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Letters, petitions, and reports, 1804-1835

 Series

Scope and Contents

Essentially the incoming correspondence of the Conseil de Ville, they are letters, for the most part, but also includie petitions of citizens for various improvements and some reports on sundry subjects. Correspondents include Presidents James Madison and Andrew Jackson; Governors William C.C. Claiborne, Jacques Villere, Henry Johnson (also letters from his terms as U.S. Senator), and A.B. Roman; and such prominent citizens as Daniel Clark, Edward Livingston, Bernard Marigny, and Benjamin Henry Latrobe. The subject matter of these communications is quite varied, ranging from issues of public health, to interests of private property, to the defense of the city against the British invaders, and to the establishment of protestant congregations in New Orleans. Several of the letters are accompanied by drawings, most notably a set of four watercolor plans annexed to an 1816 essay on flood control written by Latrobe.

The documents are numbered sequentially, beginning with number 466 in 1804. Brief filing notes were added to the documents along with these document numbers. Some numbered documents actually are made up of two or more individual letters and/or enclosures. This series of documents is a continuation of the Petitions, decrees, and letters of the Cabildo, 1770-1803, which began the document numbering sequence noted above. Researchers should view the combined inventory of the letters, petitions, and decrees from the Cabildo, Conseil Muncipal, and Conseil de Ville (1770-1835) for more information about about these volumes.

Dates

  • Creation: 1804-1835

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Available on microfilm to registered researchers by appointment. Request by call number. Originals are closed for research.

Requesting Materials

Extent

3 Volumes (available on 2 rolls of microfilm)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: French

From the Collection: English

Processing Information

These documents were bound together into three volumes, probably sometime after 1845. They have recently been disbound for microfilming, but the existing volume designations have been retained in this description. All of the documents in this numerical sequence were part of a loan of materials made by the city to the Louisiana State Museum in 1915. While in the custody of the Museum, translations/typescripts of these documents were prepared. The original documents were returned to the City Archives Collection in 1947, but the translations/typescripts remain at the Museum (photocopies of some of the volumes are available in the archives). The tables of contents prepared for the State Museum translations/transcripts serve as finding aids for at least a portion of these documents.

Repository Details

Part of the City Archives Repository

Contact:
City Archives & Special Collections
219 Loyola Avenue
New Orleans LA 70112
504-596-2610