Trove of Photographs of African-American Life in Jazz-Age New Orleans
These pages come from The Crescent City Pictorial, a 28-page booklet that contains photographs of African-American New Orleans in 1926. Its recently been digitized by Tulane Universitys Amistad Research Center, and the full document is available through Tulanes digital library.
The Amistad Centers blog writes that publisher Orlando Capitola Ward Taylor intended the 50-cent booklet to be a souvenir, and a way to boost the prospects of the African-American community. (The front of the booklet reads: Dedicated to the colored citizens of New Orleans, Louisiana, Americas Most Interesting City.)
In the 19th century, historian Elizabeth Fussell writes, the citys residential pattern was racially mixed, as African-Americans working in white homes often lived nearby their employers for ease of access. In the early 20th century, white citizens moved to newly-drained swamplands on the edges of the city, while stricter enforcement of Jim Crow laws segregated public facilities.
The pages of the booklet aim to show off the diversity and breadth of life in the black community. Photographer Villard Paddio, who owned a studio in the Treme area of the city, took pictures of the interiors of businesses, social clubs, community centers, old folks homes, and hospitals. The booklet contains four pages of the exteriors of homes of its citizens, and two pages of churches.
A collage of images of the Pythian Temple features a group shot in the roof garden, which functioned as a dance hall (you can see a close-up photo of the dance hall in action here). The page also shows the range of professionals and businesses that leased offices in the temples space: doctors, attorneys, and the Liberty Industrial Life Insurance Company.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=post&forum=1187
http://www.louisianadigitallibrary.org/cdm/search/collection/p16313coll63