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  1. Storyville was the red-light district of New Orleans, Louisiana, from 1897 to 1917. It was established by municipal ordinance under the New Orleans City Council, to regulate prostitution. Sidney Story, a city alderman, wrote guidelines and legislation to control prostitution within the city.

  2. Mar 19, 2018 · Before Hurricane Katrina, it was the site of the former Iberville Housing Projects (now mixed-income apartments) and carries an even deeper history as the site of New Orleans’ “red-light” district. Every area in New Orleans has a story, here is that of Storyville.

  3. Nov 14, 2013 · On November 12th, 1917, Mayor Martin Behrman acquiesced to pressure from the US Navy and ordered the red light district closed at midnight. Here’s the story, written by Emily Landau. Created by municipal ordinance in 1897, Storyville was New Orleans’s infamous red-light district.

  4. Jan 6, 2017 · Instead, in 1836, the city’s Anglo-Americans convinced the state legislature to split New Orleans into pieces—three semi-autonomous municipalities divided along ethnic lines. For more than 15...

  5. The suburbs saw great growth in the second half of the 20th century, and it was only in the post-World War II period that a truly metropolitan New Orleans comprising the New Orleans center city and surrounding suburbs developed.

  6. Oct 9, 2013 · New Orleans annexed the City of Lafayette out of Jefferson Parish in 1852, an expansion that pushed the Orleans Parish limits from Felicity to Toledano Street. Because Canal Street roughly...

  7. Jul 31, 2017 · This area has gone through a few different nicknames—it was first Faubourg Washington (faubourg being an old French term meaning something like suburb) and later Little Saxony, for its...

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