The Historic New Orleans Collection

The Williams Research Center
410 Chartres Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
504-598-7171
FAX 504-598-7168

Founded in 1966 from the personal collections of New Orleans residents L. Kemper and Leila Williams, the Historic New Orleans Collection is located in the heart of the Vieux Carre. The Collection is a museum/research center with extensive collections relating to Louisiana's history and culture.

Carnival holdings at the Collection are available in the library, curatorial, and manuscripts departments. In addition to books on Mardi Gras, the Library houses sheet music, souvenir booklets, guide books, and theses. The Curatorial Division maintains three-dimensional items, posters, broadsides, invitations, postcards, paintings, and other images. Besides a general photograph category for Carnival, the collections of Charles L. Franck, Leonard Huber, Daniel Leyrer, and Michael Smith contain a significant number of Mardi Gras images. Curatorial also has a large collection of float and costume designs (1870-1980s) which include the work of Jennie Wilde, Bror Anders Wikstrom, Danny Frolich, the Barth Brothers, and Blaine Kern. As a supplement to original materials, Curatorial also maintains a file containing information on artists and designers associated with Carnival. Carnival materials in the Manuscripts Division can be found in the Terriberry Mardi Gras papers (1907-1940), Walmsley Family Papers (1885-1966), Walmsley Comus Collection (1910-1925), School of Design Contracts (1911-1950), Queens of Carnival Scrapbooks (1953-1982), Anita Nolan Pitot Collection (1929-1980), Charles Christian Steppe Mardi Gras Papers (1920s-1960s), Alexander-McClure Family Papers, and the Henri de Ste. Gême Papers (1831-1838).

The Collection also owns images of nearly all of the halls and theaters where Carnival balls have been staged over the past century and one-half. Among these are interior views of the magnificent 1859 French Opera House, the elegant Orpheum Theater, and the Grand Opera House, which once stood on Canal Street. There are exterior images of the Washington Artillery Hall, the Athanaeum, Grunewald Hall, the Gaiety Theater, Odd Fellows' Hall, and the 1927 Municipal Auditorium, where the majority of krewes have staged their Carnival balls for nearly seventy years.

Various record types derive from various provenances. Holdings of items created by New Orleans Carnival organizations for the use of their own members and guests include ball invitations, admit cards, programs, dance cards, souvenirs, posters, broadsides, correspondence, contracts, float building and design records, costume designs, scrapbooks, ball favors, commemorative jewelry, limited edition doubloons, regal regalia such as crowns and scepters, and a 1949 film.

Items made commercially for sale to the public include Carnival "bulletins" made to insert in newspapers, broadsides, books, posters, guides, paintings, prints, lithographs, postcards, slides, stereographs, sheet music, phonographs, and photographs.

Among personal memorabilia are photographs, invitations, correspondence, and a 1926 Rex Ball film (transferred to videotape). Studies, analyses, and government records include theses and council records. Business items include records of float builders and designers, manufacturers, and costume makers.