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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Jill-Karen Yakubik and Herschel A. Franks of the archaeological firm Earth Search were the first to "unearth" the history detailed in the following pages. Our interpretation of the Cabildo
courtyard draws from their lengthy detailed report of the excavation, "Archaeological
Investigations at the Site of the Cabildo, New Orleans, Louisiana,"written with contributions
from Daniel C. Weinand, Elizabeth J. Reitz and Tristram R. Kidder. In that report Dr. Yakubik
and her colleagues devote attention to the environmental setting, previous digs in the New
Orleans area, archaeological methodologies, and field investigation results. We greatly appreciate
Dr. Yakubik's review of our manuscript.
Robert J. Cangelosi Jr., of Koch and Wilson Architects, also read this manuscript and offered helpful suggestions.
Our task was made easier with suggested exhibition label text written by Kimberly S. Hanger in
her former capacity as historian at the Louisiana State Museum. Museum director James F.
Sefcik offered encouragement and direction.
Finally, we wish to thank the late Doris Zemurray Stone, the Zemurray Foundation, and the
Friends of the Cabildo, which generously funded the excavation.
ARCHAEOLOGY AT THE CABILDO
Sometimes the solution to a practical problem yields unexpected rewards. And so it was with the 1990-1991 archaeological dig in the Cabildo courtyard. In May 1988 a fire destroyed the third
floor of the Cabildo, one of the principal buildings of the Louisiana State Museum. In the
following years, the architects of the New Orleans firm Koch and Wilson, along with
construction crews, labored over this national historic landmark's restoration. In repairing fire,
smoke, and water damage, the architects had to install mechanical lines as well as rectify a pesky
drainage problem in the courtyard. Because they were forced to disturb the ground, they
recommended that the museum conduct a full-scale archaeological dig that would provide further
details regarding the history of the Cabildo and its associated buildings. To perform this task, the
museum, with a grant from the Zemurray Foundation and funding from the Friends of the
Cabildo, hired Dr. Jill-Karen Yakubik and her Earth Search staff.
The archaeologist encountered a complex historical site. Since 1723 several buildings had occupied the space that the present Cabildo now covers. After the Cabildo's completion in 1799, repairs, additions, and renovations altered the structure. Some parts were demolished, while others were replaced.
The archaeological team excavated six units in the rear courtyard of the Cabildo, uncovering
deposits dating back to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Coins, which probably fell
unnoticed from people's pockets, aided in dating the surrounding deposits. Over a period of about
two months, the archaeologists dug up over 4000 artifacts, greatly expanding our knowledge of
the Cabildo complex and its inhabitants. To the untrained eye, bits and pieces of clothing,
crockery, bones, and other cast-off items may seem like worthless bits of trash destined for the
landfill, where we banish our own unwanted possessions. Luckily for us, enough of the "trash"
of another era has survived to become the treasure for those seeking to uncover history. For
buttons, bottle sherds, and pipe stems not only tell us about the objects of which they were once
part; they also provide clues about the daily lives of people who used those artifacts.
CONSTRUCTION AT THE CABILDO SITE
- 1723-1725 First corps de garde (police station) constructed.
- 1729-1730 Civil prison with enclosed yard built.
- 1751First corps de garde demolished and replaced with a larger one at the same location.
Officials renovated the civil prison, adding an arcaded front to the lower story of the rear
structure. A two-story military prison and criminal chamber were also built and the jailer's
quarters were expanded.
- 1769 Spanish officials demolished the front civil prison and in its place constructed the first
Cabildo (Casa Capitular, or Council House). A building inventory the following year showed the
military prison, Superior Council chamber, and jailer's quarters located behind the corps de garde
and civil prison.
- 1788 First major New Orleans fire damaged area structures, including the corps de garde, civil prison and Cabildo. The corps de garde and civil prison were repaired and returned to use.
- 1793 Firehouse built on the site of the first Cabildo.
- 1794 Second fire destroyed the firehouse and badly damaged the corps de garde and civil prison.
- 1795-1799 Workers constructed a new, larger Cabildo, designed by Gilberto Guillemard. This second Cabildo, which survives today, incorporated the thick walls of the corps de garde.
- 1795-1801 The civil prison was repaired, renovated, and expanded.
- 1837-l839 After the construction of a parish prison, the civil prison was torn down.
- 1839 The Arsenal was built on the former site of the civil prison, on St. Peter Street, behind the Cabildo.
- l841 A prison was constructed along Pirates' Alley.
- 1842 Construction of the Creole House on part of the site of the old civil prison, on Pirates'
Alley, behind the Cabildo.
- 1848 Third story, with a mansard roof and a cupola, added to the Cabildo.
- 1850 Construction of the prison adjacent to the Arsenal, according to the design of city engineer Joseph Pilie.
BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SITE
The Cabildo courtyard formed part of a prison complex for nearly two hundred years, spanning French, Spanish, and American rule. By 1725 the first corps de garde, or police station, stood on the grounds. Four years later, between the corp.s de garde and the church, authorities added the civil prison, consisting of a pair of two-story brick buildings at opposite ends of a yard enclosed by brick walls. The front structure contained a courtroom and the gatekeeper's apartment. The rear building housed the prisoners in nine cells. A combination of deterioration and the need for
increased space led to the demolition of the original corps de garde in 1751. The new police
headquarters, built alongside the jail, was fashioned from brick masonry. At this time officials
also elected to renovate the prison, rebuilding one of the rear structure's walls as well as the
prison yard wall. The courtroom became the jailer's quarters. Spanish officials instituted further
changes at this site shortly after they took over the colony. Governor Alejandro O'Reilly
reorganized the government, establishing the Cabildo, or town council. In 1769 he razed the front
portion of the complex, where the jailer and the guard had resided, and in its place erected the
first Casa Capitular, the Cabildo's meeting house.
In 1788 a great fire destroyed the Casa Capitulur, the corps de garde, and the prison, leaving
behind only the brick walls. More than a year later the renovated prison resumed its functions.
Another large fire, in 1794, severely damaged the prison again, despite the prisoners' success
in finally extinguishing the flames. Like the earlier fire, this one leveled a number of buildings in
the area, including the recently built firehouse. Once more, authorities renovated the prison first,
according to architect Gilberto Guillemard's plans. Architect and engineer Barthelemy Lafon
won the contract, and his workers completed the job in about three months. Over the next several
years, the Cabildo authorized a series of repairs and new construction, including new cells and a
kitchen behind the jailer's quarters. A two-story extension of the prison along St. Peter Street
contained seven cells. The entire complex of buildings occupied the present-day sites of the
Arsenal, the Jackson House, the Creole House, Cabildo Alley, and the buildings at 823-825 St.
Peter.
In 1839 a new parish prison on Orleans Street (behind today's Municipal Auditorium) took over the functions of the old jail. At that time, the old civil prison was torn down, but some cells
adjoining the Cabildo remained and became part of a jail for the police station housed there. In
1841 a three story prison structure was built along Priates' Alley, and in 1850 a similar structure
containing six cells was erected perpendicular to it. These additions still exist today in the
Cabildo's courtyard. The Third Precinct Station remained there until 1914, when the space was
turned over to the Louisiana State Museum.
PRISON CONDITIONS
We have some information about the prison building during the French colonial era, but much
less about the experience of its inhabitants. Sources from the Spanish period later in the century
point to miserable conditions. The jail restored after the 1788 fire was poorly ventilated and
subject to flooding. Prisoners slept on the floor in dark cells. Their efforts during the 1794 fire,
however, won them some improvement in their living space. Repairs and renovations executed
from 1796 to 1800, including separate cells for women and additional cells for men, alleviated
crowding. Officials also made changes to thwart all too frequent prison escapes. One measure
involved dismantling a shed that prisoners used to scale the exterior wall.
Prison conditions remained poor after Louisiana became a part of the United States; after all,
prisons in other American cities were similarly wretched. In 1813 the grand jury for the first
district of Louisiana inspected the crowded jail and found a series of very low, humid and
infectious vaults, which are of course very unfit to lodge men, of whatever crimes they may be
guilty" (Louisiana Courier, 2 July 1813). Debtors, vagrants, and the insane occupied the prison,
often sharing cells with persons more typically classified as criminals today. Slaves were also
imprisoned. Some of these were debtors, while others were charged with running away or
pretending to be free." Among the 185 prisoners in the jail in 1820, vagrants numbered 23, and
there were 45 federal prisoners. Twenty-three others remained untried, and 20 had committed
"slight offenses." Three insane persons, 4 runaway slaves, 18 debtors, including 1 slave, and 3
slaves "pretending to be free" rounded out the rest of the count. Sentences ranged from two
months of hard labor to life, with one prisoner scheduled for execution.
In 1823 about 50 of the 160 prisoners attempted to escape from the courtyard, where they took their daily exercise. In their nearly successful effort, they overpowered one of the keepers, but
before they could make it to the exterior door that led to the street, the young slave turnkey
secured the exit and threw the key into the street. Evading the frustrated escapees, the turnkey
managed to hide in a chimney. Before the prisoners could pry open the outer door, the city guard
arrived and turned back the prisoners. The prisoners then managed to gain access to the roof; but
by then soldiers and concerned citizens had surrounded the prison. They shot one prisoner
dead, rounded up the others, and returned them to their cells.
Alexis de Tocqueville, the famous French commentator on American life, visited the prison in
1832 and reported, "We would be unable to paint the dolorous impression that we received
when...we saw there men thrown pell-mell with swine, in the midst of excrement and filth." "The
place containing condemned criminals," asserted Tocqueville, "could not by any stretch of the
imagination be called a prison: it's a frightful cesspool into which they are dumped and which is
suitable only for those unclean animals one finds there with them. It is noteworthy that all those
detained there are not slaves: it's the prison of free men."
DINING BEHIND BARS
Waste deposits unearthed during the dig substantiate Tocqueville's dim assessment. Bones
deposited between 1800 and 1830 include a high percentage of rodent remains, indicating that
prisoners shared their cramped quarters with rats. Faunal, or animal, remains also show that the
incarcerated ate poor-quality meat. Large numbers of bones from less desirable parts of cows and
pigs probably mean that prisoners lived on a diet of cheap cuts of meat. In fact, contemporary
reports inform us that the jailer raised pigs and chickens in the courtyard.
Animal bones from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Top row from left: cow's
shoulder blade fragment with butcher's hack marks: cow s tooth; bone fragment from cow's leg
with butcher s saw cuts; cow s rib fragment . Scarring at the end of the the rib suggests that fats
nawed it Bottom from left: sheep's or goat's shoulder bone with buthcer's hack marks; pig's
tusk.
A few chickens, along with other birds, seem to have graced the prison table, as wel1 as a limited number of fish, including freshwater bullhead catfish, sheepshead, garfish, and sea trout. Turtle shells and bones suggest that the occasional terrapin appeared at the prison mess. Wild game, much more commonly eaten in the 1800s than today, also spiced up the monotonous diet of the prisoners, as did sheep and goat meat.
The bones also provide evidence of nineteenth-century butchering techniques and practices.
Some show hack marks from cleaver-like butchering instruments, while most were cut with
saws.
Prisoners and jailers ate and drank from a polyglot mixture of plates,bowls, cups, and saucers.
Tableware fragments found on the Cabildo site confirm importation of a wide variety of British
ceramics to Louisiana during the late Spanish colonial and later periods, especially large
quantities of inexpensive shell-edged pearlware. This British ware was widely popular
throughout the United States.
British ceramics from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Top row, from left: soup plate fragment, blue transfer-printed whiteware; plate fragment, black transfer-printed whiteware: soup plate lip in two pieces. blue shell-edged pearlware; bowl fragment. mulberry
transfer-printed whiteware. Bottom from left: bowl fragment. blue hand-painted pearlware. bowl
fragment, annular pearlware; cup fragment, blue hand-painted pearlware; bowl fragment,
creamware.
The team found few French artifacts from the earliest period of European settlement, primarily
because the prison structure was excavated to the base of its foundations following either the
1788 or 1794 fire. This was undoubtedly to inspect the integrity of the foundations, and it
obliterated most of the evidence of prior occupation at the site. French artifacts include faience, a
tin-enameled earthenware.

French-period ceramics, eighteenth century. Top row, from left: vessel fragment, Mottled-Brown Lead-Glazed Buffware; two vessel fragments, brown faience, French. Bottom: bowl fragment, Albisola Trailed, Italian.
Before 1780 French faience was common in Louisiana, but after that
date British ceramics predominated. Archaeologists also uncovered limited quantities of a
green-glazed buff earthenware produced in Saintonge, the smallest of the French provinces. This
coarse earthenware type was common in late eighteenth-century southeast Louisiana.

Utensils, early nineteenth century. From left: bone knife handle with partial blade; utensil handle;
cooking or eating utensil handle in the fiddle pattern; bone knife handle with partial blade.
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