PETER W. PATOUT

  • Home
  • About
    • Meet Peter
    • Press
    • Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice
    • Selling your home with Peter Patout
    • Buying your home with Peter Patout
  • LA Historic Properties
    • Acadiana >
      • Rental: Ory Patout House
    • Southeast Louisiana >
      • 2615-2621 Chartres St.
      • Governor Nicholls
      • Rental: Creole Maisonette
      • Rental: Historic Cottage
  • MS HISTORIC PROPERTIES
    • Delta
    • Natchez >
      • Canemount (1851)
  • PERIOD ROOMS
    • Jacobean
    • Hacton
    • Greek Revival
    • Colonial
  • Blog
  • Past Properties
    • Maison Chenal / LaCour House /Holden Collection
    • Belmont Historic Inn
    • Mary Plantation
    • Bayside Plantation
    • The Galleries (c. 1869)
    • Loisel House (c. 1830)
    • Cold Spring Plantation
    • Fern Hill (c. 1904)
    • 3440 Coliseum Street (L-19th C)
    • Reymond House (1898)
    • 3441 Chestnut Street (L-19th C)
    • Maison Blanche
    • 2624-2626 Chartres St.
    • Crawford Plantation House (c. 1836)
    • Fonsylvania (c. 1825)
    • Dunleith Historic Inn
    • N. Roman
    • Grand Creole Cottage (c. 1828)
    • 1231 Chartres Street, Unit #1
    • Simien House (c. 1910)
    • Hubbs House (1803)
    • Trowbridge House (1840)
    • Lt. Gov. Dr. Paul Cyr House
    • 1002 Jackson #B
    • 911 St. Peter Street #6 (c. 1838)
    • The Blue House
    • Orange Cottage
    • Arabi Shotgun
    • McClure House
    • 231 N. Rampart Street #6
    • 2627-29 Chartres Street
    • Moss House (c. 1890)
    • Paradise Park (c. 1870)
    • 836 St Peter Street, #5
    • Wetherbee House (late-19th c)
    • 825 Smith Drive
    • 1127 Decatur Street, Apt C
  • Home
  • About
    • Meet Peter
    • Press
    • Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice
    • Selling your home with Peter Patout
    • Buying your home with Peter Patout
  • LA Historic Properties
    • Acadiana >
      • Rental: Ory Patout House
    • Southeast Louisiana >
      • 2615-2621 Chartres St.
      • Governor Nicholls
      • Rental: Creole Maisonette
      • Rental: Historic Cottage
  • MS HISTORIC PROPERTIES
    • Delta
    • Natchez >
      • Canemount (1851)
  • PERIOD ROOMS
    • Jacobean
    • Hacton
    • Greek Revival
    • Colonial
  • Blog
  • Past Properties
    • Maison Chenal / LaCour House /Holden Collection
    • Belmont Historic Inn
    • Mary Plantation
    • Bayside Plantation
    • The Galleries (c. 1869)
    • Loisel House (c. 1830)
    • Cold Spring Plantation
    • Fern Hill (c. 1904)
    • 3440 Coliseum Street (L-19th C)
    • Reymond House (1898)
    • 3441 Chestnut Street (L-19th C)
    • Maison Blanche
    • 2624-2626 Chartres St.
    • Crawford Plantation House (c. 1836)
    • Fonsylvania (c. 1825)
    • Dunleith Historic Inn
    • N. Roman
    • Grand Creole Cottage (c. 1828)
    • 1231 Chartres Street, Unit #1
    • Simien House (c. 1910)
    • Hubbs House (1803)
    • Trowbridge House (1840)
    • Lt. Gov. Dr. Paul Cyr House
    • 1002 Jackson #B
    • 911 St. Peter Street #6 (c. 1838)
    • The Blue House
    • Orange Cottage
    • Arabi Shotgun
    • McClure House
    • 231 N. Rampart Street #6
    • 2627-29 Chartres Street
    • Moss House (c. 1890)
    • Paradise Park (c. 1870)
    • 836 St Peter Street, #5
    • Wetherbee House (late-19th c)
    • 825 Smith Drive
    • 1127 Decatur Street, Apt C
Picture

CLIMAX OF TRICENTENNIAL YEAR!

8/21/2018

1 Comment

 
Picture

The Pontalba Family is Returning to Louisiana for the Founders Ball
& Launch of the Baroness Pontalba Exhibit at the Cabildo!
​Dear Friends! 

I am thrilled to offer you early ticket access to the Louisiana Museum’s Founders Ball & Exhibition Opening at the Cabildo. This is one for the history books!

Taking a wrong turn in the French countryside six years ago was incredibly fortuitous! I met the Pontalbas!. This wonderful occurrence along with help from friends led to this year's Founders Ball and Baroness de Pontalba exhibition....Here's how it happened and what you can anticipate. 

Picture
Picture

Founders Ball & Exhibition Opening
The Baroness de Pontalba & the Family that Built Jackson Square
​_______________​
​
How a father’s philanthropy & a daughter’s determination created the urban heart and the architectural look of Old New Orleans

My cousin and I were looking for a Joan of Arc site when we got lost. Then I saw a sign for Senlis, which I remembered from  Intimate Enemies: The Two Worlds of the Baroness de Pontalba, Christina Vella’s biography of the Almonester and Pontalba families, as their family seat.
 

We stopped at the Visitor Center and asked if the Pontalba family still lived in Senlis and discovered that they did! We arranged to tour their gardens and drove  through alleys of poplar trees and rolling hills to the château. To our delight we met members of the Pontalba family, who graciously invited us in.

That the direct descendants of the Baroness de Pontalba (1795-1874) would welcome us to Château de Mont-l’Évêque, that we would develop a warm friendship, and that they would embrace their Louisiana heritage was beyond any dream that I could imagine!

Subsequently, I kept dreaming along with my friends, artist Andrew Lamar Hopkins and Louisiana Museum Foundation Director Susan Maclay. 
Picture
Pontalba Family Founders Ball Invitations
From the beginning, we set our sights on the LMF’s top fundraising event, The Founders’ Ball, and invited the Pontalba family to be our honored guests. 

​We also realized that Mont l’Évêque is a treasure trove of historical items related to the Pontalbas' time in Louisiana - primarily in the 19th century. So, the idea for the exhibition was born. 

Picture
New Orleans’ iconic urban core: Jackson Square, St. Louis Cathedral, the Cabildo, the Presbytère, and the twin Pontalba Buildings - Upper Pontalba Apartments shown.
In addition to items from the de Pontalba family château, the exhibition will draw from the Louisiana State Museum, and loans from private collections. We are honored to have guest Curator, Randolph Delehanty, PhD, who will tell the  city-defining story of Don Andrés Almonester and his formidable daughter, Micaela, the Baroness de Pontalba.
Picture

The Founders Ball and Exhibit are dedicated to Christina Vella
Picture

Of course, none of this would have happened if I hadn't read Intimate Enemies. We should all be eternally grateful to the late Christina Vella, author of this book that was critically acclaimed by the New York Times. 

If you haven't already read Intimate Enemies, I encourage you to do so. It will deepen your appreciation of the exhibit and what Jackson Square means to all of us.


The costume Ball will be reminiscent of the elegant parties Baroness Pontalba held in New Orleans and in her mansion in Paris, which today, still known as the Hôtel de Pontalba, serves as the official residence of the United States Ambassador to France.

​Late-18th-century to mid-19th-century attire, recalling the days of Don Almonester and our Baroness, are encouraged for the ball. Contemporary black tie and ball gowns will also be acceptable.


Together, we will welcome Charles-Edouard and Isabelle, Baron and Baroness de Pontalba, their son Pierre, and other family members from France!

Here’s a link to buy your Founders Ball tickets. They are $300 each for Louisiana Museum Foundation Members and $350 for non-members. I suggest you do this today for tickets are limited and this remarkable event will sell out!

The only mission of the Louisiana Museum Foundation is to support the Louisiana State Museum through community donations and programmatic support. I hope that you will join me as a proud member of the LMF to support them for this event and beyond.

Picture
Almonester Pontalba balcony ironwork detail from the Pontalba Apartments
1 Comment
Forward>>

    See Press for more News!
    ​
    CULTURAL Insider:

    Follow my blog for historic property listings and top cultural picks to celebrate the region!

      Sign Up

    Subscribe to Newsletter

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All
    Architecture
    Art
    Books
    Events & Celebrations
    Favorite Recipes
    French Quarter Citizen
    Gardens
    Historic Homes & Properties
    History
    Julia Reed
    Maison Chenal
    Natchez
    New Orleans
    Other Listings
    Pontalba
    Southern Cuisine
    South Louisiana


    EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
    Historic Property Listings & Cultural News

    CLICK EACH ISSUE TO DISCOVER MORE

    Recent Issues
    2.20.21
    IT'S CARNIVAL TIME!
    In this Issue: 

    O N E  S O L D! | TWO! UNDER CONTRACT!
    SO MUCH GOOD NEWS!

    PORCH DREAMS REALIZED 
    MUSEUM QUALITY ROOMS
    FABULOUS PARADE PARTY SIPS & NIBBLES
    KING CAKE CHRONICLE RETURNS
    FEATURING BEST KING CAKES EVAH! 
     LOUISIANA SAKE & MORE!

    ​
    12.14.21
    SPREADING HOLIDAY CHEER!
    In this Issue:

    NEW LISTING DETAILS! ● A PREVIEW! ● PHENOMENAL ESTATES ●  SEASONAL RECIPE ●  WED TALK:  HISTORY AROUND THE TABLE ● HOLIDAY EVENTS ● BEST GIFTS ● PAY ATTENTION! ARCHITECTURAL ELEMENTS FOR YOUR  HOME!

    9.3.21
    PRICE IMPROVEMENTS  STELLAR ESTATES
     ONE UNDER CONTRACT
    CULTURAL DISTRACTIONS

    PRICE REDUCTIONS! TOP PROPERTIES!

    8.14.21 
    THREE PRICE REDUCTIONS! ARCHITECTURAL 
    FORAY

     COCKTAIL RECIPE & MORE!


    7.21.21
     SAT OPEN HOUSE ARCHITECTURAL ADVENTURE, EXPLORE THE BLOOMS+


Picture
Sign-up for new listings & my Cultural Insider Blog!
Peter W. Patout,
Historic Property Realtor

1111 Bourbon Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70116
c: (504) 481-4790
e: peter@peterpatout.com
Licensed in the State of Louisiana and Mississippi
Talbot Historic Properties
605 Congress Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70117
o: (504) 415-9730

    Have any Questions? Leave A Note!

Submit