Algiers, Louisiana

Everything Algiers is known for

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Music in Algiers

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Rivers & Roads in Song near Algiers

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Musical Heritage

Fats Domino's Yellow-and-Black House RoadyGoat

1960

On the corner of Caffin Avenue and Marais Street at 1208 Caffin Avenue stands the longtime home of Antoine 'Fats' Domino, the New Orleans rock-and-roll pioneer behind 'Blueberry Hill' and 'Ain't That a Shame.' He bought the compound around 1960 and lived here for decades, a pink-and-yellow landmark in the Lower 9th Ward. When Hurricane Katrina's levee failures flooded the neighborhood in August 2005, Domino, then 77, stayed home and was rescued by boat, then airlifted to safety. In the chaos he was briefly and wrongly presumed dead, and someone spray-painted 'R.I.P. Fats, You will be missed' on the house. He survived, lived until 2017, and the city later renamed a stretch of the avenue in his honor. The house remains a quiet pilgrimage site.

History of Algiers

Cafe du Monde RoadyGoat

1862

At 800 Decatur Street, in the French Market on the edge of New Orleans' French Quarter, Cafe du Monde has been frying beignets and pouring chicory coffee since 1862 — making it the city's oldest coffee stand. It opened mid-Civil War, while Union troops occupied New Orleans. The signature order: three square, holeless beignets buried in powdered sugar, with a cafe au lait cut with roasted chicory root, a wartime habit born when coffee ran scarce and locals stretched their supply. The original stand keeps famously long hours and runs nearly every day of the year, closing only on Christmas and when a hurricane threatens (so 'open around the clock since 1862' is a charming overstatement — it's long hours, not truly 24/7). Order the beignets; expect to wear the sugar.

Acme Oyster House RoadyGoat

Acme Oyster House has been shucking on Iberville Street in the French Quarter since 1910. The chargrilled oysters — swimming in butter, garlic, and Parmesan — are a New Orleans invention that spread nationwide. The shuckers behind the marble counter are as fast as any in the Gulf. In a city of legendary food, Acme is the first stop for most visitors.

Willie Mae's Scotch House RoadyGoat

Willie Mae Seaton opened her Scotch House in New Orleans' Treme neighborhood in 1957. In 2005, the James Beard Foundation named it an America's Classic. Two months later, Hurricane Katrina destroyed it. Volunteers from across the country — including teams from the Southern Foodways Alliance — rebuilt the restaurant from the studs. The fried chicken, with its impossibly crispy, almost translucent crust, is worth every minute of the wait.

The Cabildo - Louisiana Purchase

1803

The Spanish colonial government building on Jackson Square where the Louisiana Purchase transfer ceremony took place on December 20, 1803, doubling the size of the United States.

William Frantz Elementary School

1960

On November 14, 1960, six-year-old Ruby Bridges became the first Black child to attend an all-white elementary school in the South, escorted by federal marshals past screaming crowds.

Congo Square

1740

The open space in what is now Louis Armstrong Park where enslaved Africans gathered on Sundays to play music, dance, and trade, creating the foundation of American popular music.

Preservation Hall

1961

Legendary French Quarter jazz venue founded in 1961 to protect and honor traditional New Orleans jazz.

Homer Plessy Historical Marker

1892

Marker at the corner of Press and Royal streets where Homer Plessy was arrested in 1892 for sitting in a whites-only railroad car, leading to the Supreme Court case that legalized segregation for 58 years.

Fats Domino House

1928

The yellow house in the Lower Ninth Ward where Antoine 'Fats' Domino lived for decades, damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and later restored.

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