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Louisiana Architecture: A Handbook on Styles
Preface

FRENCH CREOLE: The facade of this New Orleans cottage illustrates the Creoles' general lack of concern for symmetry. Only after southern and centeral Louisiana began filling with Anglo-Americans, who brought with them their own architectural traditions, did the facades of Creole houses become symmetrical. Photo by Donna Fricker. FRENCH CREOLE: A larger Creole dwelling, Little Texas in St. James Parish has two fill ranges fo rooms. the Greek Revival transom and sidelights outlining the home's central entrance illustrate how the Creoles adpated Angelo-american Architectural ideas without sacrificing the essence of the creole Styule. Photo by Jay Edwards FRENCH CREOLE: Wraparound mantels with elegant overmantels characterized high style Creole taste. This mantel is one of three within the Jones House in Natchitoches Parish. Photo by Donna Fricker. FRENCH CREOLE: Homeplace is a raised Creole plantation house in St. Charles Parish. the finest house type built by French Louisianians, these homes were once quite common in rural areas. Now only aobut thirity are know to survive int the entire state. Photo by Patricia L. Duncan. FRENCH CREOLE: The pigennier at Magnolia Plantation in Natchitoches Parish. One wonders if these ornamental towers are related to the towers on late medieval castles and manor house. Photo by Donna Fricker. FRENCH CREOLE: With living quarters located above commerical space, townhouses like Natchotiches Docournau Square were practical hojes for Creoles living in crowded urban areas. However, the plan of this townhouse difers from the norm because its dependencies are arranged around its courtyard, making a U rather than an L shaped building. Photo by Donna Fricker.

Click the pictures above for examples of Louisiana Architectural styles

Back in the 1950s, when machine technology and modern architecture were still going to save the world, a curious thing happened. Public and academic disgust with the "dour" and "frightful" buildings of the Victorian age began to abate. As interest grew, people were perplexed, for they did not know what to make of these curious relics with their wild skylines, decoratively shingled walls, curlicue brackets and knobby columns. But now, after a generation or so of study, the popular styles that graced the American buildingscape during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are fairly well known to preservationists. Much of this was set forth in 1969 in Marcus Whiffen's pioneering work, American Architecture Since 1780: A Guide to the Style.

Whiffen, as it is known, has become a major handbook for field preservationists, and since that time, other guides have appeared. But these have not always been very useful in Louisiana, simply because our state is so different from the national norm. There are some American styles that virtually never appeared in Louisiana. Gothic and Tuscan villas and cottages of the likes of Andrew Jackson Downing come to mind. They were a national craze of the early Victorian era, but in Louisiana one can count the examples literally on one hand. Add to this the Parisian Second Empire style, with its generous and often bulbous mansard roofs. This gouty scion of the great "Gilded Age" made little impact here despite its French provenance. Then, too, styles that did become popular in our state often had Louisiana permutations quite unlike the national norms. Then there is that glory of our heritage, the French Creole tradition, which, with minor exceptions, appears in no other state.

The need for a clear statement on Louisiana styles has long been recognized. The essays that follow first appeared as a series in Preservation In Print which ran in 1993 and 1994. This publication is a joint project of the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans and the Louisiana Division of Historic Preservation, Office of Cultural Development, Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism. The authors, as members of the Division's staff, have at present a total of 45 man-years experience in examining Louisiana's historic buildings. Many of the observations contained in these essays uniquely reflect that experience. In this they have come to know and savor the richness of our architectural heritage. All in all, one could hardly spend a career in a more delightful pursuit.



Continue to The French Creole Style

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