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Unmasking the History of Mardi Gras in New Orleans

<p>It has been two years since the traditional Mardi Gras parades and the crowds they attract have flooded the streets of New Orleans&period; After missing in-person Mardi Gras traditions last year&comma; the New Orleans community is ready to jump back into celebrating the way they know how&semi; with beads&comma; bands&comma; floats&comma; and food&period;  There is so much to be excited about as Mardi Gras approaches&period; Like so many other cultural institutions in this country&comma; Mardi Gras has a complicated history&period; New Orleans was founded in 1718 by the French explorer Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville&period; With the French came many Catholic traditions&comma; including an indulgent celebration before the chastity of Lent&period; In Catholic Europe&comma; this celebration was characterized by rowdy crowds and huge feasts&period; Carnival season begins with Twelfth Night and ends on Mardi Gras&period; In New Orleans&comma; during the 18th and 19th centuries Mardi Gras celebrations became increasingly violent&period; It became impossible to police them because there were no organized parades&period; Instead&comma; costumed revelers would parade through the streets while onlookers threw flour&comma; and eventually rotten fruit at them from the balconies of the French Quarter in a mockery of debutants throwing sweets as they rode to the aristocrat balls&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is reported that the first celebration of Mardi Gras in New Orleans occurred in 1730 when a French settler named Marc-Antoine Caillot and a small group of his friends dressed up in makeshift costumes and crashed a wedding&period; This celebration was unrecognizable from the Mardi Gras of today&period; In the 1700s&comma; there were no parades&comma; and Mardi Gras in the Big Easy was centered around aristocratic balls&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Upscale Mardi Gras balls began in 1741&comma; but the earliest reference to a Carnival in New Orleans that resembles today&&num;8217&semi;s celebrations was in 1781 when a Spanish magistrate &lpar;New Orleans was under Spanish rule from 1762 &&num;8211&semi; 1803&rpar; demanded more segregated festivities&period; Since costumes and masks were so widespread during Mardi Gras celebrations&comma; people of color could intermingle with white colonists and celebrate with them&period; During French rule&comma; they even attended the aristocratic Mardi Gras balls held by wealthy Creole &lpar;people living in New Orleans of French or Spanish descent&rpar; merchants and farmers&period; When the Spanish took over the city in 1781 they prohibited Black people from masking or attending Mardi Gras balls&period; Mask bans went in and out of effect in an attempt to segregate revelers&period; At the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803&comma; most New Orleans inhabitants were of French descent&period; When American aristocrats moved into the city in the early 19th century&comma; tensions emerged in Mardi Gras ballrooms&period; By 1852&comma; Americans had seized control of the city&period; They dominated its government and Mardi Gras celebrations&period; By the 1850s&comma; Mardi Gras was so dangerous that most people stayed inside&comma; and the streets were overrun by criminals and violence&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1857&comma; an American named John Pope established the Gem Saloon committee&comma; a group of wealthy white American men who sought to reform Mardi Gras&period; They formed the Mystick Krewe of Comus&comma; the first official Mardi Gras parading krewe&period; Comus took Mardi Gras balls from the Creoles and made them exclusively for rising American aristocrats&period; They also introduced the concept of an organized and themed parade&period; Their first parade ended at the Gaiety Theater&comma; where they performed a tableau for their exclusive ball&period; All of the members were sworn to secrecy&comma; and they formed the Pickwick Club as a front for their secret society&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1862&comma; during the Civil War &lpar;1861-1865&rpar;&comma; New Orleans became occupied by the Union Army&period; The city was plunged into shortages&comma; and Mardi Gras celebrations that year were almost nonexistent&period; Celebrations and traditions continued to be muted until 1866 when Comus paraded again&period; After the Civil War&comma; Comus remained closely tied to the ideals of the Confederacy&comma; championing white supremacy and including ex-Confederates in their club and parades&period; In 1873&comma; Comus put on a parade deriding Darwin’s <em>Origin of Species <&sol;em>that included racist images of Black Americans and mocked Ulysses S&period; Grant&comma; who oversaw Reconstruction&period; During all of this time&comma; Black people remained excluded from Mardi Gras&period; This disgusting display was widely applauded by New Orleans high society&period; In 1870&comma; the second Mardi Gras krewe formed&colon; the Twelfth Night Revelers&period; It was founded by the Crescent City Democratic Club&comma; which was working towards the same goals as the KKK&period; The Twelfth Night Revelers introduced throwing trinkets from parade floats and naming a debutant as queen of their parade each year&comma; which both became popular traditions&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1873&comma; two more Mardi Gras krewes debuted&colon; the Krewe of Momus and the Krewe of Rex&period; The Krewe of Rex was founded to honor a Russian duke who visited the city for Mardi Gras that year&period; In mimicry of royalty&comma; they elected a king named Rex who &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;ruled” New Orleans for a day&period; They also commanded those who lived along their parade route to decorate their houses with Rex’s &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;royal colors” &&num;8211&semi; green&comma; purple&comma; and gold&period; They became the first krewe to parade during the day&period; In 1873&comma; Rex picked a queen for the first time&period; The Krewe of Momus featured floats paying tribute to Scottish novels&period; The krewe was founded by people impatient with the waitlist to get into Comus and was also primarily made up of ex-Confederates and white supremacists&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>From the beginning&comma; these organized parades employed satire in their designs&period; Comus mocked Reconstruction through offensive depictions of Republican politicians and displays of racism like in their 1873 parade&period; The first Rex parade&comma; made to honor the visiting Duke&comma; paradoxically poked fun at his supposed affair with an opera singer by playing <em>If I Ever Cease to Love<&sol;em> in front of him&comma; a song that the opera singer sang&period; Zulu took racist stereotypes and made them their own&comma; incorporating them into their parades&period; This trend has carried into today&comma; and krewes like the Krewe du Vieux are renowned for their satirical displays&period; Mocking the contemporary constructs of power is a fundamental part of this celebration&period; It has provided a voice to those&comma; like the original members of Zulu and the Krewe of Yuga&comma; the first gay krewe&comma; who otherwise didn’t have one&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1875&comma; Mardi Gras in the Crescent City was canceled&period; Tensions between white supremacists&comma; many of them prominent members of the parading krewes&comma; and Republicans had erupted into violence&period; The Twelfth Night Revelers became a ball-only krewe and stopped hosting parades&period; They remain a ball-only krewe today&period; Republicans lost control of the city in 1876&comma; and white supremacists and ex-Confederates ensured that the Black population in New Orleans remained oppressed as the efforts of Reconstructionists collapsed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>All of these krewes are now known as old-line krewes&period; They are the oldest krewes of Mardi Gras&comma; and heavily embedded in the history of racism and white supremacy in the city&period; Towards the close of the 19th century&comma; they began to shift more towards Rex’s version of festivities&comma; which focused on bringing tourists and money into the city around Mardi Gras&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1909&comma; the Zulu Social Aide and Pleasure Club&comma; which is sometimes considered an old-line krewe&comma; began parading&period; It was the first all-black parade and mocked many contemporary racist stereotypes such as blackface&period; The coconuts they painted and handed out at their parades soon became a precious item to catch at Mardi Gras&comma; and the krewe has become a symbol of Carnival&period; Today&comma; lucky parade-goers are still able to catch these coconuts&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1921 Rex introduced the tossing of beads&comma; which became an essential part of parading by the 1980s&period; Mardi Gras struggled to regain its footing after World War I&comma; and the city began to urge people to start costuming and closed traffic in the French Quarter to encourage parade attendance&period; In 1934&comma; the city started a public&comma; segregated ball to push back against the exclusivity of the old-line krewes&period; The city also extended Carnival from a day to a week and then a month&period; This longer season allowed for more krewes to parade&period; Neighborhood&comma; or commercial krewes&comma; were founded in the 1920s&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;30s&comma; and &OpenCurlyQuote;40s to fill these spots&period; These included krewes such as the Krewe of Hermes &lpar;which introduced neon lights on parading floats&rpar; and the Krewe of Nor &lpar;which introduced local high school marching bands in parades&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1958&comma; the Krewe of Yuga&comma; the first gay krewe&comma; held its first ball&period; This krewe sought to mock the stuffiness of the old-line krewes whose members had historically oppressed members of the LGBTQ&plus; community and anyone who was not wealthy and white&period; They held their ball for five years before it was raided by the police in 1962&period; After those arrested were bailed out&comma; several of them formed another gay krewe&comma; the Krewe of Petronius&comma; which still holds balls today that feature elaborate and impressive costumes&period; In 1964&comma; the Bourbon Street Awards&comma; the largest drag contest in the United States&comma; was started&period; This contest still takes place today on Fat Tuesday and features hundreds of contestants and enormous costumes that can weigh over a hundred pounds&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"attachment&lowbar;10964" aria-describedby&equals;"caption-attachment-10964" style&equals;"width&colon; 881px" class&equals;"wp-caption alignright"><img class&equals;"size-full wp-image-10964" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;Screen-Shot-2022-01-25-at-11&period;33&period;14-AM&period;png" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"881" height&equals;"739" &sol;><figcaption id&equals;"caption-attachment-10964" class&equals;"wp-caption-text">Photo by David Grunfeld&comma; NOLA&period;com&comma; 2019<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>1969 ushered in the era of the super krewes&period; That year&comma; the Krewe of Bacchus rolled for the first time&period; Founded by a group of businessmen who thought Mardi Gras was dying&comma; this first super krewe focused on being bigger and better than the other krewes&period; They had three times as many riders on their multi-tiered floats and threw over a million strings of beads their first year&period; They also invite celebrities to be their king and ride on the first float&period; Endymion&comma; a neighborhood krewe founded in 1967&comma; was inspired by Bacchus and decided to transform itself into the second super krewe&period; They opened their membership to any man &lpar;women were still excluded&rpar; who could pay the membership fee&period; These super krewes were instantly popular&comma; and although they were still exclusive they were much more inclusive than the old-line krewes&period; The third and final super krewe was founded in 2012&semi; the Krewe of Nyx&period; Not only were the super krewes much more popular&comma; but people had begun to criticize the exclusivity of the old-line krewes and saw super krewes as more accessible to the public&period; Old-line krewes had remained strictly white&comma; male&comma; and Protestant&comma; with few exceptions&comma; since their founding&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 1991&comma; Dorothy Mae Taylor&comma; the first Black woman to serve in the Louisiana House of Representatives&comma; brought the krewes to court and forced them to integrate&period; If they did not integrate&comma; their parading licenses were revoked&period; At this time&comma; most krewes consisted of all white males &lpar;the Krewe of Iris&comma; founded in 1959&comma; was a notable exception&comma; as it was one of the only all-female krewes&rpar;&period; Comus and Momus both stopped parading&comma; and Proteus did too until 2000&period; To fill the gaps left by these old-line krewes&comma; new&comma; more inclusive krewes&comma; like the Krewe of Muses and the Krewe of Orpheus&comma; sprung up&period; Comus still holds its debutante ball behind closed doors&comma; and every year there is a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;meeting of the courts” where Rex and his queen meet Comus and his queen&period; Both krewes remain extremely exclusive&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2005&comma; New Orleans was devastated by Hurricane Katrina&period; The storm killed almost two thousand people and caused 81 billion dollars in property damage&period; In the wake of the destruction&comma; city officials debated but ultimately decided to hold Mardi Gras&period; It looked different than the celebrations the year before&comma; but it still brought joy and money into the city&period; Last year&comma; Mardi Gras was canceled for the 15th time in history due to the pandemic and replaced by &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Yardi Gras&comma;” where people put elaborate decorations on their front lawns&period; This year&comma; Mardi Gras is back&comma; and the city has already organized the parade routes&period; Some of them have changed from previous years due to a shortage of available law enforcement&comma; but the Carnival season is packed with parades for everyone to enjoy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>With organizations like Comus out of the public eye&comma; it is easy to forget the troubled history of these krewes&period; However&comma; many old-line krewes integrated only in name&comma; and remain extremely white and wealthy&period; Often the only way to become a part of these secret societies is through marriage&comma; and membership is passed down through the family&period; It is important to remember this history&comma; which is frequently swept under the floats&period; To an outsider like myself&comma; the costumes of the Rex riders are a little too close to the oppressive symbols of other masked groups&period; As I watch them go by this year&comma; I will definitely be thinking about that history and encourage you to as well&period; I am excited to experience my first in-person Mardi Gras&comma; and also want to be aware of the past as I’m reaching to catch throws&period; I’ve begun to plan which parades I want to see&comma; and can’t wait to find the best king cake in the city&period; Amid the rush of tourism that fills the city&comma; this history is often lost&comma; and you have to look for it to find it&period; Mardi Gras has not always been as accessible as it is for everyone today&comma; and it is important to remember that between slices of king cake and handfuls of beads&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"attachment&lowbar;10966" aria-describedby&equals;"caption-attachment-10966" style&equals;"width&colon; 274px" class&equals;"wp-caption aligncenter"><img class&equals;"size-full wp-image-10966" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;Screen-Shot-2022-01-25-at-11&period;35&period;21-AM&period;png" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"274" height&equals;"518" &sol;><figcaption id&equals;"caption-attachment-10966" class&equals;"wp-caption-text">Photo by Kate Elkins&comma; rexorganization&period;com<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>Interested in learning more&quest; Most of the information in this article came from the <em>History of Mardi Gras<&sol;em> course taught by Professor Fertel or from the New Orleans Mardi Gras website&comma; <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;mardigrasneworleans&period;com&sol;">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;mardigrasneworleans&period;com&sol;<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Featured Photo by Dan Anderson&comma; the New York Times&comma; 2020<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine; <&excl;-- WP Biographia v4&period;0&period;0 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"wp-biographia-container-top" style&equals;"background-color&colon; &num;FFEAA8&semi; border-top&colon; 4px solid &num;000000&semi;"><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-pic" style&equals;"height&colon;100px&semi; width&colon;100px&semi;"><img alt&equals;'' src&equals;'https&colon;&sol;&sol;secure&period;gravatar&period;com&sol;avatar&sol;1f4befa5fe11abd32531fe32dba8974458edf37de60946aa2113205a0ed7f2f5&quest;s&equals;100&&num;038&semi;d&equals;wp&lowbar;user&lowbar;avatar&&num;038&semi;r&equals;g' srcset&equals;'https&colon;&sol;&sol;secure&period;gravatar&period;com&sol;avatar&sol;1f4befa5fe11abd32531fe32dba8974458edf37de60946aa2113205a0ed7f2f5&quest;s&equals;200&&num;038&semi;d&equals;wp&lowbar;user&lowbar;avatar&&num;038&semi;r&equals;g 2x' class&equals;'wp-biographia-avatar avatar-100 photo' height&equals;'100' width&equals;'100' &sol;><&sol;div><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-text"><h3>About <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;author&sol;calmo&sol;" title&equals;"Corwin Almo">Corwin Almo<&sol;a><&sol;h3><p><&sol;p><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-links"><small><ul class&equals;"wp-biographia-list wp-biographia-list-text"><li><a href&equals;"mailto&colon;ca&&num;108&semi;&&num;109&semi;o&&num;64&semi;&&num;116&semi;u&&num;108&semi;&&num;97&semi;&&num;110&semi;e&period;&&num;101&semi;du" target&equals;"&lowbar;self" title&equals;"Send Corwin Almo Mail" class&equals;"wp-biographia-link-text">Mail<&sol;a><&sol;li> &vert; 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