Excavation in New Orleans' French Quarter Reveals 

Layers of Prehistory and of Fantasy


In December 2004, the Historic New Orleans Collection decided to sponsor an archaeological and historical investigation of 535-537 Conti Street in the French Quarter. The Collection owns this property, presently occupied by an early-20th-century parking garage, and plans to build a new archival storage facility on the site. The structure will reconstruct a three-and-a-half story hotel built on the site in the 1820s. Although regulations rarely pertain to archaeology on private property nor does the state provide archaeological services in New Orleans, the Collection deems support of archaeological research to be consistent with its mission to preserve and promote the history of the

Burnt fragments of rouge pots
from 1822 burn layer.
city. This project is one of only six controlled excavations ever conducted on colonial-era archaeological deposits in the French Quarter and is rapidly becoming one of the most extensive.

Through a collaborative partnership, Dr. Shannon Lee Dawdy of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Chicago and archaeologists from Earth Search, Inc., a New Orleans-based archaeological consulting firm, have been conducting excavations on the site since December, where work will continue into April 2005. The principal Earth Search collaborators have been Dr. Jill-Karen Yakubik, President, and Ryan Gray, Project Manager. Dawdy will conduct archival research and laboratory analysis over the next year, resulting in a report and academic presentations. A part-year resident, she is also a Visiting Scholar at the College of Urban and Public Affairs, University of New Orleans.


Research on the site is ongoing, but the following discoveries, questions, and facts are of interest:
The old American folksong, "House of the Rising Sun," has played a prominent part in the way people have imagined New Orleans, with the lyrics most often interpreted as the words of a 'fallen woman' working in a brothel of that name. There is no clear evidence that "Rising Sun" was a euphemism for a bordello. The song has gone through several permutations over the years and probably has roots in an English folksong. It has come to mean whatever listeners want it to mean.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Partially-reconstructed rouge pot
from 1822 burn layer.

The same can be said of the archaeological site at 535 Conti. The tavern-hotel called "Rising Sun" is very well preserved in a fire-burned rubble level within the site. Among the artifacts coming from the layer are an unusually high number of faience rouge pots - or French cosmetics jars (three to four times the number found at residential sites of the same era). This is a finding that will require some further sleuthing to figure out what they were doing at a male-operated tavern and hotel that seems to have been serving the rowdier waterfront crowd. Although an advertisement for the hotel says that, "Gentlemen here may rely upon finding attentive Servants" and "the best entertainment," it requires the imagination to connect the dots between artifacts, archives, and lyrics. Most ethnomusicologists would agree that we will never know the ultimate origin of the song the "House of the Rising Sun," or even settle on a single 'correct' interpretation of its meaning, but many fans and tourists nevertheless fantasize about finding physical evidence of a titillating New Orleans myth.

 

 

 

 


 

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