Bourbon Hotel
Anita Rao KashiAnita Rao Kashi|Guest Contributor|HOTELS, NEW ORLEANS Updated : Nov 30, 2016, 03.35 PM IST
Anita Rao Kashi
Anita Rao Kashi is a freelance travel and food writer based in Bangalore. After nearly 12 years with The Times of India in Bangalore,she went freelance in Jan 2006 to write about travel and food. Her stories have appeared in such publications as Lonely Planet Magazine India, National Geographic Magazine India, Economic Times, Jetwings, Femina, Tiger Tales, Silkwinds, Bangalore Mirror, The Star of Malaysia etc. Apart from writing for various national and international magazines, newspapers and websites, as well blogging on travel and food, she has worked on travel and food guides.
Located between Royal and Bourbon Streets, the elegant façade of the Bourbon Hotel is attractive and has a rather strange as well as solemn history. It was built sometime in the mid 19th century and began life as a convent for the Sisters of the Holy Family, the oldest female-led African-American order in America. On the first floor is a ballroom which is considered to be the location for the Quadroon Balls. In a strange practice called placage, a kind of common-law marriage, wealthy Frenchmen were introduced to African-American women called quadroons or one quarter black, who they took on as a kind of mistress in a socially accepted relationship. The women were provided for in terms of finance, housing and education and the relationships sometimes are known to have lasted a lifetime. This custom is extensively documented in many works by noted authors.
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