Seventh Ward/Marigny
New Orleans’s Seventh Ward originally stretched from the Mississippi River to Lake Pontchartrain between Elysian Fields and Esplanade Avenue. The Seventh included neighborhoods like Lake Terrace Oaks and Filmore as well as parts of Gentilly to the Marigny, both of which overlap with the Eighth. The Seventh began as the Marigny––once a plantation owned by Bernard de Marigny, who sold it in the early nineteenth century when Marigny found himself in need of funds to pay off a debt. Selling primarily to free people of color, the neighborhood featured some of the oldest, most established Black communities in the country, after the Tremé. A host of influential African Americans have called the Seventh Ward home––from musicians like Jelly Roll Morton and Frank Ocean to activists like A. P. Tureaud to writers and academics like Fatima Shaik––as does Dillard University, a historically Black university with roots dating back to 1873.
Prospect.6 Exhibition Venues
New Orleans Center for Creative Arts (NOCCA) and Press Street Railroad Yards
Sweet Lorraine's Jazz Club
UNO St. Claude Gallery
Local Lagniappe
André Cailloux Center for the Performing Arts
Baldwin & Co.
Community Book Center
Goat in the Road Productions
JAMNOLA
Mondo Bizarro
New Orleans Center for Creative Arts (NOCCA)
New Orleans Neon Art Museum
Second Story Gallery
Studio Be
Venusian Gardens Art Gallery
Prospect Recommends
For feasting
1000 Figs ($, vegetarian)
The Ruby Slipper Café ($–$$)
For small bites and drinks
Pagoda Café ($)
Baldwin & Co ($$)
Three Muses ($$)
Grand Krewe Fine Wine and Spirits ($$$)
For shopping/exploring
King and Queen Emporium International ($–$$)
Louisiana Music Factory ($–$$)
The Spotted Cat Music Club ($–$$)