Welcome to the Weekend POU! Feast Of All Saints is a historical novel by author and New Orleans native Anne Rice. The plot centers on the gens de couleur libres, or free people of color, who lived in New Orleans before the Civil War and in particular, the placage system and its effect on the children born from this institution. In 2001, a miniseries of the same name … [Read more...] about Saturday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Placees
Friday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Happy Friday POU! SMH.....nothing new under the sun. Just replace "pirate" with "drug dealer" - dumb woman still doing dumb shit for a no good outlaw! Sisters Marie and Catherine Villard were the mistresses of the New Orleans-based pirate brothers Pierre and Jean Laffite. Pierre had at least seven children with Marie. His relationship with her also proved handy … [Read more...] about Friday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Thursday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Good Morning POU! We continue our series of looking at the lives of the placee in colonial Louisiana. Common portray of Marie Louise Rochon. According to some stories, she not only African and French heritage but also Native American as well. Rosette Rochon was born in 1767 in colonial Mobile, the daughter of Pierre Rochon, a shipbuilder from a Québécois family and his … [Read more...] about Thursday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Wednesday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Good Morning POU! Between 1718-1830, it became an accepted practice in Louisiana for white men (married and unmarried) to take black paramours. These relationships were often longstanding. Some historians have argued that free women of color desired to be the mistresses of white men because it improved their status and security as well as their children's. Dozens of … [Read more...] about Wednesday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Tuesday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs
Good Morning POU! We take a look this week at the lives of the placee, women of color who became the lifetime mistresses of wealthy slave owners in the antebellum south. When you hear today's racists yelling that the Civil War was not about slavery but states rights, and the rationale is "because black people owned slaves!!". They don't mean some enterprising field negro … [Read more...] about Tuesday Open Thread: Little Known Stories of Plac’ees – or rather 18th Century THOTs