The Lower Ninth Ward: Community and Placemaking | New Orleans Historical (2024)

A hundred years ago, the area around the 2400 block of Lamanche Street was occupied by the Temple of the Innocent Blood, a spiritism church that was created and run by Mother Catherine Seals. From 1922 until her death in 1930, Mother Catherine maintained what has been described as a “Bethlehem” in the Lower Ninth Ward. The location for the church was intentional. At the time, this area of New Orleans was isolated swampland located on the edge of city limits. Mother Catherine used this isolation to create a space and culture for the inhabitants of the Temple that challenged the status quo. Within the Temple walls, Mother Catherine and her followers created a place and community that served and provided refuge for more vulnerable people regardless of age, race, marital status, or social standing. In 2011, a group from the University of New Orleans conducted an excavation around the former location of the Temple of the Innocent Blood. The dig uncovered items that could be directly linked to the Temple, along with an array of items that post-dated the Temple's closure.

One of these finds that came after the closing of the Temple of Innocent Blood was a subsurface trash pit containing diagnostic artifacts dating to the 1950s and 1960s. This was a time period marked by white flight and escalating racial segregation across many urban areas of the United States, and New Orleans was no exception. The Lower Ninth Ward was impacted by this social and racial upheaval, and the demographic of the area shifted from a diverse neighborhood of lower income and working class families to an area becoming predominantly occupied by Black residents.

The items recovered from the 1950-1960 period help to reconstruct the story about the community that remained in the Lower Ninth Ward, including its values, welfare, consumerism, and ideals. Objects like brand name lipstick and face creams, jewelry, and souvenirs imply an investment in joy, well being, and consideration for oneself beyond basic needs. Objects like the home mortgage stamp and life insurance tag represent actions of creating permanence, place making, and taking care of your home and family by creating and securing something for future generations.

Although these featured items are associated with a time after Mother Catherine’s death and the closure of the Temple of the Innocent Blood, they reflect the same principles upon which the Temple was founded. They are objects that have a symbolic ability to subvert the status quo, and represent the attainment of a higher social status than what others may perceive or want you to have. These artifacts can be interpreted as a continuation of Mother Catherine’s ethos and presence in the Lower Ninth Ward, and help establish a communal lineage in the history of the neighborhood that speaks to the ability of its residents to create something for themselves that may have otherwise been difficult to attain.

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Cite this Page

By Elena Ricci, edited by Elizabeth Williams, “The Lower Ninth Ward: Community and Placemaking,” New Orleans Historical, accessed March 29, 2024, https://neworleanshistorical.org/items/show/1711.

Related Tours

  • The City Beneath the City: Archaeology of New Orleans
  • Temple of the Innocent Blood

Tags

  • Archaeology

Related Sources

  • Campanella, Richard. “Urban History of Lower Ninth Ward .” Accessed December 7, 2022. https://richcampanella.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/article_Campanella-urban-history-of-Lower-Ninth-Ward-New-Orleans.pdf.
  • Gray, D. Ryan. “8 a Manger in a Sea of Mud: Material Legacies and Loss at the Temple of the Innocent Blood.” Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 26, no. 1 (2015): 105–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/apaa.12062.
  • Landphair, J. “‘The Forgotten People of New Orleans’: Community, Vulnerability, and the Lower Ninth Ward.” Journal of American History 94, no. 3 (2007): 837–45. https://doi.org/10.2307/25095146.
  • “Lower Ninth Ward Neighborhood Snapshot.” Greater New Orleans Community Data Center. Accessed December 7, 2022. https://www.datacenterresearch.org/pre-katrina/orleans/8/22/snapshot.html.
  • Simerman, John. “New Orleans' Lower 9th Ward Is Still Reeling from Hurricane Katrina's Damage 15 Years Later.” NOLA.com, August 29, 2020. https://www.nola.com/news/katrina/article_a192c350-ea0e-11ea-a863-2bc584f57987.html
  • Robert K. Nelson, LaDale Winling, Richard Marciano, Nathan Connolly, et al., “Mapping Inequality,” American Panorama, ed. Robert K. Nelson and Edward L. Ayers, accessed September 1, 2020, Accessed 9/1/2020

Published on Apr 10, 2023. Last updated on Nov 15, 2023.

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The Lower Ninth Ward: Community and Placemaking | New Orleans Historical (2024)

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