This is the thirteenth in a
series of images of New Orleans neighborhoods taken in February 2010 the
weekend before the Super Bowl victory and two weeks for Mardi Gras. I certainly
did not have time to cover them all but this series will provide a glimpse of
the city that I hope you will want to visit.
The first black and white picture shows the house at the corner of Jeannette and Lowerline when we lived there in the 1950s. It was white with grey front steps. The next one shows it pre-Katrina in the Spring of 2005. It had been painted a maroon color and the front steps were also painted maroon. The next three pictures show the house as it was being repaired after Katrina, as well as the destruction to the sidewalk in front. The last one shows it in 2010. It is now a bright yellow with white trim and they returned the front steps to grey which I think is much better. The owners restored it to its original condition and did not seem to make any exterior changes.
After really big rains, my friends
and I played with our toy boats by the side of Lowerline Street as the
poor drainage formed a lake next to the curb. Sometimes we would toss Cherry Bombs at the boats. These fireworks were illegal then but we got them at a shop on the Orleans Parish line without our parents knowledge. It was a shot gun house and the story was that they would move the fireworks to the Jefferson Parish end when the Orleans Parish police showed up and then the reverse when the Jefferson Parish police came. This might be a myth but the Cherry Bombs were real. One day the city decided to fix the drainage on the street. They sent a crew of seven
armed with one pickaxe to take on the problem. Six supervised while one swung the axe. Fortunately, the lake returned after the next big rain.
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