NewOrleans1841AcrossRiver.jpg
Description NewOrleans1841AcrossRiver.jpg |
New Orleans , 1841 color engraving. "New Orleans. - Taken from the Opposite Side a Short Distance above the Middle or Picayune Ferry." View looking from Algiers (probably about where Mardi Gras World is now) looking across the Mississippi River. On river are a variety of sailing ships, steam ships, row-boats, and a flatboat. Across the river is the skyline of the "American Quarter" of New Orleans, with the dome of the first St. Charles Hotel prominent just left of center. The French Quarter to the right is mostly obscured by ships, but the towers of St. Louis Cathedral can be recognized behind ships' rigging near the right edge. In the foreground along the river batture are seen, left to right: two men in top-hats and prosperous outfits of the time with a dog; a small group of African Americans (likely slaves), both men and women, working taking soil from the river edge and putting it in wheel-barrows (presumably building up the high-water levee a short distance inland); two white men in working garb seated on a log with barrels; two large metal anchors; and two men moving a small sailboat which is tied to a post on the bature (presumably either about to put it back in the water or almost finished dragging it on land). |
|||||
Date | ||||||
Source | 19th century color engraving. Painted by W. J. Bennett from a sketch by A. Mondelli. Engraved by W. J. Bennett. Published by Henry I. Megarey, New York. Via [1] | |||||
Author | A. Mondelli and William J. Bennett. | |||||
Permission
( Reusing this file ) |
Copyright expired.
|
|||||
Other versions |
Engraving version:
|