Showing posts with label house tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label house tour. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Dining at Destrehan Plantation


destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
Welcome back to Destrehan Plantation!  There is a bounty of food laid out for your pleasure!  Faux food, that is!  The first couple of pictures are from the kitchen inside the home on the first floor.  This is probably where they assembled the food for serving since there is also a kitchen that is unattached to the home.
 
destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
destrehan plantation - the kitchen
 
Now, on the dining room.  I don’t have a lot of pictures of this room because the light was not good.  Also, we were with a group of very young couples who seemed to want to rush though so I didn’t get as many pictures as I wanted to!
 
destrehan plantation - the dining room
 
destrehan plantation - the dining room
 
Homes built this early on where not as fancy as some of the later built homes.  Plus, we have to realize that in 1787 there weren’t any furniture stores to buy from!  On the other hand, for this time period, they were lucky to be so close to the Port of New Orleans where they could have items shipped in from France.
 
destrehan plantation
 
The rest of the pictures are from the movie Interview with the Vampire, which was filmed here at Destrehan.  I’m pretty sure this is Louie’s home, where the vampire Lestat, played by Tom Cruise was having dinner with him.

 
This is Lestat again after Louie sets fire to his home after informing his slaves that he is the devil!
 
 
 
Did you know that Anne Rice actually wrote the book, Interview with the Vampire and that she is a native of New Orleans herself?  Brad Pitt must have really liked the area himself since he and Angelina Jolie also own a home here.  Hmmm, I think there’s another post in here somewhere!
 
If you click on the pictures, it will state you to the original source.  If you missed Part 1 of Destrehan Plantation, click here.  Thanks so much for stopping by!  I hope you enjoyed the tour!
 
Sharing with:
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style
Thrifty Things Friday @ The Thrifty Groove
Centerpiece Wednesday @ The Style Sisters
Open House @ No Minimalist Here
Let’s Dish @ Cuisine Kathleen
Tablescape Thursday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Seasonal Sundays @ The Tablescaper
Grace at Home @ Imparting Grace
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru Life

Thursday, May 9, 2013

The Laura–A Creole Plantation Part 3


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Here are some pictures of Laura though the years. Originally named after her great grandfather, the Duparc Plantation name was changed in 1874 to "The Laura." In 1872, Laura's grandmother, Elisabeth, divided the plantation, giving half to Laura's father, Emile, 3,000 acres plus the Big House, and, to his sister, Aimee, was given 3,000 acres and the sugar mill. The following year, Emile had a successful harvest but, his sister and mother, wanting to take back his half of the farm, refused him the use of Aimee's sugar mill. His entire crop spoiled, Emile found lenders in New Orleans and, in 1873, built his own sugar mill. To celebrate the mill's opening, Emile asked Laura to invite her teenage girl friends, instructing them to suggest a name for his new mill. Laura's best friend, Lily LeGendre, offered "the Laura Mill." Realizing the opportunity, Emile, in front of Elisabeth & Aimee, declared that his half of the plantation would be called "the Laura Plantation." When Laura sold the farm in 1891 to the Florian Waguespack family, she stipulated that from that sale forward, the name of the farm must be called "the Laura Plantation." Laura was born in 1861 and died in 1963 at the age of 102. After she sold the plantation in 1891, she moved to St. Louis, Missouri, to live with her husband.

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This is a view from the back balcony. The building you see in the distance is the Maison de Reprise. It was built in 1829 by Laura’s great grandmother as a “retirement home.” If you did not work for the family business, you did not reside in the main home. So upon her retirement, she purchased a slot of land from the plantation and had this built. After retirement, she lived an additional 30-35 years!

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I really hope that one day, before it’s too late, that funds will become available to where this beautiful old building can be restored!  This is what the house looked like in 1919.
 
Maison Reprise, Laura Plantation, 1919
 
I scanned it from this book, “Memories of the Old Plantation Home” by Laura Lecoul Gore.
 
 
It is an excellent resource for more information about the plantation and Laura’s life.  Before her death, she wrote down her memoirs for her children and held in safe keeping by a family friend. The manuscript was not found until restorers of the plantation were searching for old pictures and other documentation.  It is an amazing book that gives the reader a glimpse of her own life as well as stories passed down in her family.  I purchased the book and highly recommend it!  If you click on the picture, it will take you to Amazon, where it can be purchased.  Another resource is The Laura website.  It also has quite a bit of information, including this info that I’ve shared below!
 
Laura Plantation was rescued from demolition, not because of its Big House but, because of its remaining slave quarters and what happened in them many years ago. In the 1870s, Alcée Fortier, a young neighbor of Laura's, visited the workers' cabins at this site and at nearby plantations. On his visits, he wrote down stories that he heard the former slaves telling their children in French. Throughout his life, Fortier was known for the passion he had for his native Creole culture and for his special interest in recording folklore that he, as a child, had been exposed to on his family plantation on the River Road and in New Orleans.
 
Source
 
As a teenager, Fortier began to collect these stories from former slaves, all lively accounts of Compair Lapin and Compair Bouki, the clever rabbit and the stupid fool. In 1894, Fortier, the president of the American Folklore Society and Dean of Foreign Languages of Tulane University, published his stories, entitling them "Louisiana Folktales."
One year later, Fortier's friend and colleague in Georgia, Joel Chandler Harris, published stories that he had heard in English, tales told by former slaves (whose ancestors were from Senegal) in Georgia and the Carolinas. To great success, Harris published "Tales of Uncle Remus", including his "The Little Tar Baby." Ever since, English-speakers would know Compair Lapin as that rascal: Br'er Rabbit.
 
 
To purchase a copy, as written by Alcee Fortier in 1894, click on the picture above.  Below is an original slave cabin that remains at the plantation today.  It was in cabins, such as this, that the old stories were told!
 
slave cabin @ laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
I hope you have enjoyed this tour of The Laura Plantation.  If you missed any previous posts, I have them listed below:
 
Part 1
Part 2
 
Thanks for stopping by!
 
Sharing with:
Metamorphosis Monday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Make it Pretty @ The Dedicated House
Nifty Thrifty Tuesday @ Coastal Charm
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru Life
Open House @ No Minimalist Here
Tuesdays Treasures @ My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia
The Scoop Link Party @ The Farmhouse Porch
Tuesdays at Our Home @ Our Home Away From Home
Show Me What Ya Got @ Not JUST A Housewife
Be Inspired Friday @ Common Ground
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Fabulously Creative Party @ Jennifer Rizzo
Tweak it Tuesday @ Cozy Little House
Tips, Tutorials, & Tidbits @ StoneGable
Spring Party @ DIY by Design
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style
Oh, the Places I've Been @ The Tablescaper

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

The Laura–A Creole Plantation Part 2


dining room at laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
Welcome back to The Laura Plantation!  Today we’re touring the dining room and the preparation room.
 
dining room at laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
The table is set with some lovely gold trimmed china.
 
dining room at laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
Gold trimmed serving pieces…
 
petticoat table at laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
You will see many tables like this in antebellum homes.  This is called a petticoat table.  As the ladies walked by, they could check their petticoats in the mirror.
 
laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
This is the preparation room where the cooked food would have been brought in from the kitchen prior to serving the family in the dining room.
 
dining room at laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
This room is much more rustic than other antebellum homes that I have toured.  Most have a nice butler’s pantry that also housed china.
 
laura plantation, vacherie, la
 
Be sure and stop back by on Thursday afternoon!  I’ll be posting Part 3 that will include a little more Creole history!
 
Thanks for stopping by!
 
Sharing with:
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Centerpiece Wednesday @ The Style Sisters
Let’s Dish @ Cuisine Kathleen
Tablescape Thursday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Seasonal Sundays @ The Tablescaper
Grace at Home @ Imparting Grace
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru Life

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Houmas House Garden Tour

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houmas house garden tour
 
Welcome back to Houmas House!  The gardens at this plantation are absolutely fabulous!!  I was totally amazed when we arrived.  As you leave the gift shop, the pond is the first thing you see!  Since we had an hour before our tour began, we followed the sounds of rushing water.  This was the first of many waterfalls in this area!
 
houmas house garden tour
 
The water came down this waterfall and actually flowed under the sidewalk…
 
houmas house garden tour
 
and formed little streams!  Here is just one of many seating areas!
 
houmas house garden tour
 
This is a tall double waterfall!
 
houmas house garden tour
 
There is another seating area under the pavilion on the hill.
 
houmas house garden tour
 
This is a view of the left side of the house.
 
houmas house garden tour
 
Here’s a view of the front lawn, complete with wedding set up!  Originally there were 28 live oaks down the alley but after the big flood in the late 20’s, a lot of the trees were removed to make way for the levee system.  The alley of trees functioned as a type of tunnel bringing in wind off the Mississippi River and would help cool the house in the hot summer months.  Once the levee was built, all the wall was blocked off.
 
houmas house garden tour
 
A view from the back yard looking toward the rear of the house.
 
houmas house garden tour
 
This next view is from the area of the waterfalls.  In the distance, you can see the water spray from the fountain that is in the back of the house. 
 
houmas house garden tour

Another view of the backyard from a different angle.
 
houmas house garden tour
 
A view from the right side…
 
houmas house garden tour
houmas house gardent tour
 
I so hope that you have enjoyed this tour!  I know that I really enjoyed taking out these pictures!  It was so hard to decide which pictures to use!  If you missed the first two posts on Houmas House, click on the links below!
 
 
Sharing with:
Metamorphosis Monday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Make it Pretty @ The Dedicated House
Nifty Thrifty Tuesday @ Coastal Charm
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru Life
Open House @ No Minimalist Here
Tuesdays Treasures @ My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia
The Scoop Link Party @ The Farmhouse Porch
Tuesdays at Our Home @ Our Home Away From Home
Show Me What Ya Got @ Not JUST A Housewife
Be Inspired Friday @ Common Ground
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Fabulously Creative Party @ Jennifer Rizzo
Tweak it Tuesday @ Cozy Little House
Tips, Tutorials, & Tidbits @ StoneGable
Spring Party @ DIY by Design
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style
Oh, the Places I've Been @ The Tablescaper

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Houmas House Tour & Fine Dining


houmas house plantation tour

Welcome back to Houmas House!  If you missed Part 1, click here.  Let’s continue the tour with the dining and kitchen areas.
The table in the dining room is set out in all it’s splendor!
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
All of the lovely plantation homes in the South has pineapples.  They are a sign of hospitality!  There is even a brass pineapple on the hearth which you can see in the next picture.
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
A few pieces of the original china still exist.
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
As we left the dining room, we walked down the hallway to a large open room which had a few more tabletop goodies!
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
Has you ever seen a silver barbeque pit?
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
It does have the look of one doesn’t it?  But it’s actually a roast beef server!
 
houmas house plantation tour
 
This room has French doors that exit to the back porch and beyond to the outdoor kitchen.  Here’s a peek though the door.  You can see part of the fabulous gardens though the other door.
 
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Remember the original china?  They do have reproductions, approximately 600 pieces!  The lady to the right in the picture below is actually a server for a wedding that was going on.  She was dipping some type of soup or gumbo into cups for the guests.
 
houmas house plantation tour

Did I mention there is an onsite restaurant?  Actually, Houmas House is the home of Latil’s Landing Restaurant, CafĂ© Burnside, Le Petite Houmas Restaurant and the Wine Cellars of Houmas House.  For more info, go to HoumasHouse.com.
 
 
I hope you enjoyed this part of the Houmas House tour!  If you missed Part 1, click here.  Be sure to stop by Friday for the garden tour!  It is totally awesome!
 
Sharing with:
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Centerpiece Wednesday @ The Style Sisters
Let’s Dish @ Cuisine Kathleen
Tablescape Thursday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Seasonal Sundays @ The Tablescaper
Grace at Home @ Imparting Grace
Make it Pretty @ The Dedicated House
Nifty Thrifty Tuesday @ Coastal Charm
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru Life
Open House @ No Minimalist Here
Tuesdays Treasures @ My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia
The Scoop Link Party @ The Farmhouse Porch
Tuesdays at Our Home @ Our Home Away From Home
Show Me What Ya Got @ Not JUST A Housewife
Be Inspired Friday @ Common Ground
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Fabulously Creative Party @ Jennifer Rizzo
Tweak it Tuesday @ Cozy Little House
Tips, Tutorials, & Tidbits @ StoneGable
Spring Party @ DIY by Design
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style

Monday, April 22, 2013

Houmas House & Bette Davis


 
This past Saturday, the husband and I skipped down River Road and toured a couple of fabulous antebellum homes.  We had an awesome time.  We live a little over an hour away from this area but have never visited.  After this trip, I wondered what took us so long and, yes, I am already planning another trip to see the rest of the plantations!
 
The house that I’m showing you today is called Houmas House which is named after the Houmas Indians that lived in this area.  The land to build the house was actually purchased from the Indians by the original owner.
 
houmas house
 
This picture was taken in the center hall.  On the table is an antique “view finder” from the 1800’s.  The mural on the walls is not original to the house but was painted by the gardener!  Yes, you heard right!  The gardener painted this fine mural of a sugar cane field.  To see more of the hallway mural, you can check out Susan’s post on Houmas House by clicking here.  Since she recently did a post and I have a ton of pictures, I’m going to try to share different rooms.  This music box is from the 1800’s and still works perfectly!
 
houmas house
 
The next one is from the parlor…
 
houmas house
 
with it’s fabulous chandelier and moldings!
 
houmas house
 
And the clock on the mantel, actually belonged to Marie Antoinette!  It was purchased by one of the owners at an auction.
 
houmas house
 
the game room…
 
houmas home
 
You might be asking yourself just what does this house have to do with Bette Davis?  Well, she’s got her own room here!  Her movie, Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte, was filmed in this home.  That’s it in the background.
 
 
At the time, there were no other accommodations in this area so she stayed onsite in this bedroom.
 
 
houmas house
 
This room is now called the Bette Davis room.  See the table at the foot of the bed?
 
houmas house on river road in la
 
It opens up into a desk!  Amazing, especially considering it’s a couple of hundred years old!  In the corner, there is a cabinet holding momentums from the movie.
 
Houmas house on river road in la
 
The children’s room…
 
houmas house on river road in la
 
This is the private bedroom of the owner, well maybe not so private since it’s part of the tour!
 
houmas house on river road in la
 
The gentleman’s wig is from the 1800’s and made of horsehair.
 
houmas house on river road in la
 
houmas house on river road in la
 
Ok, I’m going to stop here for today.  To see more, be sure to check back later this week.  I’ll be sharing the dining room and kitchen area for Tablescape Thursday and the garden tour on Friday!  The gardens are totally amazing!
 
Sharing with:
Metamorphosis Monday @ Between Naps on the Porch
Make it Pretty @ The Dedicated House
Nifty Thrifty Tuesday @ Coastal Charm
Inspire Me Tuesday @ A Stroll thru LifeOpen House @ No Minimalist Here
Tuesdays Treasures @ My Uncommon Slice of Suburbia
The Scoop Link Party @ The Farmhouse Porch
Tuesdays at Our Home @ Our Home Away From Home
Show Me What Ya Got @ Not JUST A Housewife
Be Inspired Friday @ Common Ground
Saturday Nite Special @ Funky Junk Interiors
Fabulously Creative Party @ Jennifer Rizzo
Tweak it Tuesday @ Cozy Little House
Tips, Tutorials, & Tidbits @ StoneGable
Spring Party @ DIY by Design
Wow Us Wednesday @ Savvy Southern Style