Banks' Arcade was constructed in 1833, by Thomas Banks, a heavily leveraged local businessman.[5] Prussian immigrant engineer and surveyor
Charles Zimpel was the building's architect; he also designed the
City Hotel and the Bank of Orleans.[6] The building consisted of two commercial blocks connected by a central promenade covered in a glass ceiling.[2] For many years the three-story building fronting Magazine was a landmark that served as a combination of office space, "auction-mart, [and] bar-room".[7] According to architectural historian
Dell Upton, "The ground floor contained stores, John Hewlett's restaurant, and the offices of notaries, newspapers, architects, commodity brokers, auctioneers, attorneys, and slave dealers. On the second floor were offices, billiard rooms, and the Washington Guards armory, while the third floor provided 'sleeping rooms for gentlemen.'"[2] There was also a hotel within the building.[2] Banks' Arcade was one of many
slave markets in New Orleans before the
American Civil War.[8]
Banks was a supporter of the paramilitary action that became the
Texas Revolution; two companies of soldiers known as the
New Orleans Greys were recruited and organized at the Arcade's coffeehouse.[9] The coffee room was not a 19th-century café with baristas and a couple of tables, but a grand meeting room, reportedly large enough to host 5,000 people at a time.[2]
Banks ran into financial trouble during the
Panic of 1837[7] and
declared bankruptcy in 1842.[5] The building was heavily damaged in a fire in 1851,[10] although not wholly destroyed. There was another, minor fire at the site in 1859, at which time the "new Arcade Hotel" was under construction.[11] The surviving portion of the building was renovated after the American Civil War and about a third of original footprint survives today as the St. James Hotel.[12]
Gallery
Norman's plan of New Orleans & environs, 1845: Banks' Arcade is marked with number 5 in the Second Municipality
Joseph A. Beard sale advertisement broadside: "Valuable Gang of Young Negroes", 17 men and women, to be sold at auction 25 March 1840 at Banks' Arcade."
^
abcdeUpton, Dell (2008). Another City: Urban Life and Urban Spaces in the New American Republic. Yale University Press. pp. 163–165.
ISBN9780300124880.
Banks' Arcade was constructed in 1833, by Thomas Banks, a heavily leveraged local businessman.[5] Prussian immigrant engineer and surveyor
Charles Zimpel was the building's architect; he also designed the
City Hotel and the Bank of Orleans.[6] The building consisted of two commercial blocks connected by a central promenade covered in a glass ceiling.[2] For many years the three-story building fronting Magazine was a landmark that served as a combination of office space, "auction-mart, [and] bar-room".[7] According to architectural historian
Dell Upton, "The ground floor contained stores, John Hewlett's restaurant, and the offices of notaries, newspapers, architects, commodity brokers, auctioneers, attorneys, and slave dealers. On the second floor were offices, billiard rooms, and the Washington Guards armory, while the third floor provided 'sleeping rooms for gentlemen.'"[2] There was also a hotel within the building.[2] Banks' Arcade was one of many
slave markets in New Orleans before the
American Civil War.[8]
Banks was a supporter of the paramilitary action that became the
Texas Revolution; two companies of soldiers known as the
New Orleans Greys were recruited and organized at the Arcade's coffeehouse.[9] The coffee room was not a 19th-century café with baristas and a couple of tables, but a grand meeting room, reportedly large enough to host 5,000 people at a time.[2]
Banks ran into financial trouble during the
Panic of 1837[7] and
declared bankruptcy in 1842.[5] The building was heavily damaged in a fire in 1851,[10] although not wholly destroyed. There was another, minor fire at the site in 1859, at which time the "new Arcade Hotel" was under construction.[11] The surviving portion of the building was renovated after the American Civil War and about a third of original footprint survives today as the St. James Hotel.[12]
Gallery
Norman's plan of New Orleans & environs, 1845: Banks' Arcade is marked with number 5 in the Second Municipality
Joseph A. Beard sale advertisement broadside: "Valuable Gang of Young Negroes", 17 men and women, to be sold at auction 25 March 1840 at Banks' Arcade."
^
abcdeUpton, Dell (2008). Another City: Urban Life and Urban Spaces in the New American Republic. Yale University Press. pp. 163–165.
ISBN9780300124880.