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New Orleans was established in 1718 by Jean Baptiste Le Moyne,
Sieur de Bienville, on a site that for centuries had been an Indian
portage between Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River. The
city was named for Philip II, Duke d’Orleans, Uncle and Regent
of Louis XV and most of the streets were named after the reigning
Bourbon family. As capital of the Louisiana Territory, New Orleans
was intended to extend France’s dominion along the Gulf of
Mexico past the established, but poorly managed, colonies of Mobile
and Biloxi.
Colonists were lured to New Orleans and the city soon became the
major settlement in the New World, bustling with industry and bristling
with political importance. In 1762, at the end of the Seven Years
War, France ceded all her territory west of the Mississippi River,
including New Orleans, to Spain. The city remained under Spanish
rule until 1800, when Napoleon forced Spain to return the Louisiana
Territory to France.
Two devastating fires, in 1786 and 1794, destroyed nearly the entire
city. Because of this, the oldest buildings in The French Quarter
are almost entirely of Spanish design. One exception is the old
Ursuline Convent, at 1114 Chartres Street, which dates from 1750,
and is generally thought to be the oldest structure in the Mississippi
valley.
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happenings at the Maison de Ville and The Bistro.
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