Vertical Files – Subject

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vertical Files – Subject Vertical Files – Subject A Acadians (2) Bec Doux Cartoon Bial Cooking Folklife Furniture Instruments Newspaper Articles Acme, Louisiana ACORN Addresses Aeronautics African American Artists Bibliographies Black History (2) Culture Free, Pre-Civil War Gullah Jim Crow Laws Lawsuits Lawyers Military Miscellaneous Music Musicians/Composers Political Leaders Politics Post Civil War Race Relations Scientists/Engineers Social Change Studies Agriculture Albanian Migration Album Covers Alexandria, Louisiana Algiers, Louisiana All Saints Day Almshouse Alsatians Alto, Louisiana Ambrotype 1 American Revolution America’s Wetland Amistad Incident Amusement Parks Andouille Angola Prison Animals Antiques Arc of New Orleans Archdiocese of New Orleans Archeology (2) Architecture (2) Arkansas – Menard Armitage The Arms of Spain Arpadhon Mocsary (Hungarian Settlement) Artists: A-B Artists: C-D Artists: E-F Artists: G-H Artists: Daguerre Artists: Susan Roach Art Artillery Assassination Asylums Atchafalaya Basin Audubon, J.J. Audubon Pilgrimage Audubon Zoo Avery Island B Balise Banks and Banking Barataria Baptismal Records Baronne Street and Bourbon Street Buildings Baseball Baton Rouge Battle of Galvez Historic Homes/Buildings Battles Battle of the Boyne Battle of Franklin 2 Battle of Liberty Place Battle of New Orleans Bicentennial Batture Case Bay St. Louis History Bayous Bayou Classic Football Game Bayou St. John Bells Bellingrath Gardens Benevolent Societies Benjamin Franklin High School Bergeron Gallery Bethany Home Bibliographies: African American Bibliographies: Colonial Bibliographies: Legal Sources Bibliographies: Louisiana (2) Bibliographies: Louisiana Dissertations Bicentennials (2) Big Shot Beverage Company Birds Birth Records Bishops Black Books, W.P.A. Black Code of Missouri Blackmar Publications Boat Building Industry Boat Contract Boating Bonfires Bonnet Carré Spillway Bonnie and Clyde Bookstores Boucherville Bourbonism Bowls New Orleans Carrier Bowl Sugar Bowl Boy Scouts BP Oil Spill Papers Bread Revolt Bridges Huey P. Long British Land Grants British West Florida 3 Broadmoor Brown University Buildings Art Deco St. Ann, St. Charles, Toulouse Bulletin of Public Health Business C C: Miscellaneous Cabildo Café du Monde Cajun Culture and Food Calendar of Events Canal Street Canal St. and Carondelet St. Buildings Canals Canary Islands Capitol Captains Carmelite Nuns Carnival (4) Carondelet, Chartres, Decatur Street Buildings Carrollton Carousels Carpetbaggers Carriages Cartoons Carville: Louisiana Leprosy Colony Casinos Catholic Churches Cemeteries (3) Census Central Louisiana Chalmette Fire Co. Chalmette Park Charity Hospital Charivari Chenerie Hurricane Centennial Chicago Association of Commerce 1908 China and Glass Chinchuba Legends Chinese: New Orleans Chinatown in New Orleans Christmas 4 Church Point, Louisiana Churches Cisterns Citizens Citizensfor1 Citrus Civil War Civil War Centennial Clergy Clubs Coast Guard Coastal Restoration Coats of Arms Cock Fighting Cocktails Absinthe Cocodrie, Louisiana Coffee Collations (2) Colonial Dames Colonial Document Digitization Project, LSM Colonial History Colonial Law Colonial Records De la Salle Commandants Commerce Committee of Preservation of Existing Records in LA Commodities Common Ground Relief Company of the Indies Company of the West Composers Concordia Parish/Slave Uprisings Confederacy (2) Confederate Soldiers Congresses and Conventions Conservation Construction Cookbooks Corn Cornpone Cornstalk Fence Costume Continental Guards Cotton 5 Cotton Exchange Cotton Gins and Press Cotton Centennial Exposition 1884-5 Coupons and Trade Labels Courts: New Orleans Courts: Supreme Coushatta Massacre Crawfish Creole Society and Culture (2) Crescent City Crevasses Crimes Crossing Rivers Crowley, LA Crystal Hot Sauce C.S. Ironclad Virginia Cubits Gap Custom House Cypress Trees D De Bow’s Review D.A.R. Dancing Daspit Daguerreotype Dauphin Islands DCRT (Department of Culture, Recreation, and Tourism) Death Records Debutantes African American White Declaration of Independence Decrees Defense Industries Delgado Exhibit Der Grasse Krieg Desegregation and Segregation Diderot Diocese of Lafayette Diocese of Lake Charles Directories Disasters Dixie Magazine, 1986 Documents 6 American French Laws and Legislation Spanish Driftwood Drugs Drugstores: Vieux Carré Dueling Dutch in Louisiana E Eagles Earthquakes Economics Edicts Education (2) Educational Institutions Elections (2) Ellis Island Elmer’s Candy Emigration and Immigration English Bend English Drama English Language Entergy Esplanade Avenue Etching Eucharistic Congress Evangeline Country Exhibits: LA State Museum Exhibitions: International Trade Explorers: North America Expositions Jamestown Tercentennial LA Purchase New Orleans Industrial New South Panama Universelle World’s Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exxon F False River Homes 7 Fasnachts Faubourgs Faulkner Society Federal Farm Board Federal Reserve Branch of Atlanta, New Orleans Branch Festivals Breaux Bridge Church Point Delcambre Gueydon Mandeville Monroe Louisiana Folk Life Festival Morgan City Natchitoches Natchitoches Christmas Festival (2) New Orleans Rayne Southwest Louisiana Zwolle Figs Filipinos Film Fire Arms Fire Departments Fish Flags American Confederate Flatboats Floods Flood Control Flood Protection Florida Flowers Folk Art Folklife: Louisiana Folklore: Louisiana Folktales Food American History of Pableaux Johnson “Kitchen Stories” essays Peppers Southern Southern Food Alliance 8 Tulane Food Exhibit Forestry: Louisiana Fortier High School Fortifications Colonial Louisiana New Orleans Forts Balize Biloxi Jackson Maurepas St. Philip Canal Sumter Foundation for Historical Louisiana Foundries Fountains France Great Seal History Frank’s Place: TV Show Freedmen’s Bureau French Drama Language in Louisiana National Archives North America French Market (2) French Quarter French Quarter Festival Friends of the Cabildo Newsletter Volunteer Newsletter Frog Industry: Louisiana Furniture (2) Fur Trade G Gallier House Games Gambling Garden District Garden Society of New Orleans Gardening Gardens 9 Gateway Gay and Lesbian Geology Genealogical Research Genealogical Organizations Germans in Louisiana Girod House Measurements Girod Street Cemetery Greater New Orleans Archivists G.N.O.M.E.S. Gourmets Government Governors (2) Grambling University Grand Coteau Grand Isle Gravehouses Granderos and Dames Great Depression Gretna, LA Gri-Gri Case Grocery Stores Guadalupe Gulf War Gulf Biologic Station Gumbo Gumbo Krewe H Haiti Hammond Hospital Harbor Hari Krishna Harvey, Louisiana Haunted History Haunted Houses Health Surveys Higgins Inc. High School Bands Hinderer’s Iron Works Hispanic History Historic American Building Survey Historical Association Historic Houses/Buildings Baton Rouge 10 Historic New Orleans Collection (2) Holidays Horses Hospitals Hotels and Taverns Hotels Desoto Royal Orleans St Charles St Louis Houma Houma’s House Houma’s Land Bill House of Blues Houses in Louisiana Housework Housing Louisiana New Orleans Humidity Hungarians in Louisiana Hunting and Trapping Hurricanes (2) I Iberville Landing Stone Ice Illinois Immigration Imprisonment Insurance Companies International Fire Photographers Association Irish Channel Irish in New Orleans Irish Priests in Spanish Louisiana Ironwork New Orleans Ironworkers Isleños Italians (2) J Jackson Barracks Jackson Brewery/House 11 Jackson Dragoons Jackson, Louisiana Jackson Monument Jackson Square Jackson Vase Jail Jazzfest Jazz Funerals Jazz Music Jean Lafitte National Park Jefferson College Jefferson Historical Society Jefferson Parish Jesuits Jewelry Jews New Orleans Jewish History Jewish Organizations “Jezebel”: Motion Picture Jim Crow Law Joe’s Bayou Junior League Covington New Orleans K Katrina City Design Crime Disaster Losses Kit Evacuees IRS Info Louisiana Sheriff National Memorial Park Oral Histories, Written Pet Memorial Racism Repairing Historic Homes Travel Trailer Troops Task Force Volunteer Katrina Exposed Exhibit Kenner, Louisiana Kid Camera Project 12 King Cake King Creole Kingsley House Kisatchee National Forest Kitchen Utensils Konriko Rice Mill Krewe du Vieux Ku Klux Klan L La Rochelle Library Lafayette Cemetery Lake and Gulf Deep Waterways Convention Lake Charles, Louisiana Lake Pontchartrain Lakefront Airport Lakeshore Drive Lakeview Land Claims Land Grant Land Office Landfills Landscape Architecture Landscape in Art Language Laplace, LA Laura Plantation Laurel Valley Village Law Lawsuits Le Tour de Monde League of Women Voters Lebanese Heritage in Louisiana Lee Circle Legal Expenses Legal Procedure Legends Leprosy Levees LHQ Articles Calendars Liberty Bell Libraries Historical 13 New Orleans Lighthouses Lighting Lignite Lillie, Louisiana Lincoln Beach Liquor Llano Colony Anti-Lottery State Executive Committee, 1890 Louisiana Arts Artists and Writers Business Census Civil Codes and Laws Colonization Conservation Constitutional Convention Court Cases Description and Travel Engineering Society Festivals Families Food Governors History General 1670-1762 (French Rule) 1762-1800 (Spanish) 1803- Present Industries Old State Capitol Legislature Native Guards Parishes Parks Index to Cultural Language Photographs Politics and Government Preservation Public Libraries Public Relief Lottery Louisiana Purchase Louisiana Purchase Commemoration Louisiana Purchase Exhibit 14 Reconstruction Schools State Archives State Capitol History New State Capitol State Fair State Library Supreme Court Tourism Towns Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities
Recommended publications
  • Requiescat in Pace: the Cemetery Dedication and Its Implications for Land Use in Louisiana and Beyond
    William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review Volume 42 (2017-2018) Issue 3 Article 5 May 2018 Requiescat in Pace: The Cemetery Dedication and Its Implications for Land Use in Louisiana and Beyond Ryan M. Seidemann Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr Part of the Environmental Law Commons, Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons, Land Use Law Commons, and the Urban Studies and Planning Commons Repository Citation Ryan M. Seidemann, Requiescat in Pace: The Cemetery Dedication and Its Implications for Land Use in Louisiana and Beyond, 42 Wm. & Mary Envtl. L. & Pol'y Rev. 895 (2018), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr/vol42/iss3/5 Copyright c 2018 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmelpr REQUIESCAT IN PACE: THE CEMETERY DEDICATION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR LAND USE IN LOUISIANA AND BEYOND RYAN M. SEIDEMANN* INTRODUCTION Louisiana, especially New Orleans, is storied for its cemeteries.1 These sites have been featured in modern popular culture from Easy Rider to Disney’s The Princess and the Frog.2 While there is little doubt that these spaces of death contribute to the allure and the tourist draw of the area,3 they are nonetheless constantly threatened by development.4 * Ryan M. Seidemann holds a BA (Florida State University) and MA (Louisiana State University) in anthropology as well as a BCL and a JD (Louisiana State University). Currently enrolled as a doctoral student in the Department of Planning and Urban Studies at the University of New Orleans, he is also the Section Chief of the Lands & Natural Resources Section, Civil Division, Louisiana Department of Justice, an adjunct professor of law at Southern University Law Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, a death investigator for the West Baton Rouge Parish Coroner’s Office, and a Registered Profes- sional Archaeologist.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of 174Th Convention
    THE JOURNAL OF THE 174TH CONVENTION OF THE DIOCESE OF THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF LOUISIANA 1623 SEVENTH STREET NEW ORLEANS, LA 70115 APRIL 1 & 2, 2011 CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH AND SCHOOL CHRISTWOOD RETIREMENT COMMUNITY COVINGTON, LA Table of Contents Diocesan Staff 3 ECS Staff 4 Standing Committee Membership 5 Executive Board Membership 6 Church Directory (by city) 8 Diocesan Clergy (physically resident) 25 Diocesan Clergy (not physically resident) 47 Clergy by order of canonical residence 51 Necrology (as of 04/01/2011) 54 Deaneries 55 Statistical Summary from the Bishop 57 Official Acts of the Bishop 58 Canons of the Diocese 65 Constitution of the Diocese 91 Clergy Pay (current levels) 97 Executive Board Minutes 2010 98 174th Convention Committees (elected and appointed) 166 Reports to Convention 171 Delegates to Convention 201 Minutes 205 Financial Reports 256 THE DIOCESE OF LOUISIANA WWW.EDOLA.ORG 2010-2011 DIOCESAN OFFICERS AND STAFF The Rt. Rev’d Morris K. Thompson, Jr. Liz Shortess Bishop of Louisiana [email protected] Administrative Assistant [email protected] The Rev’d Canon E. Mark Stevenson Agatha Townsend Canon to the Ordinary Executive Assistant to the Bishop [email protected] [email protected] Billie Barbier Manager of Financial Resources The Rt. Rev’d Robert C. Witcher, Historiographer [email protected] Harriet Murrell, Archivist Audrey Threefoot, Assistant Archivist The Rev’d Rich Clark Valerie Hendrickson, Secretary Canon for Youth and Young Adult Ministries Lucius Butts, Treasurer [email protected] Cove Geary, Esq.,
    [Show full text]
  • The Big Easy and All That Jazz
    ©2014 JCO, Inc. May not be distributed without permission. www.jco-online.com The Big Easy and All that Jazz fter Hurricane Katrina forced a change of A venue to Las Vegas in 2006, the AAO is finally returning to New Orleans April 25-29. While parts of the city have been slow to recover from the disastrous flooding, the main draws for tourists—music, cuisine, and architecture—are thriving. With its unique blend of European, Caribbean, and Southern cultures and styles, New Orleans remains a destination city for travelers from around the United States and abroad. Transportation and Weather The renovated Ernest N. Morial Convention Center opened a new grand entrance and Great Hall in 2013. Its location in the Central Business District is convenient to both the French Quarter Bourbon Street in the French Quarter at night. Photo © Jorg Hackemann, Dreamstime.com. to the north and the Garden District to the south. Museums, galleries, and other attractions, as well as several of the convention hotels, are within Tours walking distance, as is the Riverfront Streetcar line that travels along the Mississippi into the Get to know popular attractions in the city French Quarter. center by using the hop-on-hop-off double-decker Louis Armstrong International Airport is City Sightseeing buses, which make the rounds about 15 miles from the city center. A shuttle with of a dozen attractions and convenient locations service to many hotels is $20 one-way; taxi fares every 30 minutes (daily and weekly passes are are about $35 from the airport, although fares will available).
    [Show full text]
  • PORT DIRECTORY 2013 Portdirectory 2012 Portdirectory 12/3/12 1:41 PM Page 5
    PortDirectory2012_COVERS_PortDir Cover 11/30/12 10:30 AM Page 991 PORT DIREC2013 TORY The official directory of the Port of New Orleans P.O. Box 60046, New Orleans, LA 70160 | 800.776.6652 | www.portno.com PortDirectory2012_COVERS_PortDir Cover 11/30/12 10:30 AM Page 992 PortDirectory_2012_PortDirectory 11/30/12 9:45 AM Page 1 FLEET STRENGTH After over 120 years of assisting vessels on the Mississippi River, we have more experience in more situations than anyone on the river. And we pass that experience on to our Captains every day - Captains who have been with Bisso for an average of over 24 years. Now, heading into our third century of operation, Bisso continues to invest in the best tugs for every possible job. Over the last 15 years, we’ve spent over $30 million on eight new tugs, including the first Z-drive tractor tug built on the lower Mississippi. And we will be adding our fourth Z-drive tractor tug in 2011. Today, we offer clients more security, maneuverability and horsepower with the largest fleet of twin screw, triple screw and tractor tugs on the Mississippi. This means we can send fewer tugs to do your jobs at a better overall price. So next time you’re looking for an assist on the Mississippi River, go with Bisso. AGENTS IN: BERGEN | LONDON | TOKYO | PUSAN Mailing address: P.O. Box 4250 • New Orleans LA 70178 Office: 13959 River Road • Luling LA 70070 504.861.1411 (24 hours) • fax: 504.861.3545 • www.bissotowing.com PortDirectory_2012_PortDirectory 11/30/12 9:45 AM Page 2 BEST EQUIPMENT, BEST CREWS, BEST SERVICE UNPARALLELED GUARANTEE LEADERS OF THE PACK E.N.
    [Show full text]
  • The Difficult Plantation Past: Operational and Leadership Mechanisms and Their Impact on Racialized Narratives at Tourist Plantations
    THE DIFFICULT PLANTATION PAST: OPERATIONAL AND LEADERSHIP MECHANISMS AND THEIR IMPACT ON RACIALIZED NARRATIVES AT TOURIST PLANTATIONS by Jennifer Allison Harris A Dissertation SubmitteD in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Public History Middle Tennessee State University May 2019 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Kathryn Sikes, Chair Dr. Mary Hoffschwelle Dr. C. Brendan Martin Dr. Carroll Van West To F. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I cannot begin to express my thanks to my dissertation committee chairperson, Dr. Kathryn Sikes. Without her encouragement and advice this project would not have been possible. I would like to express my deepest appreciation to my dissertation committee members Drs. Mary Hoffschwelle, Carroll Van West, and Brendan Martin. My very deepest gratitude extends to Dr. Martin and the Public History Program for graciously and generously funding my research site visits. I’m deeply indebted to the National Science Foundation project research team, Drs. Derek H. Alderman, Perry L. Carter, Stephen P. Hanna, David Butler, and Amy E. Potter. However, I owe special thanks to Dr. Butler who introduced me to the project data and offered ongoing mentorship through my research and writing process. I would also like to extend my deepest gratitude to Dr. Kimberly Douglass for her continued professional sponsorship and friendship. The completion of my dissertation would not have been possible without the loving support and nurturing of Frederick Kristopher Koehn, whose patience cannot be underestimated. I must also thank my MTSU colleagues Drs. Bob Beatty and Ginna Foster Cannon for their supportive insights. My friend Dr. Jody Hankins was also incredibly helpful and reassuring throughout the last five years, and I owe additional gratitude to the “Low Brow CrowD,” for stress relief and weekend distractions.
    [Show full text]
  • A FAILURE of INITIATIVE Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina
    A FAILURE OF INITIATIVE Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina U.S. House of Representatives 4 A FAILURE OF INITIATIVE A FAILURE OF INITIATIVE Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina Union Calendar No. 00 109th Congress Report 2nd Session 000-000 A FAILURE OF INITIATIVE Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina Report by the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.gpoacess.gov/congress/index.html February 15, 2006. — Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed U. S. GOVERNMEN T PRINTING OFFICE Keeping America Informed I www.gpo.gov WASHINGTON 2 0 0 6 23950 PDF For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; DC area (202) 512-1800 Fax: (202) 512-2250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402-0001 COVER PHOTO: FEMA, BACKGROUND PHOTO: NASA SELECT BIPARTISAN COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE THE PREPARATION FOR AND RESPONSE TO HURRICANE KATRINA TOM DAVIS, (VA) Chairman HAROLD ROGERS (KY) CHRISTOPHER SHAYS (CT) HENRY BONILLA (TX) STEVE BUYER (IN) SUE MYRICK (NC) MAC THORNBERRY (TX) KAY GRANGER (TX) CHARLES W. “CHIP” PICKERING (MS) BILL SHUSTER (PA) JEFF MILLER (FL) Members who participated at the invitation of the Select Committee CHARLIE MELANCON (LA) GENE TAYLOR (MS) WILLIAM J.
    [Show full text]
  • Laura Plantation Mute Victims of Katrina: Four Louisiana Landscapes at Risk
    The Cultural Landscape Foundation VACHERIE , LOUISIANA Laura Plantation Mute Victims of Katrina: Four Louisiana Landscapes at Risk In 1805, Guillaume Duparc, a French veteran of the American Revolution, took possession of a 12,000-acre site just four miles downriver from Oak Alley Plantation in St. James Parish. With only seventeen West African slaves, he began to clear the land, build a home and grow sugarcane on the site of a Colapissa Indian village. This endeavor, like many others, led to a unique blending of European, African and Native American cultures that gave rise to the distinctive Creole culture that flourished in the region before Louisiana became part of the United States . Today, Laura Plantation offers a rare view of this non-Anglo-Saxon culture. Architectural styles, family traditions and the social/political life of the Creoles have been illuminated through extensive research and documentation. African folktales, personal memoirs and archival records have opened windows to Creole plantation life – a life that was tied directly to the soil with an agrarian-based economy, a taste for fine food and a constant battle to find comfort in a hot, damp environment. Laura Plantation stands today as a living legacy dedicated to the Creole culture. HISTORY Situated 54 miles above New Orleans on the west bank of the Mississippi River, the historic homestead of Laura Plantation spreads over a 14-acre site with a dozen buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The main house along with Creole cottages, slave cabins and farm buildings rest on an elevated landmass of rich alluvial silt created by a geological fault.
    [Show full text]
  • NEW ORLEANS NOSTALGIA Remembering New Orleans History, Culture and Traditions
    NEW ORLEANS NOSTALGIA Remembering New Orleans History, Culture and Traditions By Ned Hémard Lee Circle Before Lee Long before Lee, the circular park linking the upriver and downriver sections of New Orleans was called the Place du Tivoli. Tivoli is a name that invariably conjures up images of verdant and picturesque gardens, its origin to be found in an historic town in the Lazio region of central Italy, founded centuries before Rome. According to Cato the Elder, Catillus founded a town in the Sabine hills to the east of Rome named Tibur (the name of which evolved into Tivoli) in honor of one of his three sons, Tiburtus. The town’s name probably shares a common root with the river Tiber. Historical vestiges of settlement in the vicinity date back to the 13th century BC. Temple of Vesta, Tivoli, Italy Tivoli is home to the Villa d’Este, commissioned by the son of Lucrezia Borgia, whose Italian Renaissance gardens are the main reason for Tivoli’s renown. It was there that this author visited in his youth, sampling his first Campari, and dined that evening at the centuries-old Ristorante Sibilla. Napoleon and other notables made this idyllic restaurant a culinary destination, as well. Built in the early 1700s beside the circular Roman Temple of Vesta and the Sanctuary of the Sybil, its terrazza garden has a breathtaking view over the deep gorge of the Aniene River, with the sounds of the waterfall in the background. It has been called “the most romantic place in Italy.” The grandeur of Tivoli’s landscape, with its evocations of ancient glory, also made it a major destination for foreign visitors on their 19th century “Grand Tour.” The Tiburtine Sybil (a kind of oracle) is famous for having announced to the Emperor Augustus the coming of Jesus.
    [Show full text]
  • Reciprocal Museum List
    RECIPROCAL MUSEUM LIST DIA members at the Affiliate level and above receive reciprocal member benefits at more than 1,000 museums and cultural institutions in the U.S. and throughout North America, including free admission and member discounts. This list includes organizations affiliated with NARM (North American Reciprocal Museum) and ROAM (Reciprocal Organization of American Museums). Please note, some museums may restrict benefits. Please contact the institution for more information prior to your visit to avoid any confusion. UPDATED: 10/28/2020 DIA Reciprocal Museums updated 10/28/2020 State City Museum AK Anchorage Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center AK Haines Sheldon Museum and Cultural Center AK Homer Pratt Museum AK Kodiak Kodiak Historical Society & Baranov Museum AK Palmer Palmer Museum of History and Art AK Valdez Valdez Museum & Historical Archive AL Auburn Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art AL Birmingham Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts (AEIVA), UAB AL Birmingham Birmingham Civil Rights Institute AL Birmingham Birmingham Museum of Art AL Birmingham Vulcan Park and Museum AL Decatur Carnegie Visual Arts Center AL Huntsville The Huntsville Museum of Art AL Mobile Alabama Contemporary Art Center AL Mobile Mobile Museum of Art AL Montgomery Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts AL Northport Kentuck Museum AL Talladega Jemison Carnegie Heritage Hall Museum and Arts Center AR Bentonville Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art AR El Dorado South Arkansas Arts Center AR Fort Smith Fort Smith Regional Art Museum AR Little Rock
    [Show full text]
  • Restaurant Index
    17_583438_bindex.qxd 12/13/06 3:45 PM Page 355 ACCOMMODATIONS INDEX Ambassador Arts District Hotel, 74–75, 91, 97, 98 Garden District Hotel, 74–75, 92, 100 Andrew Jackson Hotel, 76, 93, 98 Astor Crowne Hotel, 91, 96, 98 Hampton Inn, 77, 93, 101 The Astor Crowne Plaza, 76 Hampton Inn and Suites, 74–75, 109 Avenue Bed and Breakfast, 77 Hampton Inn Downtown, 74–75, 92, 96, 101 Avenue Garden Hotel, 74–75, 92, 96, 99 Hampton Inn Suites & Convention Center, 91, 97, 101 Avenue Inn Bed & Breakfast, 91, 99 Hilton Garden Inn, 74–75, 91, 97, 100, 109 Avenue Plaza Hotel, 74–75, 92, 97, 99 Hilton New Orleans Riverside, 74–75, 90, 100 Historic French Market Inn, 76, 92, 100 Best Western French Quarter Landmark Holiday Inn French Quarter, 76, 92, 96, 101 Hotel, 76, 93, 98 Holiday Inn Select, 74–75, 91, 101, 109 Best Western Parc St. Charles, 74–75, 93, 98 Homewood Suites by Hilton, 74–75, 92, 101 Bienville House Hotel, 76, 92, 98 Hotel de la Monnaie, 76, 92, 102 Bourbon Orleans Hotel, 156 Hotel Inter-Continental New Orleans, 74–75, 90, 102 Hotel Le Cirque, 74–75, 90, 96, 102 Chateau Dupré Hotel, 76, 92, 97, 99 Hotel Monaco, 166 Chateau LeMoyne French Quarter Holiday Hotel Monteleone, 76, 90, 97, 103 Inn, 76, 92, 99 Hotel Provincial, 76, 91, 103 Chateau Sonesta Hotel, 76, 91, 99 Hotel Royal, 76, 91, 96, 103 The Columns, 77, 93, 98, 175 Hotel St. Marie, 76, 92, 97, 102 Comfort Suites Downtown, 74–75, 93, 98 Hotel St.
    [Show full text]
  • Office of State Museum Agency Number 06-263 Program: Museum
    Office of State Museum Agency Number 06-263 Program: Museum Fiscal Year 2014-2015 through 2018-2019 Agency Vision Statement The Office of State Museum will operate and manage the State of Louisiana’s preeminent historical, cultural and educational institutions dedicated to collecting, preserving and interpreting artifacts, documents and art that reflect the diverse history, art, and culture of the State of Louisiana. Agency/Program Mission Statement To maintain the Louisiana State Museum as a true statewide Museum system that is accredited by the American Association of Museums; to collect, preserve, and interpret buildings, documents and artifacts that reveal Louisiana’s history and culture; and to present those item using both traditional and innovative technology to educate, enlighten and provide enjoyment for the people of Louisiana and its visitors. Agency Philosophy Statement The history and culture of Louisiana are among the richest and most interesting in the world. The philosophy of the Office of State Museum is to use the highest standards of professionalism, scholarship, and management techniques, in accordance with the guidelines of the American Association of Museums, to operate the Louisiana State Museum system. Agency Goals I. To collect, preserve, and interpret buildings, artifacts, documents and other items that reveal Louisiana's history and culture; II. To educate, enlighten and provide enjoyment for the people of Louisiana, visitors and others through the development of exhibits, programs and presentations of Louisiana’s history, culture and people; and III. To provide these services in accordance with the highest standards of professionalism, scholarship, management, and the American Association of Museums. 1 PROGRAM OBJECTIVES: Objective 1: Increase the number of attendees at museum functions, exhibits and educational programs by 25% by the year 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Charles Avenue Streetcar Line, 1835
    National Historic Mechanical St. Charles Avenue American Society of Engineering Landmark Streetcar Line, 1835 Mechanical Engineers Carrollton Streetcar Shop Regional Transit Authority New Orleans, Louisiana December 9, 1984 St. Charles Avenue Streetcar Line, 1835 railroad stops in 1835 abandoned route present route and switch The St. Charles Street Car line is the passenger route “to use an English inven- pany, and were 4’ 8½” English standard oldest continuously operating street rail- tion, the steam powered Locomotive, gauge. The cars were pulled by horses, way in the world and was one of the first rolling on a road of iron rails.” As the which used a wooden walkway between passenger railroads in the United States. tracks crossed each plantation boundary, the rails. The electric streetcars now operating on there was a slight curve to keep the line Two steam locomotives, the “New Or- the route are typical of the transportation parallel with the river, forming a huge leans” and the “Carrollton” were ordered that played a major role in American cities crescent shaped route. As New Orleans from England, probably from Benjamin in the first part of this century. grew, new streets followed the curve of Hick & Company in Bolton, Lan- The line was incorporated as the New the railroad and river, rather than the castershire. The “Fulton,” a 2-2-0 type Orleans and Carrollton Rail Road Com- usual grid of most American cities; thus with outside inclined cylinders, had been pany (N.O. & C.R.R.) February 9, 1833. New Orleans was called “Crescent City.” built for the Pontchartrain railroad in Capitalization was $300,000, with $100 According to the Street Railway Jour- 1834, and a second “New Orleans” for the shares payable in $5 installments.
    [Show full text]