New Orleans Marie Laveaux printed on heavyweight paper that is coated and sealed in a 1.25 inch round pendant. It is suspended from 32-inch ultrasuede ribbon. A 100 year old ancestral love letter print is on reverse side.
Item # nk-023
$39.95
Image History
Marie Laveaux (1801-1881) voodoo queen of New Orleans. Marie
was the daughter of a white plantation owner and a slave woman. She was multi-lingual and
spoke French, Spanish and English.
She was married twice in St. Louis Cathedral. As a hair
dresser she developed a large clientele who procured her
to perform voodoo rituals. She retired from practicing
voodoo in 1869. Her daughter followed in her
footsteps. In her later years of life, Marie became
a Eucharistic minister to the prisoners of Orleans Parish
Prison. She made an altar for the men to pray before they
were to be executed.
"Everytime I close my eyes blowing that trumpet
of mine – I look right into the heart of good old New Orleans
– it has given me something to live for." –Louis
Armstrong