans has increasingly been known as Hollywood South due to its prominent role in the film industry and in pop culture 11 12 Founded in 1718 by French colonists New Orleans was once the territorial capital of French Louisiana before becoming part of the United States in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 New Orleans in 1840 was the third most populous city in the United States 13 and it was the largest city in the American South from the Antebellum era until after World War II The city has historically been very vulnerable to flooding due to its high rainfall low lying elevation poor natural drainage and proximity to multiple bodies of water State and federal authorities have installed a complex system of levees and drainage pumps in an effort to protect the city 14 15 New Orleans was severely affected by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 which flooded more than 80 of the city killed more than 1 800 people and displaced thousands of residents causing a population decline of over 50 16 Since Katrina major redevelopment efforts have led to a rebound in the city s population Concerns about gentrification new residents buying property in formerly closely knit communities and displacement of longtime residents have been expressed 17 18 19 20 The city and Orleans Parish French paroisse d Orleans are coterminous 21 As of 2017 Orleans Parish is the third most populous parish in Louisiana behind East Baton Rouge Parish and neighboring Jefferson Parish 22 The city and parish are bounded by St Tammany Parish and Lake Pontchartrain to the north St Bernard Parish and Lake Borgne to the east Plaquemines Parish to the south and Jefferson Parish to the south and west The city anchors the larger Greater New Orleans metropolitan area which had a population of 1 271 845 in 2020 23 Greater New Orleans is the most populous metropolitan statistical area in Louisiana and since the 2020 census has been the 46th most populous MSA in the United States 24 Contents 1 Etymology and nicknames 2 History 2 1 French Spanish colonial era 2 2 United States territorial era 2 3 Battle of New Orleans 2 4 Port 2 5 Civil War Reconstruction era 2 6 Jim Crow era 2 7 20th century 2 7 1 Civil Rights movement 2 7 2 Drainage and flood control 2 8 21st century 2 8 1 Hurricane Katrina 2 8 2 Hurricane Rita 2 8 3 Post disaster recovery 2 8 4 Hurricane Ida 3 Geography 3 1 Elevation 3 2 Cityscape 3 2 1 Historic and residential architecture 3 2 2 Tallest buildings 3 3 Climate 3 4 Threat from tropical cyclones 4 Demographics 4 1 Race and ethnicity 4 2 Sexual orientation and gender identity 4 3 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Port 5 2 Business 5 3 Tourist and convention business 5 4 Federal and military agencies 6 Culture and contemporary life 6 1 Tourism 6 2 Entertainment and performing arts 6 3 Cuisine 6 4 Dialect 7 Sports 8 National protected areas 9 Government 10 Crime 11 Education 11 1 Colleges and universities 11 2 Primary and secondary schools 11 3 Libraries 12 Media 13 Transportation 13 1 Public transportation 13 1 1 Streetcars 13 1 2 Buses 13 1 3 Ferries 13 2 Bicycling 13 3 Roads 13 4 Taxi service 13 5 Airports 13 6 Rail 13 7 Modal characteristics 14 Notable people 15 Sister cities 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksEtymology and nicknames The New Orleans cityscape in early February 2007 The name of New Orleans derives from the original French name La Nouvelle Orleans which was given to the city in honor of Philippe II Duke of Orleans who served as Louis XV s regent from 1715 to 1723 25 The city of Orleans itself is named after the Roman emperor Aurelian originally being known as Aurelianum Thus by extension New Orleans is also named after Aurelian and in Latin would translate to Nova Aurelianum Following France s defeat in the Seven Years War and the Treaty of Paris which was signed in 1763 France transferred possession of Louisiana to Spain The Spanish renamed the city to Nueva Orleans pronounced ˌnweba oɾleˈans which was used until 1800 26 When the United States acquired possession from France in 1803 the French name was adopted and anglicized to become the modern name which is still in use today New Orleans has several nicknames including these Crescent City alluding to the course of the Lower Mississippi River around and through the city 27 The Big Easy possibly a reference by musicians in the early 20th century to the relative ease of finding work there 28 29 The City that Care Forgot used since at least 1938 30 referring to the outwardly easygoing carefree nature of the residents 29 NOLA the acronym for New Orleans Louisiana HistoryMain article History of New Orleans For a chronological guide see Timeline of New Orleans French Spanish colonial era Main articles Louisiana New France New France Treaty of Paris 1763 Louisiana New Spain and New Spain See also Seven Years War French and Indian War Gulf Coast campaign Spain and the American Revolutionary War Third Treaty of San Ildefonso and Treaty of Aranjuez 1801 Historical affiliations Kingdom of France 1718 1763 Kingdom of Spain 1763 1802 French First Republic 1802 1803 United States of America 1803 1861 State of Louisiana 1861 Confederate States of America 1861 1862 United States of America 1862 present La Nouvelle Orleans New Orleans was founded in the spring of 1718 May 7 has become the traditional date to mark the anniversary but the actual day is unknown 31 by the French Mississippi Company under the direction of Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville on land inhabited by the Chitimacha It was named for Philippe II Duke of Orleans who was regent of the Kingdom of France at the time 25 His title came from the French city of Orleans The French colony of Louisiana was ceded to the Spanish Empire in the 1763 Treaty of Paris following France s defeat by Great Britain in the Seven Years War During the American Revolutionary War New Orleans was an important port for smuggling aid to the American revolutionaries and transporting military equipment and supplies up the Mississippi River Beginning in the 1760s Filipinos began to settle in and around New Orleans 32 Bernardo de Galvez y Madrid Count of Galvez successfully directed a southern campaign against the British from the city in 1779 33 Nueva Orleans the name of New Orleans in Spanish 34 remained under Spanish control until 1803 when it reverted briefly to French rule Nearly all of the surviving 18th century architecture of the Vieux Carre French Quarter dates from the Spanish period notably excepting the Old Ursuline Convent 35 The Revolt took place in what is now Natchez National Historical Park in Natchez Mississippi As a French colony Louisiana faced struggles with numerous Native American tribes who were navigating the competing interests of France Spain and England as well as traditional rivals Notably the Natchez whose traditional lands were along the Mississippi near the modern city of Natchez Mississippi had a series of wars culminating in the Natchez Revolt that began in 1729 with the Natchez overrunning Fort Rosalie Approximately 230 French colonists were killed and the Natchez settlement destroyed causing fear and concern in New Orleans and the rest of the territory 36 In retaliation then governor Etienne Perier launched a campaign to completely destroy the Natchez nation and its Native allies 37 By 1731 the Natchez people had been killed enslaved or dispersed among other tribes but the campaign soured relations between France and the territory s Native Americans leading directly into the Chickasaw Wars of the 1730s 38 Relations with Louisiana s Native American population remained a concern into the 1740s for governor Marquis de Vaudreuil In the early 1740s traders from the Thirteen Colonies crossed into the Appalachian Mountains The Native American tribes would now operate dependent on which of various European colonists would most benefit them Several of these tribes and especially the Chickasaw and Choctaw would trade goods and gifts for their loyalty 39 The economic issue in the colony which continued under Vaudreuil resulted in many raids by Native American tribes taking advantage of the French weakness In 1747 and 1748 the Chickasaw would raid along the east bank of the Mississippi all the way south to Baton Rouge These raids would often force residents of French Louisiana to take refuge in New Orleans proper Inability to find labor was the most pressing issue in the young colony The colonists turned to sub Saharan African slaves to make their investments in Louisiana profitable In the late 1710s the transatlantic slave trade imported enslaved Africans into the colony This led to the biggest shipment in 1716 where several trading ships appeared with slaves as cargo to the local residents in a one year span By 1724 the large number of blacks in Louisiana prompted the institutionalizing of laws governing slavery within the colony 40 These laws required that slaves be baptized in the Roman Catholic faith slaves be married in the church and gave slaves no legal rights The slave law formed in the 1720s is known as the Code Noir which would bleed into the antebellum period of the American South as well Louisiana slave culture had its own distinct Afro Creole society that called on past cultures and the situation for slaves in the New World Afro Creole was present in religious beliefs and the Louisiana Creole language The religion most associated with this period for was called Voodoo 41 42 In the city of New Orleans an inspiring mixture of foreign influences created a melting pot of culture that is still celebrated today By the end of French colonization in Louisiana New Orleans was recognized commercially in the Atlantic world Its inhabitants traded across the French commercial system New Orleans was a hub for this trade both physically and culturally because it served as the exit point to the rest of the globe for the interior of the North American continent In one instance the French government established a chapter house of sisters in New Orleans The Ursuline sisters after being sponsored by the Company of the Indies founded a convent in the city in 1727 43 At the end of the colonial era the Ursuline Academy maintained a house of 70 boarding and 100 day students Today numerous schools in New Orleans can trace their lineage from this academy 1724 plan for Saint Louis Parish Church New Orleans Louisiana by Adrien de PaugerAnother notable example is the street plan and architecture still distinguishing New Orleans today French Louisiana had early architects in the province who were trained as military engineers and were now assigned to design government buildings Pierre Le Blond de Tour and Adrien de Pauger for example planned many early fortifications along with the street plan for the city of New Orleans 44 After them in the 1740s Ignace Francois Broutin as engineer in chief of Louisiana reworked the architecture of New Orleans with an extensive public works program French policy makers in Paris attempted to set political and economic norms for New Orleans It acted autonomously in much of its cultural and physical aspects but also stayed in communication with the foreign trends as well After the French relinquished West Louisiana to the Spanish New Orleans merchants attempted to ignore Spanish rule and even re institute French control on the colony The citizens of New Orleans held a series of public meetings during 1765 to keep the populace in opposition of the establishment of Spanish rule Anti Spanish passions in New Orleans reached their highest level after two years of Spanish administration in Louisiana On October 27 1768 a mob of local residents spiked the guns guarding New Orleans and took control of the city from the Spanish 45 The rebellion organized a group to sail for Paris where it met with officials of the French government This group brought with them a long memorial to summarize the abuses the colony had endured from the Spanish King Louis XV and his ministers reaffirmed Spain s sovereignty over Louisiana United States territorial era Main articles Louisiana Purchase Territory of Orleans and Dominican Creoles The Third Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800 restored French control of New Orleans and Louisiana but Napoleon sold both to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 46 Thereafter the city grew rapidly with influxes of Americans French Creoles and Africans Later immigrants were Irish Germans Poles and Italians Major commodity crops of sugar and cotton were cultivated with slave labor on nearby large plantations Between 1791 and 1810 thousands of St Dominican refugees from the Haitian Revolution both whites and free people of color affranchis or gens de couleur libres arrived in New Orleans a number brought their slaves with them many of whom were native Africans or of full blood descent 47 While Governor Claiborne and other officials wanted to keep out additional free black people the French Creoles wanted to increase the French speaking population In addition to bolstering the territory s French speaking population these refugees had a significant impact on the culture of Louisiana including developing its sugar industry and cultural institutions 48 As more refugees were allowed into the Territory of Orleans St Dominican refugees who had first gone to Cuba also arrived 49 Many of the white Francophones had been deported by officials in Cuba in 1809 as retaliation for Bonapartist schemes 50 Nearly 90 percent of these immigrants settled in New Orleans The 1809 migration brought 2 731 whites 3 102 free people of color of mixed race European and African descent and 3 226 slaves of primarily African descent doubling the city s population The city became 63 percent black a greater proportion than Charleston South Carolina s 53 percent at that time 49 Battle of New Orleans Main articles Battle of New Orleans and War of 1812 The Battle of New Orleans 1815 Plan of the city and suburbs of New Orleans from a survey made in 1815 51 During the final campaign of the War of 1812 the British sent a force of 11 000 in an attempt to capture New Orleans Despite great challenges General Andrew Jackson with support from the U S Navy successfully cobbled together a force of militia from Louisiana and Mississippi U S Army regulars a large contingent of Tennessee state militia Kentucky frontiersmen and local privateers the latter led by the pirate Jean Lafitte to decisively defeat the British led by Sir Edward Pakenham in the Battle of New Orleans on January 8 1815 52 The armies had not learned of the Treaty of Ghent which had been signed on December 24 1814 however the treaty did not call for cessation of hostilities until after both governments had ratified it The U S government ratified it on February 16 1815 The fighting in Louisiana began in December 1814 and did not end until late January after the Americans held off the Royal Navy during a ten day siege of Fort St Philip the Royal Navy went on to capture Fort Bowyer near Mobile before the commanders received news of the peace treaty 52 Port Mississippi River steamboats at New Orleans 1853 As a port New Orleans played a major role during the antebellum period in the Atlantic slave trade The port handled commodities for export from the interior and imported goods from other countries which were warehoused and transferred in New Orleans to smaller vessels and distributed along the Mississippi River watershed The river was filled with steamboats flatboats and sailing ships Despite its role in the slave trade New Orleans at the time also had the largest and most prosperous community of free persons of color in the nation who were often educated middle class property owners 53 54 Dwarfing the other cities in the Antebellum South New Orleans had the U S s largest slave market The market expanded after the United States ended the international trade in 1808 Two thirds of the more than one million slaves brought to the Deep South arrived via forced migration in the domestic slave trade The money generated by the sale of slaves in the Upper South has been estimated at 15 percent of the value of the staple crop economy The slaves were collectively valued at half a billion dollars The trade spawned an ancillary economy transportation housing and clothing fees etc estimated at 13 5 of the price per person amounting to tens of billions of dollars 2005 dollars adjusted for inflation during the antebellum period with New Orleans as a prime beneficiary 55 According to historian Paul Lachance the addition of white immigrants from Saint Domingue to the white creole population enabled French speakers to remain a majority of the white population until almost 1830 If a substantial proportion of free persons of color and slaves had not also spoken French however the Gallic community would have become a minority of the total population as early as 1820 56 After the Louisiana Purchase numerous Anglo Americans migrated to the city The population doubled in the 1830s and by 1840 New Orleans had become the nation s wealthiest and the third most populous city after New York and Baltimore 57 German and Irish immigrants began arriving in the 1840s working as port laborers In this period the state legislature passed more restrictions on manumissions of slaves and virtually ended it in 1852 58 In the 1850s white Francophones remained an intact and vibrant community in New Orleans They maintained instruction in French in two of the city s four school districts all served white students 59 In 1860 the city had 13 000 free people of color gens de couleur libres the class of free mostly mixed race people that expanded in number during French and Spanish rule They set up some private schools for their children The census recorded 81 percent of the free people of color as mulatto a term used to cover all degrees of mixed race 58 Mostly part of the Francophone group they constituted the artisan educated and professional class of African Americans The mass of blacks were still enslaved working at the port in domestic service in crafts and mostly on the many large surrounding sugarcane plantations After growing by 45 percent in the 1850s by 1860 the city had nearly 170 000 people 60 It had grown in wealth with a per capita income that was second in the nation and the highest in the South 60 The city had a role as the primary commercial gateway for the nation s booming midsection 60 The port was the nation s third largest in terms of tonnage of imported goods after Boston and New York handling 659 000 tons in 1859 60 Civil War Reconstruction era See also New Orleans in the American Civil War and Louisiana in the American Civil War The starving people of New Orleans under Union occupation during the Civil War 1862 As the Creole elite feared the American Civil War changed their world In April 1862 following the city s occupation by the Union Navy after the Battle of Forts Jackson and St Philip Gen Benjamin F Butler a respected Massachusetts lawyer serving in that state s militia was appointed military governor New Orleans residents supportive of the Confederacy nicknamed him Beast Butler because of an order he issued After his troops had been assaulted and harassed in the streets by women still loyal to the Confederate cause his order warned that such future occurrences would result in his men treating such women as those plying their avocation in the streets implying that they would treat the women like prostitutes Accounts of this spread widely He also came to be called Spoons Butler because of the alleged looting that his troops did while occupying the city during which time he himself supposedly pilfered silver flatware 61 Significantly Butler abolished French language instruction in city schools Statewide measures in 1864 and after the war 1868 further strengthened the English only policy imposed by federal representatives With the predominance of English speakers that language had already become dominant in business and government 59 By the end of the 19th century French usage had faded It was also under pressure from Irish Italian and German immigrants 62 However as late as 1902 one fourth of the population of the city spoke French in ordinary daily intercourse while another two fourths was able to understand the language perfectly 63 and as late as 1945 many elderly Creole women spoke no English 64 The last major French language newspaper L Abeille de la Nouvelle Orleans New Orleans Bee ceased publication on December 27 1923 after ninety six years 65 According to some sources Le Courrier de la Nouvelle Orleans continued until 1955 66 As the city was captured and occupied early in the war it was spared the destruction through warfare suffered by many other cities of the American South The Union Army eventually extended its control north along the Mississippi River and along the coastal areas As a result most of the southern portion of Louisiana was originally exempted from the liberating provisions of the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation issued by President Abraham Lincoln Large numbers of rural ex slaves and some free people of color from the city volunteered for the first regiments of Black troops in the War Led by Brigadier General Daniel Ullman 1810 1892 of the 78th Regiment of New York State Volunteers Militia they were known as the Corps d Afrique While that name had been used by a militia before the war that group was composed of free people of color The new group was made up mostly of former slaves They were supplemented in the last two years of the War by newly organized United States Colored Troops who played an increasingly important part in the war 67 Violence throughout the South especially the Memphis Riots of 1866 followed by the New Orleans Riot in the same year led Congress to pass the Reconstruction Act and the Fourteenth Amendment extending the protections of full citizenship to freedmen and free people of color Louisiana and Texas were put under the authority of the Fifth Military District of the United States during Reconstruction Louisiana was readmitted to the Union in 1868 Its Constitution of 1868 granted universal male suffrage and established universal public education Both blacks and whites were elected to local and state offices In 1872 lieutenant governor P B S Pinchback who was of mixed race succeeded Henry Clay Warmouth for a brief period as Republican governor of Louisiana becoming the first governor of African descent of a U S state the next African American to serve as governor of a U S state was Douglas Wilder elected in Virginia in 1989 New Orleans operated a racially integrated public school system during this period Wartime damage to levees and cities along the Mississippi River adversely affected southern crops and trade The federal government contributed to restoring infrastructure The nationwide financial recession and Panic of 1873 adversely affected businesses and slowed economic recovery From 1868 elections in Louisiana were marked by violence as white insurgents tried to suppress black voting and disrupt Republican Party gatherings The disputed 1872 gubernatorial election resulted in conflicts that ran for years The White League an insurgent paramilitary group that supported the Democratic Party was organized in 1874 and operated in the open violently suppressing the black vote and running off Republican officeholders In 1874 in the Battle of Liberty Place 5 000 members of the White League fought with city police to take over the state offices for the Democratic candidate for governor holding them for three days By 1876 such tactics resulted in the white Democrats the so called Redeemers regaining political control of the state legislature The federal government gave up and withdrew its troops in 1877 ending Reconstruction Jim Crow era Dixiecrats passed Jim Crow laws establishing racial segregation in public facilities In 1889 the legislature passed a constitutional amendment incorporating a grandfather clause that effectively disfranchised freedmen as well as the propertied people of color manumitted before the war Unable to vote African Americans could not serve on juries or in local office and were closed out of formal politics for generations The Southern U S was ruled by a white Democratic Party Public schools were racially segregated and remained so until 1960 New Orleans large community of well educated often French speaking free persons of color gens de couleur libres who had been free prior to the Civil War fought against Jim Crow They organized the Comite des Citoyens Citizens Committee to work for civil rights As part of their legal campaign they recruited one of their own Homer Plessy to test whether Louisiana s newly enacted Separate Car Act was constitutional Plessy boarded a commuter train departing New Orleans for Covington Louisiana sat in the car reserved for whites only and was arrested The case resulting from this incident Plessy v Ferguson was heard by the U S Supreme Court in 1896 The court ruled that separate but equal accommodations were constitutional effectively upholding Jim Crow measures In practice African American public schools and facilities were underfunded across the South The Supreme Court ruling contributed to this period as the nadir of race relations in the United States The rate of lynchings of black men was high across the South as other states also disfranchised blacks and sought to impose Jim Crow Nativist prejudices also surfaced Anti Italian sentiment in 1891 contributed to the lynchings of 11 Italians some of whom had been acquitted of the murder of the police chief Some were shot and killed in the jail where they were detained It was the largest mass lynching in U S history 68 69 In July 1900 the city was swept by white mobs rioting after Robert Charles a young African American killed a policeman and temporarily escaped The mob killed him and an estimated 20 other blacks seven whites died in the days long conflict until a state militia suppressed it Throughout New Orleans history until the early 20th century when medical and scientific advances ameliorated the situation the city suffered repeated epidemics of yellow fever and other tropical and infectious diseases 20th century Esplanade Avenue at Burgundy Street looking lakewards north towards Lake Pontchartrain in 1900 1943 waiting line at wartime Rationing Board office in New Orleans Richard Nixon in New Orleans August 1970 Royal at Iberville Streets heading to Canal Street New Orleans economic and population zenith in relation to other American cities occurred in the antebellum period It was the nation s fifth largest city in 1860 after New York Philadelphia Boston and Baltimore and was significantly larger than all other southern cities 70 From the mid 19th century onward rapid economic growth shifted to other areas while New Orleans relative importance steadily declined The growth of railways and highways decreased river traffic diverting goods to other transportation corridors and markets 70 Thousands of the most ambitious people of color left the state in the Great Migration around World War II and after many for West Coast destinations From the late 1800s most censuses recorded New Orleans slipping down the ranks in the list of largest American cities New Orleans population still continued to increase throughout the period but at a slower rate than before the Civil War By the mid 20th century New Orleanians recognized that their city was no longer the leading urban area in the South By 1950 Houston Dallas and Atlanta exceeded New Orleans in size and in 1960 Miami eclipsed New Orleans even as the latter s population reached its historic peak 70 As with other older American cities highway construction and suburban development drew residents from the center city to newer housing outside The 1970 census recorded the first absolute decline in population since the city became part of the United States in 1803 The Greater New Orleans metropolitan area continued expanding in population albeit more slowly than other major Sun Belt cities While the port remained one of the nation s largest automation and containerization cost many jobs The city s former role as banker to the South was supplanted by larger peer cities New Orleans economy had always been based more on trade and financial services than on manufacturing but the city s relatively small manufacturing sector also shrank after World War II Despite some economic development successes under the administrations of DeLesseps Chep Morrison 1946 1961 and Victor Vic Schiro 1961 1970 metropolitan New Orleans growth rate consistently lagged behind more vigorous cities Civil Rights movement During the later years of Morrison s administration and for the entirety of Schiro s the city was a center of the Civil Rights movement The Southern Christian Leadership Conference was founded in New Orleans and lunch counter sit ins were held in Canal Street department stores A prominent and violent series of confrontations occurred in 1960 when the city attempted school desegregation following the Supreme Court ruling in Brown v Board of Education 1954 When six year old Ruby Bridges integrated William Frantz Elementary School in the Ninth Ward she was the first child of color to attend a previously all white school in the South Much controversy preceded the 1956 Sugar Bowl at Tulane Stadium when the Pitt Panthers with African American fullback Bobby Grier on the roster met the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 71 There had been controversy over whether Grier should be allowed to play due to his race and whether Georgia Tech should even play at all due to Georgia s Governor Marvin Griffin s opposition to racial integration 72 73 74 After Griffin publicly sent a telegram to the state s Board Of Regents requesting Georgia Tech not to engage in racially integrated events Georgia Tech s president Blake R Van Leer rejected the request and threatened to resign The game went on as planned 75 The Civil Rights movement s success in gaining federal passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 renewed constitutional rights including voting for blacks Together these resulted in the most far reaching changes in New Orleans 20th century history 76 Though legal and civil equality were re established by the end of the 1960s a large gap in income levels and educational attainment persisted between the city s White and African American communities 77 As the middle class and wealthier members of both races left the center city its population s income level dropped and it became proportionately more African American From 1980 the African American majority elected primarily officials from its own community They struggled to narrow the gap by creating conditions conducive to the economic uplift of the African American community New Orleans became increasingly dependent on tourism as an economic mainstay during the administrations of Sidney Barthelemy 1986 1994 and Marc Morial 1994 2002 Relatively low levels of educational attainment high rates of household poverty and rising crime threatened the city s prosperity in the later decades of the century 77 The negative effects of these socioeconomic conditions aligned poorly with the changes in the late 20th century to the economy of the United States which reflected a post industrial knowledge based paradigm in which mental skills and education were more important to advancement than manual skills Drainage and flood control See also Drainage in New Orleans A view of the New Orleans Central Business District as seen from the Mississippi River USS New Orleans LPD 18 in foreground 2007 In the 20th century New Orleans government and business leaders believed they needed to drain and develop outlying areas to provide for the city s expansion The most ambitious development during this period was a drainage plan devised by engineer and inventor A Baldwin Wood designed to break the surrounding swamp s stranglehold on the city s geographic expansion Until then urban development in New Orleans was largely limited to higher ground along the natural river levees and bayous Wood s pump system allowed the city to drain huge tracts of swamp and marshland and expand into low lying areas Over the 20th century rapid subsidence both natural and human induced resulted in these newly populated areas subsiding to several feet below sea level 78 79 New Orleans was vulnerable to flooding even before the city s footprint departed from the natural high ground near the Mississippi River In the late 20th century however scientists and New Orleans residents gradually became aware of the city s increased vulnerability In 1965 flooding from Hurricane Betsy killed dozens of residents although the majority of the city remained dry The rain induced flood of May 8 1995 demonstrated the weakness of the pumping system After that event measures were undertaken to dramatically upgrade pumping capacity By the 1980s and 1990s scientists observed that extensive rapid and ongoing erosion of the marshlands and swamp surrounding New Orleans especially that related to the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet Canal had the unintended result of leaving the city more vulnerable than before to hurricane induced catastrophic storm surges 21st century Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Katrina at its New Orleans landfall See also Effects of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans and Drainage in New Orleans New Orleans was catastrophically affected by what Raymond B Seed called the worst engineering disaster in the world since Chernobyl when the federal levee system failed during Hurricane Katrina on August 29 2005 80 By the time the hurricane approached the city on August 29 2005 most residents had evacuated As the hurricane passed through the Gulf Coast region the city s federal flood protection system failed resulting in the worst civil engineering disaster in American history at the time 81 Floodwalls and levees constructed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers failed below design specifications and 80 of the city flooded Tens of thousands of residents who had remained were rescued or otherwise made their way to shelters of last resort at the Louisiana Superdome or the New Orleans Morial Convention Center More than 1 500 people were recorded as having died in Louisiana most in New Orleans while others remain unaccounted for 82 83 Before Hurricane Katrina the city called for the first mandatory evacuation in its history to be followed by another mandatory evacuation three years later with Hurricane Gustav Hurricane Rita Main article Hurricane Rita The city was declared off limits to residents while efforts to clean up after Hurricane Katrina began The approach of Hurricane Rita in September 2005 caused repopulation efforts to be postponed 84 and the Lower Ninth Ward was reflooded by Rita s storm surge 83 Post disaster recovery Main article Reconstruction of New Orleans An aerial view from a United States Navy helicopter showing floodwaters around the Louisiana Superdome stadium and surrounding area 2005 Because of the scale of damage many people resettled permanently outside the area Federal state and local efforts supported recovery and rebuilding in severely damaged neighborhoods The U S Census Bureau in July 2006 estimated the population to be 223 000 a subsequent study estimated that 32 000 additional residents had moved to the city as of March 2007 bringing the estimated population to 255 000 approximately 56 of the pre Katrina population level Another estimate based on utility usage from July 2007 estimated the population to be approximately 274 000 or 60 of the pre Katrina population These estimates are somewhat smaller to a third estimate based on mail delivery records from the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center in June 2007 which indicated that the city had regained approximately two thirds of its pre Katrina population 85 In 2008 the U S Census Bureau revised its population estimate for the city upward to 336 644 86 Most recently by July 2015 the population was back up to 386 617 80 of what it was in 2000 87 Several major tourist events and other forms of revenue for the city have returned Large conventions returned 88 89 College bowl games returned for the 2006 2007 season The New Orleans Saints returned that season The New Orleans Hornets now named the Pelicans returned to the city for the 2007 2008 season New Orleans hosted the 2008 NBA All Star Game Additionally the city hosted Super Bowl XLVII Major annual events such as Mardi Gras Voodoo Experience and the Jazz amp Heritage Festival were never displaced or canceled A new annual festival The Running of the Bulls New Orleans was created in 2007 90 Hurricane Ida Main article Hurricane Ida On August 29 2021 Hurricane Ida a category 4 hurricane made landfall West of New Orleans where the Hurricane Ida tornado outbreak caused damage Geography A true color satellite image taken on NASA s Landsat 7 2004 New Orleans is located in the Mississippi River Delta south of Lake Pontchartrain on the banks of the Mississippi River approximately 105 miles 169 km upriver from the Gulf of Mexico According to the U S Census Bureau the city s area is 350 square miles 910 km2 of which 169 square miles 440 km2 is land and 181 square miles 470 km2 52 is water 91 The area along the river is characterized by ridges and hollows Elevation See also Drainage in New Orleans Vertical cross section showing maximum levee height of 23 feet 7 0 m New Orleans was originally settled on the river s natural levees or high ground After the Flood Control Act of 1965 the U S Army Corps of Engineers built floodwalls and man made levees around a much larger geographic footprint that included previous marshland and swamp Over time pumping of water from marshland allowed for development into lower elevation areas Today half of the city is at or below local mean sea level while the other half is slightly above sea level Evidence suggests that portions of the city may be dropping in elevation due to subsidence 92 A 2007 study by Tulane and Xavier University suggested that 51 of the contiguous urbanized portions of Orleans Jefferson and St Bernard parishes lie at or above sea level with the more densely populated areas generally on higher ground The average elevation of the city is currently between 1 foot 0 30 m and 2 feet 0 61 m below sea level with some portions of the city as high as 20 feet 6 m at the base of the river levee in Uptown and others as low as 7 feet 2 m below sea level in the farthest reaches of Eastern New Orleans 93 94 A study published by the ASCE Journal of Hydrologic Engineering in 2016 however stated most of New Orleans proper about 65 is at or below mean sea level as defined by the average elevation of Lake Pontchartrain 95 The magnitude of subsidence potentially caused by the draining of natural marsh in the New Orleans area and southeast Louisiana is a topic of debate A study published in Geology in 2006 by an associate professor at Tulane University claims While erosion and wetland loss are huge problems along Louisiana s coast the basement 30 feet 9 1 m to 50 feet 15 m beneath much of the Mississippi Delta has been highly stable for the past 8 000 years with negligible subsidence rates 96 The study noted however that the results did not necessarily apply to the Mississippi River Delta nor the New Orleans metropolitan area proper On the other hand a report by the American Society of Civil Engineers claims that New Orleans is subsiding sinking 97 Large portions of Orleans St Bernard and Jefferson parishes are currently below sea level and continue to sink New Orleans is built on thousands of feet of soft sand silt and clay Subsidence or settling of the ground surface occurs naturally due to the consolidation and oxidation of organic soils called marsh in New Orleans and local groundwater pumping In the past flooding and deposition of sediments from the Mississippi River counterbalanced the natural subsidence leaving southeast Louisiana at or above sea level However due to major flood control structures being built upstream on the Mississippi River and levees being built around New Orleans fresh layers of sediment are not replenishing the ground lost by subsidence 97 In May 2016 NASA published a study which suggested that most areas were in fact experiencing subsidence at a highly variable rate which was generally consistent with but somewhat higher than previous studies 98 Cityscape See also Wards of New Orleans and Neighborhoods in New Orleans Bourbon Street New Orleans in 2003 looking towards Canal Street New Orleans contains many distinctive neighborhoods The Central Business District is located immediately north and west of the Mississippi and was historically called the American Quarter or American Sector It was developed after the heart of French and Spanish settlement It includes Lafayette Square Most streets in this area fan out from a central point Major streets include Canal Street Poydras Street Tulane Avenue and Loyola Avenue Canal Street divides the traditional downtown area from the uptown area Every street crossing Canal Street between the Mississippi River and Rampart Street which is the northern edge of the French Quarter has a different name for the uptown and downtown portions For example St Charles Avenue known for its street car line is called Royal Street below Canal Street though where it traverses the Central Business District between Canal and Lee Circle it is properly called St Charles Street 99 Elsewhere in the city Canal Street serves as the dividing point between the South and North portions of various streets In the local parlance downtown means downriver from Canal Street while uptown means upriver from Canal Street Downtown neighborhoods include the French Quarter Treme the 7th Ward Faubourg Marigny Bywater the Upper Ninth Ward and the Lower Ninth Ward Uptown neighborhoods include the Warehouse District the Lower Garden District the Garden District the Irish Channel the University District Carrollton Gert Town Fontainebleau and Broadmoor However the Warehouse and the Central Business District are frequently called Downtown as a specific region as in the Downtown Development District Other major districts within the city include Bayou St John Mid City Gentilly Lakeview Lakefront New Orleans East and Algiers Historic and residential architecture See also Buildings and architecture of New Orleans New Orleans is world famous for its abundance of architectural styles that reflect the city s multicultural heritage Though New Orleans possesses numerous structures of national architectural significance it is equally if not more revered for its enormous largely intact even post Katrina historic built environment Twenty National Register Historic Districts have been established and fourteen local historic districts aid in preservation Thirteen of the districts are administered by the New Orleans Historic District Landmarks Commission HDLC while one the French Quarter is administered by the Vieux Carre Commission VCC Additionally both the National Park Service via the National Register of Historic Places and the HDLC have landmarked individual buildings many of which lie outside the boundaries of existing historic districts 100 Housing styles include the shotgun house and the bungalow style Creole cottages and townhouses notable for their large courtyards and intricate iron balconies line the streets of the French Quarter American townhouses double gallery houses and Raised Center Hall Cottages are notable St Charles Avenue is famed for its large antebellum homes Its mansions are in various styles such as Greek Revival American Colonial and the Victorian styles of Queen Anne and Italianate architecture New Orleans is also noted for its large European style Catholic cemeteries Tallest buildings See also List of tallest buildings in New Orleans Skyline of the Central Business District of New Orleans For much of its history New Orleans skyline displayed only low and mid rise structures The soft soils are susceptible to subsidence and there was doubt about the feasibility of constructing high rises Developments in engineering throughout the 20th century eventually made it possible to build sturdy foundations in the foundations that underlie the structures In the 1960s the World Trade Center New Orleans and Plaza Tower demonstrated skyscrapers viability One Shell Square became the city s tallest building in 1972 The oil boom of the 1970s and early 1980s redefined New Orleans skyline with the development of the Poydras Street corridor Most are clustered along Canal Street and Poydras Street in the Central Business District Name Stories HeightOne Shell Square 51 697 ft 212 m Place St Charles 53 645 ft 197 m Plaza Tower 45 531 ft 162 m Energy Centre 39 530 ft 160 m First Bank and Trust Tower 36 481 ft 147 m Climate See also Hurricane preparedness for New Orleans Snow falls on St Charles Avenue in December 2008 The climate of New Orleans is humid subtropical Koppen Cfa with short generally mild winters and hot humid summers in the 1991 2020 climate normals the USDA hardiness zone is 9b with the coldest temperature in most years being about 27 6 F 2 4 C The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 54 3 F 12 4 C in January to 84 F 28 9 C in August Officially as measured at New Orleans International Airport temperature records range from 11 to 102 F 12 to 39 C on December 23 1989 and August 22 1980 respectively Audubon Park has recorded temperatures ranging from 6 F 14 C on February 13 1899 up to 104 F 40 C on June 24 2009 101 Dewpoints in the summer months June August are relatively high ranging from 71 1 to 73 4 F 21 7 to 23 0 C 102 The average precipitation is 62 5 inches 1 590 mm annually the summer months are the wettest while October is the driest month 101 Precipitation in winter usually accompanies the passing of a cold front There are a median of over 80 days of 90 F 32 C highs 9 days per winter where the high does not exceed 50 F 10 C and less than 8 nights with freezing lows annually although it is not uncommon for entire winter seasons to pass with no freezing temperatures at all such as the 2003 04 winter the 2012 13 winter the 2015 16 winter and the consecutive winters of 2018 19 and 2019 20 It is rare for the temperature to reach 20 or 100 F 7 or 38 C with the last occurrence of each being January 17 2018 and June 26 2016 respectively 101 New Orleans experiences snowfall only on rare occasions A small amount of snow fell during the 2004 Christmas Eve Snowstorm and again on Christmas December 25 when a combination of rain sleet and snow fell on the city leaving some bridges icy The New Year s Eve 1963 snowstorm affected New Orleans and brought 4 5 inches 11 cm Snow fell again on December 22 1989 during the December 1989 United States cold wave when most of the city received 1 2 inches 2 5 5 1 cm The last significant snowfall in New Orleans was on the morning of December 11 2008 103 Climate data for Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport 1991 2020 normals a extremes 1946 present b Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 83 28 85 29 89 32 92 33 97 36 101 38 101 38 102 39 101 38 97 36 90 32 85 29 102 39 Mean maximum F C 77 5 25 3 79 7 26 5 82 9 28 3 86 5 30 3 91 9 33 3 95 2 35 1 96 6 35 9 96 7 35 9 94 3 34 6 89 8 32 1 83 8 28 8 80 3 26 8 97 6 36 4 Average high F C 62 5 16 9 66 4 19 1 72 3 22 4 78 5 25 8 85 3 29 6 90 0 32 2 91 4 33 0 91 3 32 9 88 1 31 2 80 6 27 0 71 2 21 8 64 8 18 2 78 5 25 8 Daily mean F C 54 3 12 4 58 0 14 4 63 8 17 7 70 1 21 2 77 1 25 1 82 4 28 0 83 9 28 8 84 0 28 9 80 8 27 1 72 5 22 5 62 4 16 9 56 6 13 7 70 5 21 4 Average low F C 46 1 7 8 49 7 9 8 55 3 12 9 61 7 16 5 69 0 20 6 74 7 23 7 76 5 24 7 76 6 24 8 73 5 23 1 64 3 17 9 53 7 12 1 48 4 9 1 62 5 16 9 Mean minimum F C 29 5 1 4 33 4 0 8 38 0 3 3 47 1 8 4 57 3 14 1 67 4 19 7 71 4 21 9 71 1 21 7 63 3 17 4 47 7 8 7 37 7 3 2 32 6 0 3 27 6 2 4 Record low F C 14 10 16 9 25 4 32 0 41 5 50 10 60 16 60 16 42 6 35 2 24 4 11 12 11 12 Average precipitation inches mm 5 18 132 4 13 105 4 36 111 5 22 133 5 64 143 7 62 194 6 79 172 6 91 176 5 11 130 3 70 94 3 87 98 4 82 122 63 35 1 609 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 9 5 9 0 8 1 7 3 7 8 12 7 13 9 13 6 9 8 7 1 7 1 9 2 115 1Average relative humidity 75 6 73 0 72 9 73 4 74 4 76 4 79 2 79 4 77 8 74 9 77 2 76 9 75 9Mean monthly sunshine hours 153 0 161 5 219 4 251 9 278 9 274 3 257 1 251 9 228 7 242 6 171 8 157 8 2 648 9Percent possible sunshine 47 52 59 65 66 65 60 62 62 68 54 50 60Source NOAA relative humidity and sun 1961 1990 c 101 105 102 Climate data for Audubon Park New Orleans 1991 2020 normals extremes 1893 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 84 29 86 30 91 33 93 34 99 37 104 40 102 39 103 39 101 38 97 36 92 33 85 29 104 40 Average high F C 64 3 17 9 68 4 20 2 74 5 23 6 80 9 27 2 87 9 31 1 92 5 33 6 93 9 34 4 94 0 34 4 90 1 32 3 82 6 28 1 72 9 22 7 66 4 19 1 80 7 27 1 Daily mean F C 55 4 13 0 59 4 15 2 65 2 18 4 71 4 21 9 78 6 25 9 83 7 28 7 85 2 29 6 85 5 29 7 81 8 27 7 73 6 23 1 63 7 17 6 57 7 14 3 71 8 22 1 Average low F C 46 5 8 1 50 5 10 3 55 8 13 2 62 0 16 7 69 3 20 7 74 9 23 8 76 6 24 8 76 9 24 9 73 6 23 1 64 7 18 2 54 6 12 6 49 0 9 4 62 9 17 2 Record low F C 13 11 6 14 26 3 32 0 46 8 54 12 61 16 60 16 49 9 35 2 26 3 12 11 6 14 Average precipitation inches mm 4 95 126 4 14 105 4 60 117 4 99 127 5 39 137 7 37 187 8 77 223 6 80 173 5 72 145 3 58 91 3 78 96 4 51 115 64 60 1 641 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 9 8 8 9 7 5 7 0 7 4 12 6 15 1 13 3 10 0 6 8 7 3 8 8 114 5Source NOAA 101 106 Threat from tropical cyclones Hurricanes of Category 3 or greater passing within 100 miles from 1852 to 2005 NOAA Hurricanes pose a severe threat to the area and the city is particularly at risk because of its low elevation because it is surrounded by water from the north east and south and because of Louisiana s sinking coast 107 According to the Federal Emergency Management Agency New Orleans is the nation s most vulnerable city to hurricanes 108 Indeed portions of Greater New Orleans have been flooded by the Grand Isle Hurricane of 1909 109 the New Orleans Hurricane of 1915 109 1947 Fort Lauderdale Hurricane 109 Hurricane Flossy 110 in 1956 Hurricane Betsy in 1965 Hurricane Georges in 1998 Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 Hurricane Gustav in 2008 and Hurricane Zeta in 2020 Zeta was also the most intense hurricane to pass over New Orleans with the flooding in Betsy being significant and in a few neighborhoods severe and that in Katrina being disastrous in the majority of the city 111 112 113 On August 29 2005 storm surge from Hurricane Katrina caused catastrophic failure of the federally designed and built levees flooding 80 of the city 114 115 A report by the American Society of Civil Engineers says that had the levees and floodwalls not failed and had the pump stations operated nearly two thirds of the deaths would not have occurred 97 New Orleans has always had to consider the risk of hurricanes but the risks are dramatically greater today due to coastal erosion from human interference 116 Since the beginning of the 20th century it has been estimated that Louisiana has lost 2 000 square miles 5 000 km2 of coast including many of its barrier islands which once protected New Orleans against storm surge Following Hurricane Katrina the Army Corps of Engineers has instituted massive levee repair and hurricane protection measures to protect the city In 2006 Louisiana voters overwhelmingly adopted an amendment to the state s constitution to dedicate all revenues from off shore drilling to restore Louisiana s eroding coast line 117 U S Congress has allocated 7 billion to bolster New Orleans flood protection 118 According to a study by the National Academy of Engineering and the National Research Council levees and floodwalls surrounding New Orleans no matter how large or sturdy cannot provide absolute protection against overtopping or failure in extreme events Levees and floodwalls should be viewed as a way to reduce risks from hurricanes and storm surges not as measures that eliminate risk For structures in hazardous areas and residents who do not relocate the committee recommended major floodproofing measures such as elevating the first floor of buildings to at least the 100 year flood level 119 DemographicsHistorical populationYearPop 17693 190 17783 060 4 1 17915 497 79 6 181017 242 213 7 182027 176 57 6 183046 082 69 6 1840102 193 121 8 1850116 375 13 9 1860168 675 44 9 1870191 418 13 5 1880216 090 12 9 1890242 039 12 0 1900287 104 18 6 1910339 075 18 1 1920387 219 14 2 1930458 762 18 5 1940494 537 7 8 1950570 445 15 3 1960627 525 10 0 1970593 471 5 4 1980557 515 6 1 1990496 938 10 9 2000484 674 2 5 2010343 829 29 1 2020383 997 11 7 Population given for the City of New Orleans not for Orleans Parish before New Orleans absorbed suburbs and rural areas of Orleans Parish in 1874 since which time the city and parish have been coterminous Population for Orleans Parish was 41 351 in 1820 49 826 in 1830 102 193 in 1840 119 460 in 1850 174 491 in 1860 and 191 418 in 1870 Source U S Decennial Census 120 Historical Population Figures 86 121 122 123 124 1790 1960 125 1900 1990 126 1990 2000 127 2010 2013 128 2020 estimate 129 From the 2010 U S census to 2014 census estimates the city grew by 12 adding an average of more than 10 000 new residents each year following the official decennial census 121 According to the 2020 United States census there were 383 997 people 151 753 households and 69 370 families residing in the city Prior to 1960 the population of New Orleans steadily increased to a historic 627 525 Beginning in 1960 the population decreased due to factors such as the cycles of oil production and tourism 130 131 and as suburbanization increased as with many cities 132 and jobs migrated to surrounding parishes 133 This economic and population decline resulted in high levels of poverty in the city in 1960 it had the fifth highest poverty rate of all U S cities 134 and was almost twice the national average in 2005 at 24 5 132 New Orleans experienced an increase in residential segregation from 1900 to 1980 leaving the disproportionately Black and African American poor in older low lying locations 133 These areas were especially susceptible to flood and storm damage 135 The last population estimate before Hurricane Katrina was 454 865 as of July 1 2005 136 A population analysis released in August 2007 estimated the population to be 273 000 60 of the pre Katrina population and an increase of about 50 000 since July 2006 137 A September 2007 report by The Greater New Orleans Community Data Center which tracks population based on U S Postal Service figures found that in August 2007 just over 137 000 households received mail That compares with about 198 000 households in July 2005 representing about 70 of pre Katrina population 138 In 2010 the U S Census Bureau revised upward its 2008 population estimate for the city to 336 644 inhabitants 86 Estimates from 2010 showed that neighborhoods that did not flood were near or even greater than 100 of their pre Katrina populations 139 Katrina displaced 800 000 people contributing significantly to the decline 140 Black and African Americans renters the elderly and people with low income were disproportionately affected by Katrina compared to affluent and white residents 141 142 In Katrina s aftermath city government commissioned groups such as Bring New Orleans Back Commission the New Orleans Neighborhood Rebuilding Plan the Unified New Orleans Plan and the Office of Recovery Management to contribute to plans addressing depopulation Their ideas included shrinking the city s footprint from before the storm incorporating community voices into development plans and creating green spaces 141 some of which incited controversy 143 144 A 2006 study by researchers at Tulane University and the University of California Berkeley determined that as many as 10 000 to 14 000 undocumented immigrants many from Mexico resided in New Orleans 145 In 2016 the Pew Research Center estimated at least 35 000 undocumented immigrants lived in New Orleans and its metropolitan area 146 The New Orleans Police Department began a new policy to no longer cooperate with federal immigration enforcement beginning on February 28 2016 147 As of 2010 update 90 3 of residents age 5 and older spoke English at home as a primary language while 4 8 spoke Spanish 1 9 Vietnamese and 1 1 spoke French In total 9 7 population age 5 and older spoke a mother language other than English 148 Race and ethnicity See also Hondurans in New Orleans Italians in New Orleans and Vietnamese in New Orleans Racial and ethnic composition 2020 149 2010 150 1990 151 1970 151 1940 151 White n a 33 0 34 9 54 5 69 7 Non Hispanic 31 61 30 5 33 1 50 6 152 n aBlack or African American 53 61 60 2 61 9 45 0 30 1 Hispanic or Latino of any race 8 08 5 2 3 5 4 4 152 n aAsian 2 75 2 9 1 9 0 2 0 1 Pacific Islander 0 03 n a n a n a n aTwo or more races 3 71 1 7 n a n a n a Map of racial distribution in the Greater New Orleans area 2010 U S census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other Growing into a predominantly Black and African American city by race and ethnicity since 1990 151 in 2010 the racial and ethnic makeup of New Orleans was 60 2 Black and African American 33 0 White 2 9 Asian 1 7 Vietnamese 0 3 Indian 0 3 Chinese 0 1 Filipino 0 1 Korean 0 0 Pacific Islander and 1 7 people of two or more races 153 People of Hispanic or Latino American origin made up 5 3 of the population 1 3 were Mexican 1 3 Honduran 0 4 Cuban 0 3 Puerto Rican and 0 3 Nicaraguan In 2020 the racial and ethnic makeup of the city was 53 61 Black or African American 31 61 non Hispanic white 0 2 American Indian and Alaska Native 0 03 Pacific Islander 3 71 multiracial or of another race and 8 08 Hispanic and Latino American of any race 149 The growth of the Hispanic and Latino population in New Orleans proper from 2010 to 2020 reflected national demographic trends of diversification throughout regions once predominantly non Hispanic white 154 Additionally the 2020 census revealed the city now has a more diverse population than it did before Katrina yet 21 fewer people than it had in 2000 155 As of 2011 update the Hispanic and Latino American population had also grown in the Greater New Orleans area alongside Black and African American residents including in Kenner central Metairie and Terrytown in Jefferson Parish and Eastern New Orleans and Mid City in New Orleans proper 156 Janet Murguia president and chief executive officer of the UnidosUS stated that up to 120 000 Hispanic and Latino Americans workers lived in New Orleans In June 2007 one study stated that the Hispanic and Latino American population had risen from 15 000 pre Katrina to over 50 000 157 After Katrina the small Brazilian American population expanded Portuguese speakers were the second most numerous group to take English as a second language classes in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans after Spanish speakers Many Brazilians worked in skilled trades such as tile and flooring although fewer worked as day laborers than other Hispanic and Latino Americans Many had moved from Brazilian communities in the northeastern United States and Florida and Georgia Brazilians settled throughout the metropolitan area most were undocumented In January 2008 the New Orleans Brazilian population had a mid range estimate of 3 000 people By 2008 Brazilians had opened many small churches shops and restaurants catering to their community 158 Among the growing Asian American community the earliest Filipino Americans to live within the city arrived in the early 1800s 159 The Vietnamese American community grew to become the largest by 2010 as many fled the aftermath of the Vietnam War in the 1970s 160 Sexual orientation and gender identity 2016 New Orleans Pride New Orleans and its metropolitan area have historically been popular destinations for lesbian gay bisexual and transgender communities 161 162 In 2015 a Gallup survey determined New Orleans was one of the largest cities in the American South with a large LGBT population 163 164 Much of the LGBT New Orleans population live near the Central Business District Mid City and Uptown many gay bars and night clubs are present in those areas 165 Religion Cathedral Basilica of St Louis King of France Beth Israel synagogue building on Carondelet Street New Orleans colonial history of French and Spanish settlement generated a strong Roman Catholic tradition Catholic missions ministered to slaves and free people of color and established schools for them In addition many late 19th and early 20th century European immigrants such as the Irish some Germans and Italians were Catholic Within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans which includes not only the city but the surrounding parishes as well 40 percent of the population was Roman Catholic since 2016 166 Catholicism is reflected in French and Spanish cultural traditions including its many parochial schools street names architecture and festivals including Mardi Gras Within the city and metropolitan area Catholicism is also reflected in the Black and African cultural traditions with Gospel Mass 167 Influenced by the Bible Belt s prominent Protestant population New Orleans also has a sizable non Catholic Christian demographic Roughly the majority of Protestant Christians were Baptist and the city proper s largest non Catholic bodies were the Southern Baptist Convention National Missionary Baptist Convention of America non denominationals National Baptist Convention the United Methodist Church Episcopal Church USA African Methodist Episcopal Church National Baptist Convention of America and the Church of God in Christ according to the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 168 New Orleans displays a distinctive variety of Louisiana Voodoo due in part to syncretism with African and Afro Caribbean Roman Catholic beliefs The fame of voodoo practitioner Marie Laveau contributed to this as did New Orleans Caribbean cultural influences 169 170 171 Although the tourism industry strongly associated Voodoo with the city only a small number of people are serious adherents New Orleans was also home to the occultist Mary Oneida Toups who was nicknamed the Witch Queen of New Orleans Toups coven The Religious Order of Witchcraft was the first coven to be officially recognized as a religious institution by the state of Louisiana 172 Jewish settlers primarily Sephardim settled in New Orleans from the early nineteenth century Some migrated from the communities established in the colonial years in Charleston South Carolina and Savannah Georgia The merchant Abraham Cohen Labatt helped found the first Jewish congregation in New Orleans in the 1830s which became known as the Portuguese Jewish Nefutzot Yehudah congregation he and some other members were Sephardic Jews whose ancestors had lived in Portugal and Spain Ashkenazi Jews from eastern Europe immigrated in the late 19th and 20th centuries By the beginning of the 21st century 10 000 Jews lived in New Orleans This number dropped to 7 000 after Hurricane Katrina but rose again after efforts to incentivize the community s growth resulted in the arrival of about an additional 2 000 Jews 173 New Orleans synagogues lost members but most re opened in their original locations The exception was Congregation Beth Israel the oldest and most prominent Orthodox synagogue in the New Orleans region Beth Israel s building in Lakeview was destroyed by flooding After seven years of holding services in temporary quarters the congregation consecrated a new synagogue on land purchased from the Reform Congregation Gates of Prayer in Metairie 174 A visible religious minority 175 176 Muslims constituted 0 6 of the religious population as of 2019 according to Sperling s BestPlaces 177 The Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 estimated that there were 6 150 Muslims in the city proper The Islamic demographic in New Orleans and its metropolitan area have been mainly made up of Middle Eastern immigrants and African Americans Economy A tanker on the Mississippi River in New Orleans Intracoastal Waterway near New Orleans New Orleans operates one of the world s largest and busiest ports and metropolitan New Orleans is a center of maritime industry 178 The region accounts for a significant portion of the nation s oil refining and petrochemical production and serves as a white collar corporate base for onshore and offshore petroleum and natural gas production Since the beginning of the 21st century New Orleans has also grown into a technology hub 179 180 New Orleans is also a center for higher learning with over 50 000 students enrolled in the region s eleven two and four year degree granting institutions Tulane University a top 50 research university is located in Uptown Metropolitan New Orleans is a major regional hub for the health care industry and boasts a small globally competitive manufacturing sector The center city possesses a rapidly growing entrepreneurial creative industries sector and is renowned for its cultural tourism Greater New Orleans Inc GNO Inc 181 acts as the first point of contact for regional economic development coordinating between Louisiana s Department of Economic Development and the various business development agencies Port New Orleans began as a strategically located trading entrepot and it remains above all a crucial transportation hub and distribution center for waterborne commerce The Port of New Orleans is the fifth largest in the United States based on cargo volume and second largest in the state after the Port of South Louisiana It is the twelfth largest in the U S based on cargo value The Port of South Louisiana also located in the New Orleans area is the world s busiest in terms of bulk tonnage When combined with Port of New Orleans it forms the 4th largest port system in volume Many shipbuilding shipping logistics freight forwarding and commodity brokerage firms either are based in metropolitan New Orleans or maintain a local presence Examples include Intermarine 182 Bisso Towboat 183 Northrop Grumman Ship Systems 184 Trinity Yachts Expeditors International 185 Bollinger Shipyards IMTT International Coffee Corp Boasso America Transoceanic Shipping Transportation Consultants Inc Dupuy Storage amp Forwarding and Silocaf 186 The largest coffee roasting plant in the world operated by Folgers is located in New Orleans East 187 188 The steamboat Natchez operates out of New Orleans New Orleans is located near to the Gulf of Mexico and its many oil rigs Louisiana ranks fifth among states in oil production and eighth in reserves It has two of the four Strategic Petroleum Reserve SPR storage facilities West Hackberry in Cameron Parish and Bayou Choctaw in Iberville Parish The area hosts 17 petroleum refineries with a combined crude oil distillation capacity of nearly 2 8 million barrels per day 450 000 m3 d the second highest after Texas Louisiana s numerous ports include the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port LOOP which is capable of receiving the largest oil tankers Given the quantity of oil imports Louisiana is home to many major pipelines Crude Oil Exxon Chevron BP Texaco Shell Scurloch Permian Mid Valley Calumet Conoco Koch Industries Unocal U S Dept of Energy Locap Product TEPPCO Partners Colonial Plantation Explorer Texaco Collins and Liquefied Petroleum Gas Dixie TEPPCO Black Lake Koch Chevron Dynegy Kinder Morgan Energy Partners Dow Chemical Company Bridgeline FMP Tejas Texaco UTP 189 Several energy companies have regional headquarters in the area including Royal Dutch Shell Eni and Chevron Other energy producers and oilfield services companies are headquartered in the city or region and the sector supports a large professional services base of specialized engineering and design firms as well as a term office for the federal government s Minerals Management Service Business The city is the home to a single Fortune 500 company Entergy a power generation utility and nuclear power plant operations specialist 190 After Katrina the city lost its other Fortune 500 company Freeport McMoRan when it merged its copper and gold exploration unit with an Arizona company and relocated that division to Phoenix Its McMoRan Exploration affiliate remains headquartered in New Orleans 191 Companies with significant operations or headquarters in New Orleans include Pan American Life Insurance Pool Corp Rolls Royce Newpark Resources AT amp T TurboSquid iSeatz IBM Navtech Superior Energy Services Textron Marine amp Land Systems McDermott International Pellerin Milnor Lockheed Martin Imperial Trading Laitram Harrah s Entertainment Stewart Enterprises Edison Chouest Offshore Zatarain s Waldemar S Nelson amp Co Whitney National Bank Capital One Tidewater Marine Popeyes Chicken amp Biscuits Parsons Brinckerhoff MWH Global CH2M Hill Energy Partners Ltd The Receivables Exchange GE Capital and Smoothie King Tourist and convention business Tourism is a staple of the city s economy Perhaps more visible than any other sector New Orleans tourist and convention industry is a 5 5 billion industry that accounts for 40 percent of city tax revenues In 2004 the hospitality industry employed 85 000 people making it the city s top economic sector as measured by employment 192 New Orleans also hosts the World Cultural Economic Forum WCEF The forum held annually at the New Orleans Morial Convention Center is directed toward promoting cultural and economic development opportunities through the strategic convening of cultural ambassadors and leaders from around the world The first WCEF took place in October 2008 193 Federal and military agencies Aerial view of NASA s Michoud Assembly Facility Federal agencies and the Armed forces operate significant facilities there The U S Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals operates at the US Courthouse downtown NASA s Michoud Assembly Facility is located in New Orleans East and has multiple tenants including Lockheed Martin and Boeing It is a huge manufacturing complex that produced the external fuel tanks for the Space Shuttles the Saturn V first stage the Integrated Truss Structure of the International Space Station and is now used for the construction of NASA s Space Launch System The rocket factory lies within the enormous New Orleans Regional Business Park also home to the National Finance Center operated by the United States Department of Agriculture USDA and the Crescent Crown distribution center Other large governmental installations include the U S Navy s Space and Naval Warfare SPAWAR Systems Command located within the University of New Orleans Research and Technology Park in Gentilly Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans and the headquarters for the Marine Force Reserves in Federal City in Algiers Culture and contemporary lifeMain article Culture of New Orleans Tourism See also Culture of New Orleans Museums and other attractionsNew Orleans has many visitor attractions from the world renowned French Quarter to St Charles Avenue home of Tulane and Loyola universities the historic Pontchartrain Hotel and many 19th century mansions to Magazine Street with its boutique stores and antique shops French Quarter in 2009 Street artist in the French Quarter 1988 According to current travel guides New Orleans is one of the top ten most visited cities in the United States 10 1 million visitors came to New Orleans in 2004 192 194 Prior to Katrina 265 hotels with 38 338 rooms operated in the Greater New Orleans Area In May 2007 that had declined to some 140 hotels and motels with over 31 000 rooms 195 A 2009 Travel Leisure poll of America s Favorite Cities ranked New Orleans first in ten categories the most first place rankings of the 30 cities included According to the poll New Orleans was the best U S city as a spring break destination and for wild weekends stylish boutique hotels cocktail hours singles bar scenes live music concerts and bands antique and vintage shops cafes coffee bars neighborhood restaurants and people watching The city ranked second for friendliness behind Charleston South Carolina gay friendliness behind San Francisco bed and breakfast hotels inns and ethnic food However the city placed near the bottom in cleanliness safety and as a family destination 196 197 The French Quarter known locally as the Quarter or Vieux Carre which was the colonial era city and is bounded by the Mississippi River Rampart Street Canal Street and Esplanade Avenue contains popular hotels bars and nightclubs Notable tourist attractions in the Quarter include Bourbon Street Jackson Square St Louis Cathedral the French Market including Cafe du Monde famous for cafe au lait and beignets and Preservation Hall Also in the French Quarter is the old New Orleans Mint a former branch of the United States Mint which now operates as a museum and The Historic New Orleans Collection a museum and research center housing art and artifacts relating to the history and the Gulf South Close to the Quarter is the Treme community which contains the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park and the New Orleans African American Museum a site which is listed on the Louisiana African American Heritage Trail The Natchez is an authentic steamboat with a calliope that cruises the length of the city twice daily Unlike most other places in the United States New Orleans has become widely known for its elegant decay The city s historic cemeteries and their distinct above ground tombs are attractions in themselves the oldest and most famous of which Saint Louis Cemetery greatly resembles Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris The New Orleans Museum of Art NOMA located in City Park The National WWII Museum offers a multi building odyssey through the history of the Pacific and European theaters Nearby Confederate Memorial Hall Museum the oldest continually operating museum in Louisiana although under renovation since Hurricane Katrina contains the second largest collection of Confederate memorabilia Art museums include the Contemporary Arts Center the New Orleans Museum of Art NOMA in City Park and the Ogden Museum of Southern Art New Orleans is home to the Audubon Nature Institute which consists of Audubon Park the Audubon Zoo the Aquarium of the Americas and the Audubon Insectarium and home to gardens which include Longue Vue House and Gardens and the New Orleans Botanical Garden City Park one of the country s most expansive and visited urban parks has one of the largest stands of oak trees in the world Other points of interest can be found in the surrounding areas Many wetlands are found nearby including Honey Island Swamp and Barataria Preserve Chalmette Battlefield and National Cemetery located just south of the city is the site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans Entertainment and performing arts Main article Music of New Orleans New Orleans Mardi Gras in the early 1890s Mounted krewe officers in the Thoth Parade during Mardi Gras The New Orleans area is home to numerous annual celebrations The most well known is Carnival or Mardi Gras Carnival officially begins on the Feast of the Epiphany also known in some Christian traditions as the Twelfth Night of Christmas Mardi Gras French for Fat Tuesday the final and grandest day of traditional Catholic festivities is the last Tuesday before the Christian liturgical season of Lent which commences on Ash Wednesday The largest of the city s many music festivals is the New Orleans Jazz amp Heritage Festival Commonly referred to simply as Jazz Fest it is one of the nation s largest music festivals The festival features a variety of music including both native Louisiana and international artists Along with Jazz Fest New Orleans Voodoo Experience Voodoo Fest and the Essence Music Festival also feature local and international artists Other major festivals include Southern Decadence the French Quarter Festival and the Tennessee Williams New Orleans Literary Festival The American playwright lived and wrote in New Orleans early in his career and set his play Streetcar Named Desire there In 2002 Louisiana began offering tax incentives for film and television production This has resulted in a substantial increase in activity and brought the nickname of Hollywood South for New Orleans Films produced in and around the city include Ray Runaway Jury The Pelican Brief Glory Road All the King s Men Deja Vu Last Holiday The Curious Case of Benjamin Button 12 Years a Slave and Project Power In 2006 work began on the Louisiana Film amp Television studio complex based in the Treme neighborhood 198 Louisiana began to offer similar tax incentives for music and theater productions in 2007 and some commentators began to refer to New Orleans as Broadway South 199 Louis Armstrong famous New Orleans jazz musicianThe first theatre in New Orleans was the French language Theatre de la Rue Saint Pierre which opened in 1792 The first opera in New Orleans was performed there in 1796 In the nineteenth century the city was the home of two of America s most important venues for French opera the Theatre d Orleans and later the French Opera House Today opera is performed by the New Orleans Opera The Marigny Opera House is home to the Marigny Opera Ballet and also hosts opera jazz and classical music performances Frank Ocean is a musician from New Orleans New Orleans has long been a significant center for music showcasing its intertwined European African and Latino American cultures The city s unique musical heritage was born in its colonial and early American days from a unique blending of European musical instruments with African rhythms As the only North American city to have allowed slaves to gather in public and play their native music largely in Congo Square now located within Louis Armstrong Park New Orleans gave birth in the early 20th century to an epochal indigenous music jazz Soon African American brass bands formed beginning a century long tradition The Louis Armstrong Park area near the French Quarter in Treme contains the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park The city s music was later also significantly influenced by Acadiana home of Cajun and Zydeco music and by Delta blues New Orleans unique musical culture is on display in its traditional funerals A spin on military funerals New Orleans traditional funerals feature sad music mostly dirges and hymns in processions on the way to the cemetery and happier music hot jazz on the way back Until the 1990s most locals preferred to call these funerals with music Visitors to the city have long dubbed them jazz funerals Much later in its musical development New Orleans was home to a distinctive brand of rhythm and blues that contributed greatly to the growth of rock and roll An example of the New Orleans sound in the 1960s is the 1 U S hit Chapel of Love by the Dixie Cups a song which knocked the Beatles out of the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 New Orleans became a hotbed for funk music in the 1960s and 1970s and by the late 1980s it had developed its own localized variant of hip hop called bounce music While not commercially successful outside of the Deep South bounce music was immensely popular in poorer neighborhoods throughout the 1990s A cousin of bounce New Orleans hip hop achieved commercial success locally and internationally producing Lil Wayne Master P Birdman Juvenile Suicideboys Cash Money Records and No Limit Records Additionally the popularity of cowpunk a fast form of southern rock originated with the help of several local bands such as The Radiators Better Than Ezra Cowboy Mouth and Dash Rip Rock Throughout the 1990s many sludge metal bands started New Orleans heavy metal bands such as Eyehategod 200 Soilent Green 201 Crowbar 202 and Down incorporated styles such as hardcore punk 203 doom metal and southern rock to create an original and heady brew of swampy and aggravated metal that has largely avoided standardization 200 201 202 203 New Orleans is the southern terminus of the famed Highway 61 made musically famous by musician Bob Dylan in his song Highway 61 Revisited Cuisine Steamship Bienville on board restaurant menu April 7 1861 Main articles Cuisine of New Orleans Louisiana Creole cuisine and Cajun cuisine New Orleans is world famous for its cuisine The indigenous cuisine is distinctive and influential New Orleans food combined local Creole haute Creole and New Orleans French cuisines Local ingredients French Spanish Italian African Native American Cajun Chinese and a hint of Cuban traditions combine to produce a truly unique and easily recognizable New Orleans flavor New Orleans is known for specialties including beignets locally pronounced like ben yays square shaped fried dough that could be called French doughnuts served with cafe au lait made with a blend of coffee and chicory rather than only coffee and po boy 204 and Italian muffuletta sandwiches Gulf oysters on the half shell fried oysters boiled crawfish and other seafood etouffee jambalaya gumbo and other Creole dishes and the Monday favorite of red beans and rice Louis Armstrong often signed his letters Red beans and ricely yours Another New Orleans specialty is the praline locally ˈ p r ɑː l iː n a candy made with brown sugar granulated sugar cream butter and pecans The city offers notable street food 205 including the Asian inspired beef Yaka mein Dialect Main article New Orleans English See also Culture of New Orleans Language Cafe du Monde a landmark New Orleans beignet cafe established in 1862New Orleans developed a distinctive local dialect that is neither Cajun English nor the stereotypical Southern accent that is often misportrayed by film and television actors Like earlier Southern Englishes it features frequent deletion of the pre consonantal r though the local white dialect also came to be quite similar to New York accents 206 No consensus describes how this happened but it likely resulted from New Orleans geographic isolation by water and the fact that the city was a major immigration port throughout the 19th century and early 20th century Specifically many members of European immigrant families originally raised in the cities of the Northeast namely New York moved to New Orleans during this time frame bringing their Northeastern accents along with their Irish Italian especially Sicilian German and Jewish culture 207 One of the strongest varieties of the New Orleans accent is sometimes identified as the Yat dialect from the greeting Where y at This distinctive accent is dying out in the city but remains strong in the surrounding parishes Less visibly various ethnic groups throughout the area have retained distinct language traditions Since Louisiana became the first U S state to join the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie in 2018 New Orleans has reemerged as an important center for the state s francophone and creolophone cultures and languages as seen in new organizations such as the Nous Foundation 208 Although rare Louisiana French and Louisiana Creole are still spoken in the city There is also Louisiana Canarian Spanish dialect spoken by the Isleno people and older members of the population SportsMain article Sports in New Orleans Club Sport League Venue capacity Founded Titles Record attendanceNew Orleans Saints American football NFL Caesars Superdome 73 208 1967 1 73 373New Orleans Pelicans Basketball NBA Smoothie King Center 16 867 2002 0 18 444New Orleans Jesters Soccer NPSL Pan American Stadium 5 000 2003 0 5 000NOLA Gold Rugby Union MLR Goldmine on Airline 10 000 2017 0 The fleur de lis is often a symbol of New Orleans and its sports teams New Orleans professional sports teams include the 2009 Super Bowl XLIV champion New Orleans Saints NFL and the New Orleans Pelicans NBA 209 210 211 It is also home to the Big Easy Rollergirls an all female flat track roller derby team and the New Orleans Blaze a women s football team 212 213 New Orleans is also home to two NCAA Division I athletic programs the Tulane Green Wave of the American Athletic Conference and the UNO Privateers of the Southland Conference The Caesars Superdome is the home of the Saints the Sugar Bowl and other prominent events It has hosted the Super Bowl a record seven times 1978 1981 1986 1990 1997 2002 and 2013 The Smoothie King Center is the home of the Pelicans VooDoo and many events that are not large enough to need the Superdome New Orleans is also home to the Fair Grounds Race Course the nation s third oldest thoroughbred track The city s Lakefront Arena has also been home to sporting events Each year New Orleans plays host to the Sugar Bowl the New Orleans Bowl the Bayou Classic and the Zurich Classic a golf tournament on the PGA Tour In addition it has often hosted major sporting events that have no permanent home such as the Super Bowl ArenaBowl NBA All Star Game BCS National Championship Game and the NCAA Final Four The Rock n Roll Mardi Gras Marathon and the Crescent City Classic are two annual road running events In 2017 Major League Rugby had its inaugural season and NOLA Gold were one of the first teams in the league 214 They play at the Gold mine on Airline a former minor league baseball stadium in the suburb of Metairie In 2022 a consortium started an attempt to bring professional soccer to New Orleans hoping to place teams in the male USL Championship and women s USL Super League by 2025 215 National protected areasBayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park Vieux Carre Historic DistrictGovernmentSee also List of mayors of New Orleans United States presidential election results for Orleans Parish Louisiana 216 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 26 664 15 00 147 854 83 15 3 301 1 86 2016 24 292 14 65 133 996 80 81 7 524 4 54 2012 28 003 17 74 126 722 80 30 3 088 1 96 2008 28 130 19 08 117 102 79 42 2 207 1 50 2004 42 847 21 74 152 610 77 43 1 646 0 84 2000 39 404 21 74 137 630 75 95 4 187 2 31 1996 39 576 20 84 144 720 76 20 5 615 2 96 1992 52 019 26 36 133 261 67 53 12 069 6 12 1988 64 763 35 24 116 851 63 58 2 186 1 19 1984 86 316 41 71 119 478 57 73 1 162 0 56 1980 74 302 39 54 106 858 56 87 6 744 3 59 1976 70 925 42 14 93 130 55 33 4 249 2 52 1972 88 075 54 55 60 790 37 65 12 581 7 79 1968 47 728 26 71 72 451 40 55 58 489 32 74 1964 81 049 49 69 82 045 50 31 0 0 00 1960 47 111 26 80 87 242 49 64 41 414 23 56 1956 93 082 56 54 64 958 39 46 6 594 4 01 1952 85 572 48 74 89 999 51 26 0 0 00 1948 29 442 23 78 41 900 33 85 52 443 42 37 1944 20 190 18 25 90 411 81 74 7 0 01 1940 16 406 14 35 97 930 85 63 28 0 02 1936 10 254 8 67 108 012 91 32 16 0 01 1932 5 407 5 95 85 288 93 87 165 0 18 1928 14 424 20 51 55 919 79 49 0 0 00 1924 7 865 16 46 37 785 79 06 2 141 4 48 1920 17 819 35 26 32 724 64 74 0 0 00 1916 2 531 7 45 30 936 91 03 516 1 52 1912 904 2 74 26 433 80 03 5 692 17 23 The city is a political subdivision of the U S state of Louisiana It has a mayor council government following a home rule charter adopted in 1954 as later amended The city council consists of seven members who are elected by single member districts and two members elected at large that is across the city parish LaToya Cantrell assumed the mayor s office in 2018 as the first female mayor of the city An ordinance in 2006 established an Office of Inspector General to review city government activities The city and the parish of Orleans operate as a merged city parish government 217 The original city was composed of what are now the 1st through 9th wards The city of Lafayette including the Garden District was added in 1852 as the 10th and 11th wards In 1870 Jefferson City including Faubourg Bouligny and much of the Audubon and University areas was annexed as the 12th 13th and 14th wards Algiers on the west bank of the Mississippi was also annexed in 1870 becoming the 15th ward New Orleans government is largely centralized in the city council and mayor s office but it maintains earlier systems from when various sections of the city managed their affairs separately For example New Orleans had seven elected tax assessors each with their own staff representing various districts of the city rather than one centralized office A constitutional amendment passed on November 7 2006 consolidated the seven assessors into one in 2010 218 The City of New Orleans used Archon Information Systems software and services to host multiple online tax sales The first tax sale was held after Hurricane Katrina 219 The New Orleans government operates both a fire department and the New Orleans Emergency Medical Services New Orleans is the only city in Louisiana that refuses to pay court ordered judgements when it loses a case that were awarded to the other party 220 The city uses a provision in the Louisiana Constitution that prohibits the seizure of a city s property to pay a judgment when it loses a lawsuit According to an article The constitution says the funds can t be seized and can only be paid out if the government appropriates the money In other words if the City of New Orleans doesn t budget the funds for judgments no judge can force the city to pay 221 Only if the city council chooses to vote to pay a judgment can the other party be paid Since the city can t be forced to pay judgments unless it chooses to do so it simply doesn t pay More than 36 million in over 500 unpaid judgements issued against the city are simply ignored some going as far back as 1996 222 The Orleans Parish Civil Sheriff s Office serves papers involving lawsuits provides court security and operates the city s correctional facilities including Orleans Parish Prison The sheriff s office shares legal jurisdiction with the New Orleans Police Department and provides it with backup on an as needed basis Before 2010 New Orleans and all other parishes in Louisiana had separate criminal and civil sheriff s offices corresponding to the separate criminal and civil courts these were merged in 2010 by Louisiana Revised Statute 33 1500 223 As of 2022 update the sheriff is Susan Hutson who defeated 17 year incumbent Marlin Gusman in the 2021 New Orleans City Election 224 225 CrimeSee also New Orleans Police Department and Culture of New Orleans Crime Crime is a notable ongoing problem in New Orleans As in comparable U S cities the incidence of homicide and other violent crimes is highly concentrated in certain impoverished neighborhoods 226 Arrested offenders in New Orleans are almost exclusively black males from impoverished communities in 2011 97 were black and 95 were male 91 of victims were black as well 227 The city s murder rate has been historically high and consistently among the highest rates nationwide since the 1970s From 1994 to 2013 New Orleans was the country s Murder Capital annually averaging over 200 murders 228 The first record was broken in 1979 when the city reached 242 homicides 229 The record was broken again reaching 250 by 1989 to 345 by the end of 1991 230 231 By 1993 New Orleans had 395 murders 80 5 for every 100 000 residents 232 In 1994 the city was officially named the Murder Capital of America hitting a historic peak of 424 murders The murder count was one of the highest in the world and surpassed that of such cities as Gary Indiana Washington D C and Baltimore 233 234 235 236 In 1999 the city s murder rate dropped down to a low of 158 and climbed to the high 200s in the early 2000s Between 2000 and 2004 New Orleans had the highest homicide rate per capita of any city in the U S with 59 people killed per year per 100 000 citizens 237 238 239 235 In 2006 with nearly half the population gone and widespread disruption and dislocation because of deaths and refugee relocations from Hurricane Katrina the city hit another record of homicides It was ranked as the most dangerous city in the country 240 241 By 2009 there was a 17 decrease in violent crime a decrease seen in other cities across the country But the homicide rate remained among the highest 242 in the United States at between 55 and 64 per 100 000 residents 243 In 2010 New Orleans homicide rate dropped to 49 1 per 100 000 but increased again in 2012 to 53 2 244 245 the highest rate among cities of 250 000 population or larger 246 The violent crime rate was a key issue in the 2010 mayoral race In January 2007 several thousand New Orleans residents marched to City Hall for a rally demanding police and city leaders tackle the crime problem Then Mayor Ray Nagin said he was totally and solely focused on addressing the problem Later the city implemented checkpoints during late night hours in problem areas 247 The murder rate climbed 14 in 2011 to 57 88 per 100 000 248 rising to 21 in the world 249 In 2016 according to annual crime statistics released by the New Orleans Police Department NOPD 176 were murdered 250 251 244 In 2017 New Orleans had the highest rate of gun violence surpassing the more populated Chicago and Detroit 252 253 In 2020 murders increased 68 from 2019 with a total of 202 murders Criminal justice observers blamed impacts from COVID 19 and changes in police strategies for the uptick 254 255 In 2022 New Orleans homicide rate skyrocketed leading every major city hence the city again being declared as the Murder Capital of America The NOPD dropped to under 1 000 officers in 2022 which means the department is severely understaffed for the city s population 256 NOPD is actively working to reduce violent crime by offering attractive incentives to recruit and retain more officers 257 EducationColleges and universities A view of Gibson Hall at Tulane University New Orleans has the highest concentration of colleges and universities in Louisiana and one of the highest in the Southern United States New Orleans also has the third highest concentration of historically black collegiate institutions in the U S University of New Orleans Xavier University of Louisiana 2019 Colleges and universities based within the city include Tulane University Loyola University New Orleans University of New Orleans Xavier University of Louisiana Southern University at New Orleans Dillard University Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center University of Holy Cross Notre Dame Seminary New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Delgado Community College William Carey College School of Nursing Primary and secondary schools See also List of schools in New Orleans Orleans Parish School Board OPSB also known as New Orleans Public Schools NOPS is the public school district for the entire city 258 Katrina was a watershed moment for the school system Pre Katrina NOPS was one of the area s largest systems along with the Jefferson Parish public school system It was also the lowest performing school district in Louisiana According to researchers Carl L Bankston and Stephen J Caldas only 12 of the 103 public schools within the city limits showed reasonably good performance 259 Following Hurricane Katrina the state of Louisiana took over most of the schools within the system all schools that matched a nominal worst performing metric Many of these schools and others were subsequently granted operating charters giving them administrative independence from the Orleans Parish School Board the Recovery School District and or the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education BESE At the start of the 2014 school year all public school students in the NOPS system attended these independent public charter schools the nation s first to do so 260 The charter schools made significant and sustained gains in student achievement led by outside operators such as KIPP the Algiers Charter School Network and the Capital One University of New Orleans Charter School Network An October 2009 assessment demonstrated continued growth in the academic performance of public schools Considering the scores of all public schools in New Orleans gives an overall school district performance score of 70 6 This score represents a 24 improvement over an equivalent pre Katrina 2004 metric when a district score of 56 9 was posted 261 Notably this score of 70 6 approaches the score 78 4 posted in 2009 by the adjacent suburban Jefferson Parish public school system though that system s performance score is itself below the state average of 91 262 One particular change was that parents could choose which school to enroll their children in rather than attending the school nearest them 263 Libraries Academic and public libraries as well as archives in New Orleans include Monroe Library at Loyola University Howard Tilton Memorial Library at Tulane University 264 the Law Library of Louisiana 265 and the Earl K Long Library at the University of New Orleans 266 The New Orleans Public Library operates in 13 locations 267 The main library includes a Louisiana Division that houses city archives and special collections 268 Other research archives are located at the Historic New Orleans Collection 269 and the Old U S Mint 270 An independently operated lending library called Iron Rail Book Collective specializes in radical and hard to find books The library contains over 8 000 titles and is open to the public The Louisiana Historical Association was founded in New Orleans in 1889 It operated first at Howard Memorial Library A separate Memorial Hall for it was later added to Howard Library designed by New Orleans architect Thomas Sully 271 MediaMain article Media of New Orleans See also Culture of New Orleans News amp entertainment mediaSee also New Orleans in fiction Historically the major newspaper in the area was The Times Picayune The paper made headlines of its own in 2012 when owner Advance Publications cut its print schedule to three days each week instead focusing its efforts on its website NOLA com That action briefly made New Orleans the largest city in the country without a daily newspaper until the Baton Rouge newspaper The Advocate began a New Orleans edition in September 2012 In June 2013 the Times Picayune resumed daily printing with a condensed newsstand tabloid edition nicknamed TP Street which is published on the three days each week that its namesake broadsheet edition is not printed the Picayune has not returned to daily delivery With the resumption of daily print editions from the Times Picayune and the launch of the New Orleans edition of The Advocate now The New Orleans Advocate the city had two daily newspapers for the first time since the afternoon States Item ceased publication on May 31 1980 In 2019 the papers merged to form The Times Picayune The New Orleans Advocate In addition to the daily newspaper weekly publications include The Louisiana Weekly and Gambit Weekly 272 Also in wide circulation is the Clarion Herald the newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans Greater New Orleans is the 54th largest designated market area DMA in the U S serving at least 566 960 homes 273 Major television network affiliates serving the area include 4 WWL CBS 6 WDSU NBC 8 WVUE Fox 12 WYES PBS 20 WHNO LeSEA 26 WGNO ABC 32 WLAE Independent 38 WNOL The CW 42 KGLA Telemundo 49 WPXL Ion 54 WUPL MyNetworkTV WWOZ 274 the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Station broadcasts 275 modern and traditional jazz blues rhythm and blues brass band gospel cajun zydeco Caribbean Latin Brazilian African and bluegrass 24 hours per day WTUL is Tulane University s radio station 276 Its programming includes 20th century classical reggae jazz showtunes indie rock electronic music soul funk goth punk hip hop New Orleans music opera folk hardcore Americana country blues Latin cheese techno local world ska swing and big band kids shows and news programming WTUL is listener supported and non commercial The disc jockeys are volunteers many of them college students Louisiana s film and television tax credits spurred growth in the television industry although to a lesser degree than in the film industry Many films and advertisements were set there along with television programs such as The Real World New Orleans in 2000 277 The Real World Back to New Orleans in 2009 and 2010 278 279 and Bad Girls Club New Orleans in 2011 280 Two radio stations that were influential in promoting New Orleans based bands and singers were 50 000 watt WNOE 1060 and 10 000 watt WTIX 690 AM These two stations competed head to head from the late 1950s to the late 1970s TransportationPublic transportation Hurricane Katrina devastated transit service in 2005 The New Orleans Regional Transit Authority RTA was quicker to restore the streetcars to service while bus service had only been restored to 35 of pre Katrina levels as recently as the end of 2013 During the same period streetcars arrived at an average of once every seventeen minutes compared to bus frequencies of once every thirty eight minutes The same priority was demonstrated in RTA s spending increasing the proportion of its budget devoted to streetcars to more than three times compared to its pre Katrina budget 281 Through the end of 2017 counting both streetcar and bus trips only 51 of service had been restored to pre Katrina levels 282 In 2017 the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority began operation on the extension of the Rampart St Claude streetcar line Another change to transit service that year was the re routing of the 15 Freret and 28 Martin Luther King bus routes to Canal Street These increased the number of jobs accessible by a thirty minute walk or transit ride from 83 722 in 2016 to 89 216 in 2017 This resulted in a regional increase in such job access by more than a full percentage point 282 Streetcars A New Orleans streetcar traveling down Canal Street Streetcar network Main article Streetcars in New Orleans New Orleans has four active streetcar lines The St Charles Streetcar Line is the oldest continuously operating streetcar line in the U S 283 The line first operated as local rail service in 1835 between Carrollton and downtown New Orleans Operated by the Carrollton amp New Orleans R R Co the locomotives were then powered by steam engines and a one way fare cost 25 cents 284 Each car is a historic landmark It runs from Canal Street to the other end of St Charles Avenue then turns right into South Carrollton Avenue to its terminal at Carrollton and Claiborne The Riverfront Streetcar Line runs parallel to the river from Esplanade Street through the French Quarter to Canal Street to the Convention Center above Julia Street in the Arts District The Canal Streetcar Line uses the Riverfront line tracks from the intersection of Canal Street and Poydras Street down Canal Street then branches off and ends at the cemeteries at City Park Avenue with a spur running from the intersection of Canal and Carrollton Avenue to the entrance of City Park at Esplanade near the entrance to the New Orleans Museum of Art The Rampart St Claude Streetcar Line opened on January 28 2013 as the Loyola UPT Line running along Loyola Avenue from New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal to Canal Street then continuing along Canal Street to the river and on weekends on the Riverfront line tracks to French Market The French Quarter Rail Expansion extended the line from the Loyola Avenue Canal Street intersection along Rampart Street and St Claude Avenue to Elysian Fields Avenue It no longer runs along Canal Street to the river or on weekends on the Riverfront line tracks to French Market The city s streetcars were featured in the Tennessee Williams play A Streetcar Named Desire The streetcar line to Desire Street became a bus line in 1948 Buses Public transportation is operated by the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority RTA Many bus routes connect the city and suburban areas The RTA lost 200 buses in the flood Some of the replacement buses operate on biodiesel 285 The Jefferson Parish Department of Transit Administration 286 operates Jefferson Transit which provides service between the city and its suburbs 287 Ferries Ferries connecting New Orleans with Algiers left and Gretna right New Orleans has had continuous ferry service since 1827 288 operating three routes as of 2017 The Canal Street Ferry or Algiers Ferry connects downtown New Orleans at the foot of Canal Street with the National Historic Landmark District of Algiers Point across the Mississippi West Bank in local parlance It services passenger vehicles bicycles and pedestrians This same terminal also serves the Canal Street Gretna Ferry connecting Gretna Louisiana for pedestrians and bicyclists only A third auto bicycle pedestrian connects Chalmette Louisiana and Lower Algiers 289 Bicycling The city s flat landscape simple street grid and mild winters facilitate bicycle ridership helping to make New Orleans eighth among U S cities in its rate of bicycle and pedestrian transportation as of 2010 290 and sixth in terms of the percentage of bicycling commuters 291 New Orleans is located at the start of the Mississippi River Trail a 3 000 mile 4 800 km bicycle path that stretches from the city s Audubon Park to Minnesota 292 Since Katrina the city has actively sought to promote bicycling by constructing a 1 5 million bike trail from Mid City to Lake Pontchartrain 293 and by adding over 37 miles 60 km of bicycle lanes to various streets including St Charles Avenue 290 In 2009 Tulane University contributed to these efforts by converting the main street through its Uptown campus McAlister Place into a pedestrian mall open to bicycle traffic 294 The Lafitte Greenway bicycle and pedestrian trail opened in 2015 and is ultimately planned to extend 3 1 mile 5 0 km from the French Quarter to Lakeview New Orleans has been recognized for its abundance of uniquely decorated and uniquely designed bicycles 295 Roads See also List of streets of New Orleans New Orleans is served by Interstate 10 Interstate 610 and Interstate 510 I 10 travels east west through the city as the Pontchartrain Expressway In New Orleans East it is known as the Eastern Expressway I 610 provides a direct shortcut for traffic passing through New Orleans via I 10 allowing that traffic to bypass I 10 s southward curve In addition to the interstates U S 90 travels through the city while U S 61 terminates downtown In addition U S 11 terminates in the eastern portion of the city New Orleans is home to many bridges Crescent City Connection is perhaps the most notable It serves as New Orleans major bridge across the Mississippi providing a connection between the city s downtown on the eastbank and its westbank suburbs Other Mississippi crossings are the Huey P Long Bridge carrying U S 90 and the Hale Boggs Memorial Bridge carrying Interstate 310 The Twin Span Bridge a five mile 8 km causeway in eastern New Orleans carries I 10 across Lake Pontchartrain Also in eastern New Orleans Interstate 510 LA 47 travels across the Intracoastal Waterway Mississippi River Gulf Outlet Canal via the Paris Road Bridge connecting New Orleans East and suburban Chalmette The tolled Lake Pontchartrain Causeway consisting of two parallel bridges are at 24 miles 39 km long the longest bridges in the world Built in the 1950s southbound span and 1960s northbound span the bridges connect New Orleans with its suburbs on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain via Metairie Taxi service United Cab is the city s largest taxi service with a fleet of over 300 cabs 296 It has operated 365 days a year since its establishment in 1938 with the exception of the month after Hurricane Katrina in which operations were temporarily shut down due to disruptions in radio service 297 United Cab s fleet was once larger than 450 cabs but has been reduced in recent years due to competition from services like Uber and Lyft according to owner Syed Kazmi 296 In January 2016 New Orleans based sweet shop Sucre approached United Cab with to deliver its king cakes locally on demand Sucre saw this partnership as a way to alleviate some of the financial pressure being placed on taxi services due to Uber s presence in the city 298 Airports The metropolitan area is served by the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport located in the suburb of Kenner Regional airports include the Lakefront Airport Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans Callender Field in the suburb of Belle Chasse and Southern Seaplane Airport also located in Belle Chasse Southern Seaplane has a 3 200 foot 980 m runway for wheeled planes and a 5 000 foot 1 500 m water runway for seaplanes Armstrong International is the busiest airport in Louisiana and the only to handle scheduled international passenger flights As of 2018 more than 13 million passengers passed through Armstrong on nonstops flights from more than 57 destinations including foreign nonstops from the United Kingdom Germany Canada Mexico Jamaica and the Dominican Republic Rail The city is served by Amtrak The New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal is the central rail depot and is served by the Crescent operating between New Orleans and New York City the City of New Orleans operating between New Orleans and Chicago and the Sunset Limited operating between New Orleans and Los Angeles Up until August 2005 when Hurricane Katrina struck the Sunset Limited s route continued east to Orlando With the strategic benefits of both the port and its double track Mississippi River crossings the city attracted six of the seven Class I railroads in North America Union Pacific Railroad BNSF Railway Norfolk Southern Railway Kansas City Southern Railway CSX Transportation and Canadian National Railway The New Orleans Public Belt Railroad provides interchange services between the railroads Modal characteristics According to the 2016 American Community Survey 67 4 of working city of New Orleans residents commuted by driving alone 9 7 carpooled 7 3 used public transportation and 4 9 walked About 5 used all other forms of transportation including taxicab motorcycle and bicycle About 5 7 of working New Orleans residents worked at home 299 Many city of New Orleans households own no personal automobiles In 2015 18 8 of New Orleans households were without a car which increased to 20 2 in 2016 The national average was 8 7 percent in 2016 New Orleans averaged 1 26 cars per household in 2016 compared to a national average of 1 8 per household 300 New Orleans ranks high among cities in terms of the percentage of working residents who commute by walking or bicycling In 2013 5 of working people from New Orleans commuted by walking and 2 8 commuted by cycling During the same period New Orleans ranked thirteenth for percentage of workers who commuted by walking or biking among cities not included within the fifty most populous cities Only nine of the most fifty most populous cities had a higher percentage of commuters who walked or biked than did New Orleans in 2013 301 Notable peopleMain article List of people from New OrleansSister citiesSister cities of New Orleans are 302 Cap Haitien Haiti 303 Caracas Venezuela Durban South Africa Innsbruck Austria Isola del Liri Italy Juan les Pins Antibes France Maracaibo Venezuela Matsue Japan Merida Mexico Orleans France Pointe Noire Republic of the Congo San Miguel de Tucuman Argentina Tegucigalpa HondurasSee also Geography portal North America portal United States portal France portal History portalBuildings and architecture of New Orleans Cancer Alley The Cabildo French Quarter Festival Ile d Orleans Louisiana List of people from New Orleans Mississippi River Suite with an orchestral portrayal of Mardi Gras National Register of Historic Places listings in Orleans Parish Louisiana Neighborhoods in New Orleans New Orleans in fiction New Orleans Suite Duke Ellington recording New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal New Orleans Public Schools Pontalba Buildings The Presbytere Southern Food and Beverage Museum USS New Orleans USS Orleans ParishNotes Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for New Orleans have been kept at MSY since May 1 1946 104 Additional records from Audubon Park dating back to 1893 have also been included Sunshine normals are based on only 20 to 22 years of data References 2016 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 2 2017 U S Population Totals 2010 2020 United States Census Bureau New Orleans Merriam Webster Romer Megan How to Say New Orleans Correctly About Travel about com Archived from the original on October 16 2015 Retrieved January 31 2015 QuickFacts New Orleans city Louisiana United States Census Bureau August 10 2021 Retrieved August 12 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Institute of New Orleans History and Culture Archived December 7 2006 at the Wayback Machine at Gwynedd Mercy College Hurricane on the Bayou A MacGillivray Freeman Film Hurricane on the Bayou Archived from the original on January 15 2016 David Billings New Orleans A Choice Between Destruction and Reparations The Fellowship of Reconciliation November December 2005 Damian Dovarganes Associated Press Spike Lee offers his take on Hurricane Katrina MSNBC July 14 2006 The Founding French Fathers Retrieved April 26 2008 Hollywood South Why New Orleans Is the New Movie Making Capital ABC News Retrieved October 28 2020 Hollywood South Film Production and Movie Going in New Orleans New Orleans Historical Retrieved October 28 2020 Population of the 100 Largest Urban Places 1840 United States Census Bureau 1998 About the Orleans Levee District Orleans Levee Archived from the original on June 25 2018 Retrieved July 7 2018 Jervis Rick Fifteen years and 15 billion since Katrina New Orleans is more prepared for a major hurricane for now USA TODAY Retrieved July 16 2021 Report New Orleans Three Years After the Storm The Second Kaiser Post Katrina Survey 2008 The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation August 1 2008 Retrieved July 7 2018 Is Post Katrina Gentrification Saving New Orleans Or Ruining It BuzzFeed Retrieved July 7 2018 Elie Lolis August 27 2019 Opinion Gentrification Might Kill New Orleans Before Climate Change Does The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 29 2021 Gentrification a Growing Threat for Many New Orleans Residents Louisiana Fair Housing Action Center Retrieved July 29 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kinniburgh Colin August 9 2017 How to Stop Gentrification The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved July 29 2021 Orleans Parish History and Information Archived from the original on May 15 2005 Retrieved March 18 2008 Quick Facts Louisiana Population Estimates US Department of Commerce Retrieved January 6 2017 2020 Population and Housing State Data The United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 18 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 7 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b French History in New Orleans www neworleans com Retrieved October 28 2020 History of New Orleans www neworleans com Retrieved July 4 2022 New Orleans Nicknames New Orleans Convention amp Visitors Bureau Archived from the original on January 7 2009 Retrieved December 2 2008 Why Is New Orleans Called The Big Easy Southern Living Archived from the original on October 31 2020 Retrieved October 28 2020 a b What do you call New Orleans 11 of the good bad and silly nicknames for an iconic city NOLA com Retrieved October 28 2020 Ingersoll Steve March 2004 New Orleans The City That Care Forgot and Other Nicknames A Preliminary Investigation New Orleans Public Library Archived from the original on September 20 2004 Retrieved February 9 2009 VERIFY Does New Orleans have an actual birthday WWL December 15 2017 Ding Loni 2001 Part 1 Coolies Sailors and Settlers NAATA PBS Retrieved May 19 2011 Some of the Filipinos who left their ships in Mexico ultimately found their way to the bayous of Louisiana where they settled in the 1760s The film shows the remains of Filipino shrimping villages in Louisiana where eight to ten generations later their descendants still reside making them the oldest continuous settlement of Asians in America Ding Loni 2001 1763 Filipinos in Louisiana NAATA PBS Retrieved May 19 2011 These are the Louisiana Manila men with presence recorded as early as 1763 Westbrook Laura 2008 Mabuhay Pilipino Long Life Filipino Culture in Southeast Louisiana Louisiana Folklife Program Louisiana Department of Culture Recreation amp Tourism Retrieved May 13 2018 Fabros Alex S Jr February 1995 When Hilario Met Sally The Fight Against Anti Miscegenation Laws Filipinas Magazine Burlingame California Positively Filipino LLC Retrieved August 25 2018 via Positively Filipino Mercene Floro L 2007 Manila Men in the New World Filipino Migration to Mexico and the Americas from the Sixteenth Century UP Press pp 106 08 ISBN 978 971 542 529 2 Mitchell Barbara Autumn 2010 America s Spanish Savior Bernardo de Galvez marches to rescue the colonies MHQ The Quarterly Journal of Military History 98 104 Jose Presas y Marull 1828 Juicio imparcial sobre las principales causas de la revolucion de la America Espanola y acerca de las poderosas razones que tiene la metropoli para reconocer su absoluta independencia original document Fair judgment about the main causes of the revolution of Spanish America and about the powerful reasons that the metropolis has for recognizing its absolute independence Burdeaux Imprenta de D Pedro Beaume pp 22 23 National Park Service Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings Ursuline Convent Retrieved September 10 2010 Slave Resistance in Natchez Mississippi 1719 1861 Mississippi History Now mshistorynow mdah state ms us Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved October 28 2020 Gayarre Charles 1854 History of Louisiana The French Domination Vol 1 New York New York Redfield pp 447 450 Gayarre 1854 p 450 Cummins Light Townsend Kheher Schafer Judith Haas Edward F Kurtz Micahel L 2014 Wall Bennett H Rodrigue John C eds Louisiana A History 6th ed Malden Massachusetts Wiley Blackwell p 59 ISBN 9781118619292 BlackPast July 28 2007 1724 Louisiana s Code Noir Retrieved October 28 2020 From Benin to Bourbon Street A Brief History of Louisiana Voodoo www vice com Retrieved October 28 2020 The True History and Faith Behind Voodoo FrenchQuarter com Retrieved October 28 2020 Cruzat Heloise Hulse 1919 The Ursulines of Louisiana The Louisiana Historical Quarterly 2 1 Retrieved October 28 2020 Pauger s Savvy Move PDF richcampanella com Retrieved October 28 2020 Cummins et al 2014 p 70 The Louisiana Purchase Monticello Retrieved October 28 2020 Lachance Paul F 1988 The 1809 Immigration of Saint Domingue Refugees to New Orleans Reception Integration and Impact Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 29 2 110 JSTOR 4232650 Brasseaux Carl A Conrad Glenn R eds 2016 The Road to Louisiana The Saint Domingue Refugees 1792 1809 Lafayette Louisiana University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press ISBN 9781935754602 a b Haitian Immigration 18th amp 19th Centuries Archived June 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine In Motion African American Migration Experience New York Public Library accessed May 7 2008 Gitlin 2009 p 54 Tom March 18 2015 Rare 1815 Plan of the City and Suburbs of New Orleans Cool Old Photos Retrieved February 23 2019 a b Groom Winston 2007 Patriotic Fire Andrew Jackson and Jean Laffite at the Battle of New Orleans Vintage Books ISBN 978 1 4000 9566 7 New Orleans The Birthplace of Jazz primarily excerpted from Jazz A History of America s Music PBS JAZZ A Film By Ken Burns Retrieved May 17 2006 History of Les Gens De Couleur Libres Archived from the original on May 22 2006 Retrieved May 17 2006 Walter Johnson Soul by Soul Life Inside the Antebellum Slave Market Cambridge Harvard University Press 1999 pp 2 6 Gitlin 2009 p 159 Lewis Peirce F New Orleans The Making of an Urban Landscape Santa Fe 2003 p 175 a b Lawrence J Kotlikoff and Anton J Rupert The Manumission of Slaves in New Orleans 1827 1846 Archived April 8 2014 at the Wayback Machine Southern Studies Summer 1980 a b Gitlin 2009 p 166 a b c d Nystrom Justin A 2010 New Orleans after the Civil War Race Politics and a New Birth of Freedom JHU Press pp 6 ISBN 978 0 8018 9997 3 Benjamin Butler 64 Parishes Retrieved July 29 2021 Gitlin 2009 p 180 Leslie s Weekly December 11 1902 Robert Tallant amp Lyle Saxon Gumbo Ya Ya Folk Tales of Louisiana Louisiana Library Commission 1945 p 178 Brasseaux Carl A 2005 French Cajun Creole Houma A Primer on Francophone Louisiana LSU Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 8071 3036 0 New Orleans City Guide The Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration 1938 p 90 Usticesi in the United States Civil War The Ustica Connection March 22 2003 Retrieved July 29 2018 Immigration Italian Library of Congress Gambino Richard 2000 Vendetta The True Story of the Largest Lynching in U S History Guernica Editions ISBN 978 1 55071 103 5 a b c Lewis Peirce F New Orleans The Making of an Urban Landscape Santa Fe 2003 p 175 Sell Jack December 30 1955 Panthers defeat flu face Ga Tech next Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 1 Mule Marty A Time For Change Bobby Grier And The 1956 Sugar Bowl Archived 2007 06 10 at the Wayback Machine Black Athlete Sports Network December 28 2005 Zeise Paul Bobby Grier broke bowl s color line The Panthers Bobby Grier was the first African American to play in Sugar Bowl Pittsburgh Post Gazette October 07 2005 Thamel Pete Grier Integrated a Game and Earned the World s Respect New York Times January 1 2006 Jake Grantl November 14 2019 Rearview Revisited Segregation and the Sugar Bowl Georgia Tech Retrieved November 14 2019 Germany Kent B New Orleans After the Promises Poverty Citizenship and the Search for the Great Society Athens 2007 pp 3 5 a b Glassman James K New Orleans I have Seen the Future and It s Houston The Atlantic Monthly July 1978 Kusky Timothy M December 29 2005 Why is New Orleans Sinking PDF Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Saint Louis University Archived from the original PDF on June 23 2006 Retrieved June 17 2006 O Hanlon Larry March 31 2006 New Orleans Sits Atop Giant Landslide Discovery Channel Archived from the original on June 14 2006 Retrieved June 17 2006 Kevin Baker Archived October 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Future of New Orleans American Heritage April May 2006 Marshall Bob November 30 2005 17th Street Canal levee was doomed The Times Picayune Archived from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved March 12 2006 Deaths of evacuees push toll to 1 577 nola com Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved March 22 2008 a b After Katrina 184 Infantry Soldiers to the Rescue PDF The Spectrum October 2005 Archived from the original PDF on December 26 2013 Retrieved December 19 2018 Mayor Parts of New Orleans to reopen CNN com September 15 2005 Retrieved May 2 2006 N O head count gains steam Archived July 1 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Times Picayune August 9 2007 Retrieved August 14 2007 a b c New Orleans population estimate was low by 25 000 Census says The Times Picayune January 8 2010 Facts for Features Katrina Impact The Data Center www datacenterresearch org Retrieved November 9 2018 New Orleans Braces for Convention Comeback CBS News Archived from the original on May 20 2008 Retrieved March 23 2008 New Orleans Convention and Visitors Bureau Archived from the original on April 3 2008 Retrieved March 23 2008 Nola com Archived June 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine New Orleans 2010 Census Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau August 22 2012 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved August 20 2014 New Study Maps Rate of New Orleans Sinking NASA May 16 2016 Retrieved May 16 2016 Campanella R Above Sea Level New Orleans April 2007 Williams L Higher Ground Archived August 19 2017 at the Wayback Machine A study finds that New Orleans has plenty of real estate above sea level that is being underutilized The Times Picayune April 21 2007 Schlotzhauer David Lincoln W Scott 2016 Using New Orleans Pumping Data to Reconcile Gauge Observations of Isolated Extreme Rainfall due to Hurricane Isaac Journal of Hydrologic Engineering 21 9 05016020 doi 10 1061 ASCE HE 1943 5584 0001338 Strecker M July 24 2006 A New Look at Subsidence Issues permanent dead link a b c The New Orleans Hurricane Protection System What Went Wrong and Why Archived July 2 2007 at the Wayback Machine Report by the American Society of Civil Engineers New Study Maps Rate of New Orleans Sinking May 16 2016 Brock Eric J New Orleans Arcadia Publishing Charleston South Carolina 1999 pp 108 09 Part 2 The Plan Section 1 How We Live Map Local and National Register Historic Districts Archived from the original on January 15 2016 a b c d e NOWData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 25 2021 a b WMO Climate Normals for NEW ORLEANS LA 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved March 27 2014 McCusker John Sleet snow tail off in New Orleans nola com Retrieved February 16 2020 Threaded Extremes threadex rcc acis org Station New Orleans INTL AP LA U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 25 2021 Station New Orleans Audubon LA U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved August 27 2021 Tidwell Mike 2006 The Ravaging Tide Strange Weather Future Katrinas and the Coming Death of America s Coastal Cities Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 3810 3 Federal Emergency Management Agency Archived from the original on July 3 2012 a b c See Hurricane preparedness for New Orleans Early 20th century hurricanes See Hurricane preparedness for New Orleans Late 20th century hurricanes McKinley James C Jr Urbina Ian September 12 2008 Huge Storm Slams Into Coast of Texas The New York Times Rita s impact city by city Flooding and power outages plague Texas and Louisiana CNN September 24 2005 The Weather Channel s Special Report Vulnerable Cities New Orleans Louisiana Archived from the original on April 27 2006 Retrieved October 26 2006 New Orleans People Pets Flee Flood photographs National Geographic August 30 2005 Floodwaters tensions rise in New Orleans Archived December 18 2008 at the Wayback Machine CNN August 31 2005 Barry J M What You Need to Know About Katrina and Don t Why It Makes Economic Sense to Protect and Rebuild New Orleans Retrieved December 11 2007 President Bush signs OCS revenue sharing bill Statement by Governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco From gov louisiana gov December 20 2006 Walsh B Blanco Nagin lobby for Louisiana aid Archived July 1 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Times Picayune October 17 2007 Levees Cannot Fully Eliminate Risk of Flooding to New Orleans National Academy of Sciences April 24 2009 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 a b County Totals Datasets Population Estimates Archived from the original on April 3 2015 Retrieved March 26 2015 Gibson Campbell June 1998 Population Of The 100 Largest Cities And Other Urban Places In The United States 1790 To 1990 Population Division U S Bureau of the Census Archived from the original on March 14 2007 Retrieved May 2 2006 Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50 000 or More Ranked by July 1 2018 Population April 1 2010 to July 1 2018 United States Census Bureau Population Division Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved May 23 2019 Gilbert C Din John E Harkins 1996 New Orleans Cabildo Colonial Louisiana s First City Government 1769 1803 LSU Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 8071 2042 2 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved August 20 2014 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 20 2014 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 20 2014 State amp County QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 31 2014 Retrieved August 20 2014 Population and Housing Unit Estimates Retrieved July 1 2021 Hollander Justin B Pallagast Karina Schwarz Terry Popper Frank J January 9 2009 Planning Shrinking Cities William H Frey 1987 Migration and Depopulation of the Metropolis Regional Restructuring or Rural Renaissance American Sociological Review 52 2 240 87 doi 10 2307 2095452 JSTOR 2095452 a b Elizabeth Fussell 2007 Constructing New Orleans Constructing Race A Population History of New Orleans The Journal of American History 93 3 846 55 doi 10 2307 25095147 JSTOR 25095147 a b Bruce Katz August 4 2006 Concentrated Poverty in New Orleans and Other American Cities Brookings Daphne Spain January 1979 Race Relations and the Residential Segregation in New Orleans Two Centuries of Paradox The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 441 82 R W Kates C E Colten S Laska S P Leatherman 2006 Reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina a research perspective PNAS 103 40 14653 60 Bibcode 2006PNAS 10314653K doi 10 1073 pnas 0605726103 PMC 1595407 PMID 17003119 Population estimates by parish US Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 9 2009 Retrieved March 22 2008 Expert N O population at 273 000 wwltv com August 7 2007 Archived from the original on February 26 2008 Retrieved April 3 2008 Mail survey shows N O population at 69 percent of Pre Katrina wwltv com September 27 2007 Archived from the original on March 27 2008 Retrieved April 3 2008 Donze Frank July 2 2010 New Orleans post Katrina population still growing but at slower rate nola com Archived from the original on June 20 2017 Retrieved July 8 2010 Ehrenfeucht Renia Nelson Marla 2011 Planning Population Loss and Equity in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina Planning Practice amp Research 26 2 129 46 doi 10 1080 02697459 2011 560457 S2CID 153893210 a b Nelson Marla Ehrenfeucht Renioa Laska Shirley 2007 Planning Plans and People Professional Expertise Local Knowledge and Governmental Action in Post Hurricane Katrina New Orleans Cityscape 9 3 23 52 Reilly Morse 2008 Environmental Justice through the Eye of Hurricane Katrina Washington D C Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Health Policy Institute Olshansky Robery Johnson Laurie A Horne Jedidiah Nee Brendan 2008 Longer View Planning for the Rebuilding of New Orleans Journal of the American Planning Association 74 3 273 87 doi 10 1080 01944360802140835 S2CID 153673624 Reardon Kenneth M Ionesu Heroiu Rumbach Andrew J 2008 Equity Planning in Post Hurricane Katrina New Orleans Lessons from te Ninth Ward Cityscape 10 3 57 76 Eaton Leslie June 8 2006 Study Sees Increase in Illegal Hispanic Workers in New Orleans The New York Times Retrieved March 31 2008 Metro area U S unauthorized immigrant population estimates 2016 and 2007 Pew Research Center s Hispanic Trends Project Retrieved July 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Robert McClendon Sanctuary city policy puts an end to NOPD s immigration enforcement NOLA com The Times Picayune March 1 2016 Orleans County Modern Language Association Archived from the original on August 15 2013 Retrieved August 7 2013 a b 2020 Racial and Ethnic Statistics U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 4 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link New Orleans city Louisiana State amp County QuickFacts U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 2 2016 a b c d Louisiana Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved April 20 2012 a b From 15 sample Bureau U S Census American FactFinder Results factfinder census gov Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Latinos account for over half of the country s population growth NBC News Retrieved February 13 2022 Jessica Williams 12 December 2021 Census 2020 Who lives in the New Orleans metro now Data show more diverse population nola com website Retrieved 8 December 2022 Hispanic population booms in Kenner and elsewhere in New Orleans area Archive The Times Picayune June 15 2011 Retrieved on September 7 2015 Moreno Gonzales J Katrina Brought a Wave of Hispanics Guardian Unlimited July 2 2007 Nolan Bruce New Orleans now home to thousands of Brazilians Archive Houston Chronicle Sunday January 27 2008 Retrieved on September 6 2015 Mercene Floro L 2007 Manila Men in the New World Filipino Migration to Mexico and the Americas from the Sixteenth Century UP Press pp 107 08 ISBN 978 971 542 529 2 Hiltner Stephen May 5 2018 Vietnamese Forged a Community in New Orleans Now It May Be Fading The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 17 2021 LGBT Travellers in New Orleans USA Lonely Planet Retrieved July 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link New Orleans Gay History www neworleans com Retrieved July 17 2021 Survey data shows New Orleans in top 10 of metro areas with gay population NOLA com Retrieved July 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Leonhardt David Miller Claire Cain March 20 2015 The Metro Areas With the Largest and Smallest Gay Populations The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 17 2021 10 LGBTQ Bars to Check Out in New Orleans the Most Anything Goes City in America Thrillist Retrieved July 17 2021 New Orleans Archdiocese Catholic Hierarchy Retrieved September 20 2020 Parishes Archdiocese of New Orleans Retrieved December 11 2022 Maps and data files for 2020 U S Religion Census Religious Statistics amp Demographics U S Religion Census Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved December 10 2022 New Orleans now under the flag of the United States is still very much a Caribbean city The Pearl of the Antilles and the Crescent City Historic Maps of the Caribbean in the Latin American Library Map Collections Latin American Library Tulane University Archived from the original on December 8 2006 Retrieved January 4 2007 New Orleans is described as a Caribbean city an exuberant semi tropical city perhaps the most hedonistic city in the United States R W Apple Jr Apple s America Archived from the original quoted on ePodunk com on October 13 2007 Retrieved January 4 2007 New Orleans is often called the northernmost Caribbean city Kemp John R November 30 1997 When the painter met the Creoles The Boston Globe p G3 Retrieved January 4 2007 The High Priestess of the French Quarter 64 Parishes December 5 2016 Retrieved November 18 2020 The Jewish Community of New Orleans Beit Hatfutsot Open Databases Project The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Retrieved July 19 2018 Nolan Bruce August 25 2012 Congregation Beth Israel ends 7 years of Hurricane Katrina induced wandering The Times Picayune Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 2 2014 Killion Aubry March 15 2019 Members of the New Orleans Islamic community on high alert WDSU Retrieved October 28 2020 Krewe New Orleans hidden community ViaNolaVie Retrieved October 28 2020 New Orleans Louisiana Religion bestplaces net Retrieved March 21 2019 Ports of South Louisiana New Orleans amp Plaquemines Ranked 1 4 amp 11 in America Greater New Orleans Inc gnoinc org July 11 2018 Retrieved October 28 2020 A Wary New Orleans Braces for a New Tech Boom Bloomberg com May 10 2021 Retrieved July 31 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link New Orleans remaking itself into tech hub report NOLA com Retrieved July 31 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Greater New Orleans Inc Regional Economic Alliance Gnoinc org Retrieved March 26 2013 INTERMARINE Ocean Carrier Built on Performance Intermarine Retrieved July 31 2021 Bisso Towboat Retrieved July 31 2021 Northrop Grumman Gulf Coast Shipyards Return to Work Northrop Grumman Newsroom Retrieved July 31 2021 StackPath www expeditors com Retrieved July 31 2021 Silocaf USA LLC www bloomberg com Retrieved July 31 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Where We Roast Folger Coffee Company Folgers Coffee www folgerscoffee com Retrieved July 31 2021 The Crescent City Coffee Connection History and Heritage Imbues Each Cup, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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