Tuesday, November 10, 2009

New Orleans Cemeteries

















Who would think that a cemetery could be such and interesting place to visit. The cemeteries in New Orleans have great architectural detail, interesting history and range from the poorly maintained to very will kept tombs. It is not uncommon to find a tomb in disrepair right nnext to one that is beautifully maintained. The same goes for the cemetery conditions ranging from the unmaintained historical Lafayette #1 to the plush green manicured lawns and trees at Metairie cemetery.

At the metairie cemetery I found the newer tombs had glass doors and the stained glass windows on the back walls of the tombs. When you look inside you never know what your going to find, it could be nothing, a great angle to take a picture of the staned glass window or the fallen angel statue drapped in blue light that comes from the stained glass windows on the side.




Fallen Angel Metarie Cemetary


Angel on top of tomb, Metarie Cemetary


St Roth Cemetery. St Roth is the patron of good health, and here you will find the miracle room located in this Gothic revival chapel. In the chapel you can notice an unsettling rotting smell; the walls are covered with a lavish, decaying collection of cast-off prosthetics, anatomical-themed voltives, and crutches, accented by casually draped rosaries; the floor is littered with dozens of cockroach carcasses, which lie among the pennies, candles, crucifixes, hand scribbled notes and "thank-you" bricks. You get a feeling of a forgotten museum rather than a chapel.














St. Louis Cemetary #1, located at the edge of the french quarter. This cemetery is most faous for the tomb of the voodoo queen Marie Laveau. Many people come to pay their respects, as you can see they only damage the crypt. Others leave tokens on the ground in front. It is said that voodoo rituals are still practiced on this site.

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