New Orleans

Historic Sites in New Orleans

3 historic sites to discover with Bad Historian in New Orleans.

New Orleans Audio Experiences

Visit these historic sites and more on a self-guided audio experience.

Cocktails, Craps & the Invention of Fun

Cocktails, Craps & the Invention of Fun

A pharmacist accidentally invented the cocktail. A Creole aristocrat introduced craps and named a street after it. A bartender required twelve minutes of shaking and closed at eight because he hated drunks. Walk from the Roosevelt Hotel to Frenchmen Street and discover how New Orleans invented the good time.

1h 30m10 stops
Ghosts, Graves & the Voodoo Queen

Ghosts, Graves & the Voodoo Queen

Above-ground tombs, voodoo rituals, and the hairdresser who ran the city's underground — the REAL history behind the ghost tour hokum. Walk from a cemetery where 100,000 bodies share one city block through the birthplace of jazz, past a cathedral that will not stop burning down, and into the most infamous house in New Orleans.

1h 30m9 stops
Mansions, Money & Magnolias

Mansions, Money & Magnolias

Walk through the most expensive temper tantrum in American real estate history. When the Creoles rejected them, the Americans built an entire neighborhood out of spite — complete with forty-eight columns, a president's deathbed, a thousand dolls, and a cornstalk fence from a catalog.

1h 30m9 stops
Pirates, Presidents & Purchase Receipts

Pirates, Presidents & Purchase Receipts

How a pirate, a general, and a fifteen million dollar receipt changed the shape of America — all in one swamp. Walk through the French Quarter (which is actually Spanish) and discover the Louisiana Purchase, the battle fought after the war ended, the plot to rescue Napoleon, and why Mardi Gras colors may come from a Russian coat of arms.

1h 30m9 stops
The French Quarter Cheat Code

The French Quarter Cheat Code

Beignets, Baronesses & Eight Blocks of Trouble. A woman got shot four times by her father-in-law and built the most famous apartments in the South with eight fingers. A shoemaker challenged segregation sixty-three years before Rosa Parks. A cook chained to a stove set a fire so someone would finally look upstairs. Eight stops through the French Quarter — eighty percent true, twenty percent invented.

1h 30m10 stops

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