Mid-City is the heart of New Orleans, the area where locals come
when they want to remember what makes this city the generous,
pleasure-loving, hard-boiled town that it is. Stop by any neighborhood
eaterie here for an elegant experience or a meal to remember at the
numerous formica counter favorites.
Mid-city
showcases the spirit of a true neighborhood as defined by that unique
measure of camaraderie found only in this city: It has its own Mardi
Gras parading society. The Krewe of Mid-City, founded in 1933 by a
group of area businessmen, is the fifth oldest Carnival marching
organization in New Orleans.
In 1913
a young engineer named Albert Baldwin Wood made Mid-City habitable when
he developed the screw pump, a device that allowed water to be pumped
from land situated below sea level. Before that, this charming
neighborhood was poorly drained swampland that was easily prone to
flooding and generally swarmed with mosquitoes.
Turpentine
works, lumberyards and other industries flourished along the New Basin
Canal, dug in 1832 on the present path of Interstate 10, and along
Canal Street. The whole area was known as "back 'o town" because it was
"back of" the natural levees along which the city first developed.
Mid-City is attractive today for several reasons including its
beautiful oak-lined avenues, like Jefferson Davis Parkway - the second
widest street in the city.
World-class
exhibitions at the New Orleans Museum of Art come literally to
residents' doorsteps, and the annual Celebration in the Oaks turns the
park into an elaborate exhibit of holiday lights. Right next to the
museum, stroll the beautiful Besthoff Sculpture Garden.
Two
American pastimes, Bowling and Rock 'n Roll, merge as live music floats
onto the lanes at Mid-City Lanes Rock 'n Bowl®, and Thursday afternoons
bring the Crescent City Farmers Market to the American Can Company –
also a great place to grab some coffee or a dinner near the bayou - on
Orleans Avenue. On the other side of Bayou St. John, headed back
downtown, Parkway Bakery and Tavern serves up po'boys and live music on
the weekends.
The streetcar that
linked this part of Canal Street to the Central Business District from
1861 to 1964 has been restored. Its fixed rail lines prove an incentive
for more visitors to discover this convenient district in the heart of
the city. A trip in the streetcar can take two routes. The Cemetery
cars will take you to the end of Canal to several vast cemeteries – New
Orleans "Cities of the Dead" named so because of the unique, ornate,
above-ground tombs. If you are looking for a bite before this trip, try
hopping off at Canal and Carrolton. Otherwise, there are plenty of
spirits and food to be found just a block or two from the cemeteries at
Liuzza's or the Bulldog. The City Park streetcar let's off near the New
Orleans Museum of Art at the end of Esplanade Avenue.
Esplanande Ridge
The
grand address of the Creole upper class in the 19th Century, Esplanade
Avenue is a living gallery of 19th and early 20th century residential
architecture. The oak-lined boulevard and surrounding neighborhoods,
with proximity to both City Park and Bayou St. John and an excellent
stock of historic housing, draw natives and visitors alike to this area.
In 1822 City Surveyor Joseph Pilie mapped the "Esplanade Prolongment"
but it would be years before the planned European-style boulevard
connecting the Vieux Carre to the bayou would become a reality. Long
before the street arrived, however, prominent New Orlenians were
building country houses and manor homes along Bayou Road and on large
parks dotted across the then-rural area that is now the historic
district.
At the same time, the
area's association with The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival,
which is held each Spring in the nearby Fairgrounds, makes the
Esplanade Ridge a favorite with artists, musicians, and music lovers.
Both
the racetrack and the New Orleans Museum of Art are within walking
distance, and public transit puts the downtown and uptown universities
within easy reach. The shops and restaurants in the 3000-3200 blocks of
Esplanade Avenue are a community haven to the residents.