Music

Ernie Cagnolatti
Ernie Cagolatti was a trumpet player in the the New Orleans jazz scene for much of the twentieth century.
Ernie Cagolatti was a trumpet player in the the New Orleans jazz scene for much of the twentieth century.
The late New Orleans rhythm & blues artist Ernie K-Doe remains an iconic figure in Crescent City music and culture.
Essae Culver was a pioneering librarian and educator in an era when library service was beyond the ken of most rural Americans.
Serving from 1782 until 1791, Spanish-colonial governor Esteban Miró oversaw a period of relative economic prosperity.
New Orleans born painter and instructor Ethel Edwards is known for her large-scale murals created during the New Deal era.
Ethel Hutson was a talented painter and pottery decorator and is recognized as a significant, well-connected figure in the New Orleans art world of the early twentieth century.
From 1727 to 1733 Etienne de Périer governed Louisiana as commandant-general for the Company of the Indies, which held a charter for the development of the Louisiana colony until 1731, and the French Crown.
Eugène Chassaignac was a composer and music critic in nineteenth century New Orleans.
New Orleans photographer Eugene Delcroix's work ranges from studio portraiture to scenes of murky cypress swamps and French Quarter ironwork.
Eugene Loving was an artist and etcher who worked in the French Quarter of New Orleans from the 1930s until his death in 1971.
Eulalie Mandeville was an entrepreneur of extraordinary business acumen who became one of New Orleans' wealthiest free women of color.
Evelyn Scott began her literary career as a poet but expanded into other literary genres, including short stories, essays, novels, memoir, and drama.
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