New Orleans Legendary Walking Tours

New Orleans Legendary Walking Tours

New Orleans Garden District Tours

The Henry Howard Hotel in the Garden District of New Orleans, LA

Garden District Tours

  • Fall for the Southern charm of the Garden District’s most elegant mansions and tree-lined streets.
  • See breathtaking mansions, many owned by famous celebrities, and learn all about this area’s architectural magnificence.
  • Witness the homes that played a part in the Civil War and are still standing today.
  • See the above-ground tombs of Lafayette Cemetery, one of the most historic cemeteries in New Orleans and resting place of historic local legends.
  • With one look up at the immense mansions and a view down the picturesque tree-lined streets, you’ll see why the Garden District draws tourists and celebrities year after year.

Book Now ,  as spots are very limited! All tours are approximately 2 hours. Tour times: 10:00AM Adults: $29.99 Children under 12: $18.99

To reach the meeting point from Downtown New Orleans, take the St. Charles Avenue streetcar towards the Garden District. Exit at the Washington Avenue stop. Walk down Washington Avenue towards Lafayette Cemetery. Meeting point is on the corner of Washington Ave. and Prytania St., on the cemetery side.

New Orleans Garden District Tour Photo Gallery

Gallivanter Tours

Garden District Tours

No trip to New Orleans would be complete without a tour of the Garden District. The most impressive neighborhood in New Orleans, you'll be amazed by the architecture, historic homes, and stories of the people who called the Garden District home

Get to know the characters who built the Garden District into what it is today

You can’t visit New Orleans without spending some time walking the tree-lined streets of the Garden District. Stroll around one of the most beautiful and historically rich neighborhoods in America. The Garden District is known for its amazing architecture, intriguing past, and interesting characters who have lived and played in old “Lafayette City.”

Our Garden District Tour takes the unique angle of focusing on the influential people and historic figures who have lived in the Garden District. Of course, you are still going to see the famous homes and the amazing architecture; However, we tell the story of the Garden District through the stories of the people who helped make the Garden District what it is today. Eccentric characters, Plantation owners and Military Generals have all lived in the Garden District. History is much more interesting when told through the stories of the people.

The Garden District Tour is a 90-minute walking tour that covers about 1 mile. We meet at The Rink Shopping Center and finish the tour less than a block away, inside of Lafayette Cemetery.

  • Historic Homes of the Garden District
  • You'll learn about the unique Architecture found throughout the Garden District
  • Our Garden District Tour also includes a walk through Lafayette Cemetery
  • and much more!

One of the brick walls which line the Garden District

Garden District Tour Info

7 days per week

10am and 4pm | 90 Minutes

Ages 12+: $19.99 | Ages 6-11: $9.99 | Ages 5 & under: Free

Why are Garden District Tours so popular?

It is hard to think of a more relaxing way to spend a morning or evening than on a leisurely stroll through the beautiful Garden District. Of course the homes and amazing architecture tend to be the main draw for our Garden District tours, but there is so much more waitinf for you.

Our guests truly enjoy hearing the stories of those who played our their days in the Garden District. We take tremendous pride in telling the stories of these inspiration (and sometimes kooky) people.

Famous homes and architecture on the Garden District Tour

Famous Residences

Jefferson Davis, died in the Garden District

Jefferson Davis

Lafayette Cemetery

Lafayette Cemetery

Buying tickets for our garden district tour.

You must purchase tickets in advance - we often sell out

Buy Tickets Online

Buying tickets online is fast and secure with Gallivanter. Just click the button to buy tickets online, select your tour, and enter your info. Your tickets will be emailed to you immediately.

Our friendly Guest Services Reps are available from 9 am - 1 am, 7 days per week at 1-855-938-2211 . We can answer any questions you may have, take your order, and email your tickets right away!

Lafayette Cemetery, on our Garden District Tour

The beauty of Lafeyette Cemetery

Lafeyette Cemetery, located in the heart of the Garden District, makes up a portion of our tour. You'll learn about the history and the people of Lafayette Cemetery

The Garden District was amazing! One day I'd love to own a home there - until then I will have to settle for this great tour.

Real TripAdvisor Review

I'm a big Anne Rice fan and seeing her home was a highlight of my trip to New Orleans. I can recommend this tour to anyone.

I bought tickets for this tour as a surprise for my wife, who is a fan of all things Southern. She enjoyed it and I did too.

Our Tour Guide for the tour was great. He answered all of our questions, was funny, and knew everything. We'd do any tour with him!

Where does the Garden District Tour start?

The Garden District Tour meets at the intersection of Prytania and Washington Streets, in the heart of the Garden District. Our starting location is conveniently located next to The Rink Shopping Center, located at 272 Prytania Street. You are able to grab drinks inside before the tour starts or use the restroom.

What about parking?

Parking isn't usually much of a problem in the Garden District. Within a few minutes of driving, you should easily find on street parking with the immediate vicinity of the starting location.

If you are running late or need directions please call our office at 855-938-2211 .

Looking for a different tour? Try one of these.

New Orleans Cocktail Tour

New Orleans Cocktail Tour

Discover New Orleans' cocktail history while trying them

Jackson Square, one of the stops on our tours

French Quarter History Tour

Hear the secrets of the French Quarter's history

St. Louis Cemetery, site of our New Orleans Cemetery Tours

St. Louis Cemetery Tour

Explore St. Louis Cemetery on this guided tour.

Book your Tickets now

Our Garden District Tour often sells out. Don't lose out on the best tours in New Orleans, get your tickets now.

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Garden District Walking Tour

tour new orleans garden district

The Garden District, or 'Lafayette City' as it was once known, is part of Uptown New Orleans.

This area is just a short streetcar ride from Bourbon Street and the French Quarter, but it feels like a world apart.

Michelle B.

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************Click here to see our full selection of New Orleans walking tours *************

It's a must-see in New Orleans, and we know, we lead hundreds of guests each week on walking tours of the neighborhood.

And, in the video below, Andrew, a tour guide with us - Free Tours by Foot takes you on a virtual Garden District walking tour.

Depending on the time of year, we offer daily or 2x daily guided walking tours of the Garden District.

Sights We Cover on the Garden District Tour:

  • Colonel Short's Villa
  • Briggs-Staub House
  • Commander's Palace Restaurant
  • Toby's Corner
  • Manning House
  • Brevard-Mahat-Rice House
  • Payne-Strachan House
  • Lafayette Cemetery *
  • and much more...

*The cemetery is closed to groups for maintenance until further notice. We will still talk about the cemetery at the gate!

New Orleans is well known for uneven streets, most famously in the Garden District.

It is often a source of great humor and peril. Please wear flat shoes and let us know if anyone in your party uses walking assistance.

TOUR INFORMATION

Reservations:  REQUIRED.  Click here to reserve . Groups of 10 or more persons should visit our  group inquiry page .

Where:  Meets on the southwest corner of Prytania St. and Washington Ave. (next to the white wall). Please use our Google map for  directions to the start of the tour . 

Garden District Meeting Point

Duration:  Approximately 2 hours. Approximately 1 mile in length.

When:  Check out our tour calendar or take our audio tour at your convenience.

Cost:   name-your-own-price tour .  Groups of 6-9  must prepay $10/person.  Groups of 10 or more  must organize a private tour and can read about our  options for groups . 

We have been leading walking tours for 15 years and we are well-regarded experts. Read the reviews for yourself.

GARDEN DISTRICT OF NEW ORLEANS AUDIO TOUR

We also offer a self-guided walking tour and audio tour for you to use anytime you wish.

The audio tour is GPS-enabled, so you can also follow it on your phone. Downloads cost just $2.99.

Here is an audio sample.

We also offer audio tours of other New Orleans Neighborhoods.

Here is how it works:

  • Purchase an audio tour.
  • Get a confirmation email with .mp3, .pdf, and embeddable Google Map
  • Enjoy the tour(s).

Available Tours

  • Garden District
  • French Quarter
  • Lafayette Cemetery #1
  • Hurricane Katrina Rebirth
  • Music, Arts, and More Tour
  • St. Charles Streetcar
  • How to Get Here
  • Self-guided Tour
  • Tips from Locals and Travelers

New Orleans Walking Tours

But first, a bit of background information.

Excluded from early 19th-century Creole society, newly arrived Yankees got to work creating their city.

They bought property blocks that were carved up from the Livaudais Plantation.

The result is one of New Orleans's most desired neighborhoods and one of the nation's most beautifully preserved city districts and it's home to the rich, the famous, the strange, and the dead!

Manning House Garden District

Join Free Tours by Foot on our Garden District Tour as we stroll the leafy, magnolia-shaded streets of the Garden District and a city of the dead, Lafayette Cemetery #1.

This walking tour is not just historic mansions, live oak trees, and manicured gardens.

It also includes stories of legends, tragedy, epidemics, lost causes, movie stars, celebrity chefs, and haunted spirits. 

It's free to visit and walk around the Garden District, and it's a very safe neighborhood.

HOW TO GET TO THE GARDEN DISTRICT

Depending on where you are coming from and going to exactly, the Garden District is approximately 2-3 miles from Bourbon Street in the French Quarter.

How you will get to the Garden District depends on where you are staying and what you want to do of course.  

Since this page is mainly a self-guided tour of the neighborhood, here is a link to the starting point of that tour. 

How to Get to the Garden District

Some buses service the area and you could take a taxi or an Uber, but we recommend taking a ride on the St. Charles Streetcar.  

The ride along St. Charles Avenue is full of beautiful

If you’re mainly interested in the shopping and dining on Magazine Street, the #11 city bus runs the entire length of that street, from the edge of the French Quarter to the Audubon Zoo.  

By Streetcar

Many reading this will be coming from the French Quarter, and then you will take the St. Charles Streetcar  from Canal Street.

The fare is $1.25, though day passes are also available.  

Be sure to read our guide on taking the streetcars in New Orleans. Below is a short video to give you a taste of what you will see.

Be sure to download our, GPS-enabled audio tour of the St. Charles Streetcar that you could take with you. Here's a sample.

Click here to get the audio tour .

While on your journey to the outskirts of town, you’ll pass through the first of New Orleans’ "American neighborhoods".

Known today as the Central Business District, it was the first neighborhood for the American prospectors arriving in town shortly after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. 

Many structures in this area date as far back as the 1820s.

SELF-GUIDED TOUR

Once again, here is a link to the starting point of that tour.

This walk should take 60-90 minutes, possibly more if you enter Lafayette Cemetery #1 .

Our tour begins just down the road from the Washington Ave. stop at St. Charles Ave.

Self-guided Garden District Tour Map

You can also view this tour on a smartphone on Google Maps and can use it offline as well.   

New Orleans The-Rink-Garden-District

Stop 1. The Rink/Still Perkin

The mustard-brown building at 2727 Prytania St., was once called the Crescent City Skating Rink, which we call the Rink today.

It was built in 1884, the year New Orleans hosted the World Cotton Centennial Exposition – that year’s name for the World’s Fair.

The whole city prepared to entertain huge crowds of visitors on this site so an ice skating rink was built!

Today it contains a coffee shop, the Still Perkin’ Café, where you can get a quick pastry or sandwich or a café au lait or chicory coffee to carry with you.

Upstairs is the Garden District Bookstore, which has hosted many book signings for the neighborhood’s famous novelist, Anne Rice.

You can see photos in the shop window of a theatrical mock funeral staged during one of her book promotions, and inside you’ll find a barrister bookcase filled with signed copies of her works.

Diagonally across the intersection from the Rink, you’ll see the white-painted brick wall of Lafayette Cemetery #1. Halfway along it on Washington Avenue, you’ll find the cemetery gate.

Stop 2. Lafayette Cemetery #1

Lafayette Cemetery #1 was established in 1833 and was named for Lafayette, the autonomous city where it was located and which would eventually be incorporated into New Orleans.

It is a municipal cemetery, owned and operated by the city rather than by the Catholic Church, and is the third oldest cemetery still standing in New Orleans today.

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27 or more nationalities are represented in its interments. The cemetery still has burials occurring.

There are about 1,000 tombs and an estimated 7,000 people buried in Lafayette #1. It is a city block in size.

For a more thorough exploration, read our self-guided tour and guide to Lafayette Cemetery #1 .

We also have a GPS-led audio tour of the cemetery. 

NOTE : The Lafayette Cemetery #1 is currently closed to the public while repairs and improvements are being made.

The city has estimated that it will reopen to the public in late 2024.

Exit the cemetery where you came in, on Washington Avenue, and walk left to Prytania Street. Turn right on Prytania and proceed one block, where you’ll see a fence with a cornstalk design on the right.

3. Colonel Short’s Villa 

This house, at 1448 Fourth Street, was built by architect Henry Howard for Kentucky-born Colonel Robert Short in 1859.

Local lore says that Short’s wife complained of missing the cornfields in her native Iowa and that he bought the cornstalk fence as a gift for her.

An alternative explanation, suggested by the current owners, is that the wife saw that it was the most expensive fence available in the building catalog and requested it on that basis.

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If you look closely, the corn plants are wrapped in bean vines – a common strategy for efficient cultivation of land, used by the region’s native population.

During the American Civil War, New Orleans was taken and occupied early as a strategic move to cut off Confederate supply lines.

Colonel Short’s Villa was commandeered in September 1862, and Governor Nathaniel Banks lived inside with Major General Benjamin Butler.

As a result of the early occupation, New Orleans, unlike many southern cities, evaded destruction from Sherman’s March.

Continue in the same direction along Prytania Street until the next intersection, where you’ll find the Briggs-Staub house on the left side.

4. Briggs­-Staub House 

The Briggs home, at 2605 Prytania. Street, built in 1854, is the only true example of Gothic Revival architecture in the Garden District.

Because this style reminded the Protestant Americans of the Catholicism of their Creole antagonists, it was not popular.

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Original owner Charles Briggs did not hold African slaves but did acquire Irish indentured servants. The large servant quarters can be seen to the left of the home.

Continue along Prytania to the next house on the same side of the street.

5. Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel - 2523 Prytania St.

The beautiful Madonna and canopy in the yard denote a small Catholic chapel, which used to stand here until Anne Rice, author of Interview with a Vampire , purchased the property.

It became the setting for Violin , another of her novels.

The home was designed by architect Henry Howard in 1857. Most of his works, including this house, were in the Italianate style.

Italianate homes in the Garden District, on average, have ceilings that are seventeen feet high.

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You’ll also notice the exquisite metalwork along the galleries.

At the tops of the metal columns, you’ll notice what we call “Romeo spikes” – installed, according to local lore, to keep young men from climbing into young women’s rooms.

The more likely intent of most owners was robbery prevention.

You’ll also notice gas lights on the porch that burn all day and night.

Lights like these found on many historic New Orleans buildings, uphold a tradition that dates to the 1833 arrival of J.H. Caldwell, a theater manager and gasworks industrialist, who added gaslighting to much of the city.

Since the Garden District was founded just as his enterprise began, the neighborhood would have never been without light.

Continue along Prytania to this block’s last building on the right.

New Orleans The-Womens-Opera-Guild-House s

6. The Women's Opera Guild House - 2504 Prytania St.

The standout homes in the Garden District often include more than one style.

Designed by William Freret in 1859, this building combines a Greek Revival structure and Italianate metalwork with a Queen Anne extension.

Now owned by the Women’s Opera Guild, the home can be toured on Mondays from 1 to 4 p.m.

Recent filming in the house includes the motion pictures Elsa and Peter with Shirley MacLaine and Christopher Plummer and the Quentin Tarantino film Django Unchained .

Continue down Prytania for another block; cross First Street and find the first house on the right.

7. Toby's Corner - 2340 Prytania St.

New Orleans Tobys-Corner-2340-Prytania-St-Garden-District s

The Garden District’s oldest still-standing residence was built in 1838. You can note the basic Doric columns, which speak to the home’s age.

Although built for an American owner, the house displays Creole building techniques that are practical for the region.

The house has a raised basement for flooding as well as ventilation.

The ceiling height is 15 feet. Floor-length windows surrounding the structure could be opened to take advantage of cross-breezes coming from the nearby Mississippi.

From the front gate, you can see a sugar kettle being used as a fountain in the front yard, paying homage to southeast Louisiana’s biggest crop.

If you’re here during the Carnival season, you’ll likely see three flags with the insignia of Rex, King of Mardi Gras, one of New Orleans’ many parading organizations.

Next, look across Prytania Street.

Bradish-Johnson-House-and-Louise-S.-McGehee-School-2343-Prytania-St ss

8. Bradish Johnson House and Louise S. McGehee School - 2343 Prytania St.

Architect James Freret designed this mansion in the Second Empire style for sugar baron Bradish Johnson in 1872.

It is quintessential Reconstruction-era architecture.

You can also find this style further uptown along St. Charles Avenue in neighborhoods like Audubon Place, which was developed during that era.

Today, the property is the private Louise S. McGehee School for girls. They celebrated their centennial in 2012.

From here, turn back along Prytania to the intersection with First Street, then turn left. Continue along First Street until you find a tan house on the right.

9. Buckner Mansion - 1410 Jackson Avenue

The massive house at Coliseum and Jackson, built in 1856, is the Buckner Mansion, the largest home in the neighborhood.

As you approach on Coliseum Street, you’ll see the back of the house, including a long, three-story extension: this was the home’s slave quarters.

As you come around to the front of the house on Jackson Avenue, you’ll get the full sense of its size – over 20,000 square feet.

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Henry Buckner, its namesake, was a cotton magnate who commissioned the house, and his family continued to live there until 1923 when it became a business school.

You can still see a mosaic stating its educational mission by the front gate.

Now it’s again a single-family home, but it got to play the part of a school in American Horror Story: Coven.

10. Archie Manning House - 1420 First St.

New Orleans Manning-House-Garden-District s

This is the home of former New Orleans Saints quarterback Archie Manning, as well as the childhood home of his sons Peyton, Eli, and Cooper Manning.

The family are full-time residents and are a common sight in the neighborhood.

A lot of footage from the documentary of the family called The Book of Manning (2013) was shot at the home.

11. Morris ­Israel House - 1331 First St.

By the 1860s, the Italianate style was the most popular style of architecture in the Garden District.

Like many New Orleans homes, this one is narrow along the street but extends far back on the lot.

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Large square lots that failed to sell were often split lengthwise, sometimes more than once, to form multiple lots, leaving owners with no choice but to build long, rectangular homes.

Past visitors to Disneyland in Anaheim, California might recognize this house, as it was the basis for the design of the Haunted Mansion – and the house appropriately has rumored ghosts of its own.

Continue along First Street until you cross Chestnut, then find the first house on the left.

12. Brevard ­Mahat­/Anne Rice House - 1239 First St.

New Orleans Anne-Rice-House-Garden-District s

Originally designed in 1857 as a Greek Revival home, this house has noticeable modern additions, like an Italianate bay and a skylight.

Notice the Rosegate fence, believed to be one of the first chain link fence designs in the world.

Viewers today, especially those familiar with the works of former owner Anne Rice, often see skulls rather than rosebuds.

Rice, best known for her novels about vampires in New Orleans, renovated and used the home as her primary residence for many years, besides setting her Witching Hour trilogy inside.

She sold the home in 2003 after the death of her husband, Stan Rice.

Continue along First Street, stopping at the first house on the right after the intersection with Camp Street.

13. Payne­ Strachan House - 1134 First St.

The first and only President of the short-lived Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis, died here in December 1889.

He had been traveling to New Orleans to give a lecture, became ill, and spent his last hours here in the home of Judge Charles Fenner, where he was brought to receive care.

A small monument in front of the house bears the date of Davis’ death: December 6, 1889.

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Notice the sky-blue color of the ceiling on the front porch.

The color is believed to keep winged insects from nesting there and to ward off evil spirits.

Many Garden District homes adhere to this tradition, along with other homes throughout the Gulf South region.

The color is called “haint blue.”

From here, turn back along First Street and proceed until you reach the intersection with Coliseum Street. Turn left and continue until this block’s last house on the right.

14. Joseph Merrick Jones House - 2425 Coliseum St.

John-Goodman-Trent-Reznor-House-Garden-District ss

This home currently belongs to the actor John Goodman, known locally for his role in the post-Katrina HBO drama Treme by David Simon, creator of The Wire .

He's known more broadly for his film career and long-running role as Dan Conner on the hit TV show,  Roseanne .

He moved to New Orleans over thirty years ago after making the film The Big Easy with Dennis Quaid and Ellen Barkin.

Thanks to his depiction of a staunch defender of New Orleans culture in Treme and his real-life advocacy, New Orleanians take him as an honorary native son.

Before Goodman owned the home, it belonged to Trent Reznor, the singer of Nine Inch Nails.

Some would speculate he was not a good fit as he had quite a few unconventional guests and a recording studio installed inside.

Continue along Coliseum Street and pause at the next block’s last house on the left.

15. Musson­ Bell House - 1331 Third St.

New Orleans Musson--Bell-House-1331-Third-St.-Garden-District s

This home was built in 1853 for Michel Musson, one of the few Creoles living in the Garden District before the Civil War.

He was the uncle of French artist Edgar Degas.

Degas briefly lived with Musson in another home on Esplanade Avenue during a visit to New Orleans.

You can tour that home, now called the Degas House.

The backyard of this building, visible along Coliseum Street, contains several detached buildings typical of 19th-century homes.

This includes slave quarters and a kitchen, a stable and carriage house, and a cistern for water storage.

Mark Twain, on visiting the neighborhood and seeing all the cisterns, once commented that it looked as if everybody in the neighborhood had a private brewery.

16. Robinson House - 1415 Third St.

Building on this property began in 1859 and did not end until 1865. It was for tobacco merchant Walter Robinson by architect Henry Howard

The property is one of the largest in the Garden District at 12,000 square feet.

tour new orleans garden district

The roof is flat and once gathered rainwater for the home’s indoor plumbing and drinking water.

In 2016, the house was listed for sale for $6.45 million, but the owners had to settle for only $4.5 million when they finally got a buyer!

Continue along Coliseum until you reach the next block’s last building on the right.

17. Koch-Mays House - 2627 Coliseum St.

New Orleans Sandra-Bullock-House-Garden-District s

This Swiss Germanic Chalet, built in 1867, is one of only three homes of this style in all of New Orleans.

It is not a practical style of architecture in a part of the country that gets as warm as New Orleans does.

It was designed by architect William Freret for James Eustis, a one-time U.S. Senator.

Oscar-winning actress Sandra Bullock bought the home in late 2009, and as of 2021 she still owns the property (along with, allegedly, another 16 around the country!)

People flock to the home hoping for a sighting, but she’s rarely here.

She does allow other celebrities to stay though, so you never know who might come out of the front gate.

18. Benjamin Button House – 2707 Coliseum St .

This house (Nolan House) was one of the main shooting locations for the film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, featuring Brad Pitt – and also the one the film had to fight hardest to secure.

The director chose the house as the ideal setting for the retirement home where the title character has lived for many years.

However, the owner, who at the time was evacuated to Houston thanks to Hurricane Katrina, refused the request, as she had many requests from film companies in the past.

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It took the director personally convincing her that the film would portray New Orleans in a positive, hopeful light – much needed after Hurricane Katrina – to change her mind.

The design of the house shows the broad array of visual styles the Americans living in this neighborhood drew from.

These include Ionic columns on the ground floor, Queen Anne reliefs on the second floor, and Gothic arches in Greek Revival dormers on a roof of part shingle, part Spanish tile.

Continue along Coliseum to the corner of Washington Ave.

19. Commander's Palace Restaurant - 1403 Washington Ave.

The bright turquoise-and-white building on the corner was erected in 1883 for Emil Commander to be run as a restaurant.

It is now considered one of the best restaurants in the United States and has been owned by the Brennan family, some of New Orleans’ foremost restauranteurs, since 1974.

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Locals attend the weekday martini lunches – twenty-five cents for a martini with an entrée! – but a weekend jazz brunch is also a nice option.

Reservations are required and there is a strict dress code.

And that concludes our self-guided walking tour of the Garden District in New Orleans.

If you are reading this in preparation for an in-person visit, then consider joining other like-minded travelers on a guided tour with us, Free Tours by Foot!

tour new orleans garden district

TIPS FROM LOCALS AND TRAVELERS

Below we share some thoughts and tips from members of our popular New Orleans Travel Tips Facebook group about touring the Garden District, if they felt it was worth the time, and what is the best way to see it.

Our Facebook group has over 40,000 members and consists of locals, regular visitors, and newbies to the city. 

After you've read this post, check our Facebook group for more tips from locals and tourists about visiting the Big Easy!

With so many amazing places to see in New Orleans, it’s hard to narrow down where to go and what to do. So…is the Garden District a “must-see”?

Here’s what group members said about the district and what makes it so special.

tour new orleans garden district

Besides the history and houses, the plant life is beautiful, the restaurants are amazing and the shopping is excellent.

tour new orleans garden district

We saw lots of comments from members, like this one, who say the Garden District is so nice it’s worth visiting more than once.

tour new orleans garden district

We were hard-pressed to find any negative comments about it, the most ‘negative’ being that what makes it special may not be to everyone’s liking.

tour new orleans garden district

The only comment we read that found said it wasn't worth visiting was this one, from someone who has the opportunity to see grand old mansions at home.

tour new orleans garden district

So if you are short on time in NOLA, and live in a part of the country where there are similar neighborhoods, then perhaps you might prefer to skip the Garden District. 

(Call us biased, but we don't think it should be missed, no matter what you can see back home!)

Once you decide to explore the Garden District, the question is how you want to do so.

Many members felt that taking a guided tour was the best way to get to know the area.

Guides tell you about the history, the special architectural features, and what movies and celebrities are connected to the district.

tour new orleans garden district

 And we are very pleased to see that these members took our tour and had a great time!

tour new orleans garden district

Some people felt that taking a self-guided tour was a good option, like the one contained in this post.

tour new orleans garden district

One of the most popular ways to see the Garden District, other than on foot, is to ride the St. Charles Streetcar .

tour new orleans garden district

A common question is which neighborhood should one take a tour of -- the French Quarter or the Garden District.

Plenty of our group members agree with us! Both!

tour new orleans garden district

But what if you are short of time? We say to do what this group member suggests!

tour new orleans garden district

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About The Author

tour new orleans garden district

Sarah Hester

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Two Chicks Walking Tours

Public Garden District Walking Tours

Explore live oak-lined streets in the opulent Garden District and learn of its complex past. While grand architectural marvels take center stage, their history will be described in detail by your guide during this New Orleans Garden District walking tour. Book online below!

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Highlights of the New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour

Opulent homes, fascinating history, and Lafayette Cemetery #1 are the major components of this incredibly popular New Orleans tour.

Book Your Garden District Walking Tour!

As New Orleans developed in a post Louisiana Purchase world, this lush suburb flourished in a slave economy. Modern day filmmakers, literary giants and football royalty continue to find this neighborhood irresistible. Participation in our unique two-hour long walking tours is limited so that we can connect with our guests and provide a more curated activity of the breathtaking New Orleans’ Garden District. We’ve partnered with local businesses to provide meeting locations and break stops designed with comfort in mind.

A mansion in the garden district of New Orleans

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tour new orleans garden district

GARDEN DISTRICT TOUR

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tour new orleans garden district

GARDEN DISTRICT WALKING TOUR / LAFAYETTE CEMETERY TOUR

tour new orleans garden district

SEE THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HOMES IN NEW ORLEANS

We invite you to join us on a leisurely stroll through the stunning " Garden District " of New Orleans . See the stomping ground of authors, poets, movie stars, artists, and sports legends such as Anne Rice , John Goodman, and Archie Manning, including the Benjamin Button House and home to the "Coven" in American Horror Story as well as many mysterious and loved fictional characters. 

Enjoy the towering southern live oak trees, magnificent crepe myrtles, and the stunning magnolias that some have said make walking tours through the garden district neighborhood akin to walking through a fairy tale. Learn the deep and rich history of the area and how it fits into the overall story of New Orleans, including the jealousy and mistrust that led to the "new money" of the "garish" Americans trying to show up the splendor and glory of the "old money" Europeans on the other side of town.

Points of Interests

On your tour to the Garden district, you will enjoy seeing the following locations: 

Garden District Anne Rice House/House on 1st Street/Mayfair Mansion Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 Commander's Palace Garden District Book Shop Magazine Street St. Charles Avenue

tour new orleans garden district

TOUR THE LAFAYETTE CEMETERY

Along with your garden district walking tour, you will also get a chance to visit the oldest Municipal Cemetery in New Orleans , Lafayette #1, the site of filming for many famous movies and TV shows, including Interview with a Vampire and Double Jeopardy. Learn about New Orleans’ above-ground burial practices, and join us in some gossip about dead people!

** Note: Lafayette Cemetery is closed on Municipal Holidays such as Memorial Day, Veterans Day, and Labor Day. The tour will not include the cemetery on those holidays.

Tour Information

  WHEN :   Everyday 10am

  LENGTH :   2 hours

  STARTS FROM:  INSIDE Starbucks Coffee located at 2801 Magazine St (corner of Magazine and Washington Streets)

  ENDS AT:  1403 Washington Ave

  DISTANCE:   1 mile

 INTERNET SPECIAL: $22

tour new orleans garden district

Over 20 Years of Excellence!

Worth the trip to new orleans by itself, luke is great, charm, professionalism, knowledge & fun, it was amazing and very informative, great start tge trip, enjoyed it so much we booked another tour, great tour, best walking tour ever.

tour new orleans garden district

Not Just Your Ordinary Cheap Thrill!

Fun French Quarter Walking tours led by Master Storytellers. Choose from our Ghost & Vampire walking tour, Garden District walking tour, Tour Tremé or Saints and Sinners: a Dirty little French Quarter History tour. Who knew history could be so much fun? All tours are about one hour forty-five minutes, walking distance is just under one mile. Bring your camera (and your friends), wear comfortable shoes, and be prepared to have fun! Established in 2006. Locally owned and operated. We love entertaining you and it shows. Join us for the best walking tours New Orleans has to offer. Book online for $22 per person and you receive a discount of $3 per ticket! (Regularly $25 per person).

THE VOODOO LOUNGE, 718 N RAMPART STREET, NEW ORLEANS LA 70116 504-666-8300 | PRIVACY POLICY

tour new orleans garden district

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Garden district walking tour.

Step back in time to New Orleans in the mid 1800’s on our Garden District Walking Tour.

The Garden District began as the city of Lafayette in 1833 and became part of New Orleans in 1853. Because the wealthiest of the newly arriving Americans called this area home, they were able to build the mansions that remain proudly standing today.

This 2-hour tour gives guests a crash course in New Orleans Architecture from 1838-1884. We cover the features of  Greek Revival ,  Italianate , and  Victorian Era  architecture. You will leave the tour knowing how to spot these styles and therefore distinguish between them. The neighborhood comes alive with stories of the people who lived here and the architects who designed these incredible mansions. We also can’t forget the majestic Oak trees that line the streets! They are not only beautiful but they provide shade with their massive branches and evergreen crowns.

Included in the Garden District Walking Tour is a discussion about  Lafayette #1 Cemetery . Dating back to 1833, this cemetery was the first non denominational cemetery in New Orleans. It remains one of the most popular cemeteries to visit today. Learn about the three most common types of tombs and the truth about why New Orleans buries above ground. It’s not what you might think!  Note: Lafayette #1 Cemetery is closed to the public h owever, it i s visible to view.

Our Garden District tour guides are experts in the area’s history and architecture and they will engage you with information about the grandiose homes. These were a staple of society and wealth in 19th century New Orleans. You will witness the results of our remarkable preservation efforts. As a result of those efforts, our historic neighborhoods not only maintain their integrity but continue to thrive today.

There is no better way to see the Garden District than on our tour so be sure to reserve your spot.

**Let Mark Twain’s words explain. “Those in the wealthy quarter are spacious; painted snow-white usually, and generally have wide verandas, or double-verandas, supported by ornamental columns. These mansions stand in the center of large grounds, and rise, garlanded with roses, out of the midst of swelling masses of shining green foliage and many-colored blossoms. No houses could well be in better harmony with their surroundings, or more pleasing to the eye, or more home-like and comfortable-looking.” ( Life on the Mississippi )

So what are you waiting on? Join us by booking now to take part in our exclusive Garden District Walking Tour!

Tour Details

  • Every day 10am and 1pm
  • 2 hour tour

Things you’ll see

  • Celebrity Homes
  • Antebellum Mansions
  • Lafayette Cemetery #1
  • Shotgun Houses
  • Center Hall Cottages
  • Commander’s Palace

Architecture styles

  • Greek Revival
  • Gothic Revival

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New Orleans  >  New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map

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FREE Garden District Walking Tour Map in New Orleans Mansions - Self Guided

Free Garden District Walking Tour:

Walking Tour Locatio n:  New Orleans Garden District Cost :  Free, Self-Guided ( Optional costs listed below ) Style :  Do-It-Yourself Walking Tour ( Self Guided )  Starting Point :  Third Street Street Car Stop End Of Tour :  Washington Avenue Street Car Stop Walking Distance :  Approximately 2.2 miles Time Required :  1.5 Hours of walking ( +1 hour for the official cemetery tour ) Best Time To Go :  Begin your walk around 9:30am so you can get a coffee at stop #6 and join the 1 hour long SOC Cemetery Tour mentioned at stop #7 which leaves daily at 10:30am. Getting Her e:  The historic Saint Charles Street Car only takes 14 minutes from Common Street the edge of the French Quarter ( see map ).  Cost is $1.25 per ride, or $3 for a 1-Day Jazzy Pass which can be purchased from the driver, must have cash in exact change. Fun Scale :  8.5 out of 10

Historical Overview Of The Garden District:

Our free, self-guided Garden District walking tour is one of the best daytime activities New Orleans has to offer.  You’ll be able to get a relaxing escape from the madness of Bourbon Street and a taste of the wealthy side of early-day New Orleans.  From historic mansions, to beautiful vegetation, and an impressive cemetery, there is a lot to see in the Garden District.

The entire Garden District neighborhood was once the vast  Livaudais Plantation , ( pronounced Lee-Voo-Day ).  In 1826, Jacques Livaudais lost ownership of the plantation to his wife Celeste Marigny ( sister of Bernard de Marigny ) when he failed to show up for a divorce court proceeding.  Celeste later sold the family plantation to a group of businessmen in 1832 for $490,000 who quickly parceled off and gridded the land into 80 city blocks.  The businessmen saw their new neighborhood as  the American answer  to the French & Creole dominated Vieux Carré ( pronounced Vue Ca-Ray ), know today as the French Quarter.

There had been an influx of affluent Americans to New Orleans following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, and after 30 years later they finally got their own community outside of the Vieux Carré ( meaning the Old Square in French ).  Originally called the Village of Lafayette, the development efforts paid off immediately as wealthy Americans flocked to build their mansion estates on the edge of New Orleans.   In 1835, the Village of Lafayette got an extra luxury when the steam-powered Saint Charles Street Car started service.  The Saint Charles Street Car, now electric, is currently the  oldest active streetcar line in the World .

With plenty of space and fertile plantation soil, the mansions in the Village of Lafayette were each surrounded by  huge lawns and gardens  that spanned up to a full city block.   Because of the large lawns, the community was fittingly  nicknamed the Garden District .  The Garden District name officially stuck when the neighborhood was annexed in as a part of New Orleans in 1852.  This incorporation also lead to a second building boom, making the community one of the most desirable to live in.

While there are some bigger Antebellum mansions further in the countryside, the Garden District offers a rare chance to see an entire neighborhood of  preserved mansions  from the 1800s.  Strolling past the rod iron fences, Greek Revival facades, and magnolia trees, you’ll fall more in love with the Big Easy.  While the lawns aren’t as big as they originally were, it is impressive that so many mansions have together survived the test of time against war, fire, and a number of devastating hurricanes.  Still today it is easy to see the combination of both wealth and pride that made the stunning Garden District possible.  Hope you enjoy our map and do-it-yourself New Orleans Garden District walking tour.

The Garden District Walking Tour:

1. saint charles streetcar trolley :.

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Saint Charles Streetcar Trolley Line

About The Saint Charles Streetcar Line :   Started running in 1835 with steam, horse, & mule powered trains until the line was electrified in 1893.  Formerly called the Carrollton Line, the trolleys running down Saint Charles Street make up the World’s oldest operating streetcar line . The vintage cars are a quick and enjoyable way to get to do our Garden District walking tour when you are staying near the French Quarter.

Cost : $1.25 per ride or $3 for a city-wide bus & trolley day pass called the Jazzy Pass.  Have exact change on you if possible.   Hours :  The Saint Charles Streetcar runs 24 hours a day with trolleys coming every 20-30 minutes at night; every 10 minutes in the early morning & evening; and every 6-7 minutes during daytime hours.

2. Claiborne Cottage ( 2524 St. Charles Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Claiborne Cottage Saint Charles Avenue

About The Claiborne Cottage :   Stepping off the historic Saint Charles Street Car at 3rd Street puts you right in front of the wonderful Claiborne Cottage.  This elegant yellow cottage was built for Sophronie Louise Claiborne in 1857.  Sophronie was extremely well connected in New Orleans as her father was William Claiborne who served as  Louisiana’s 1st Governor  in 1812.  Prior to moving to Louisiana, her father had filled Andrew Jackson’s seat in the US Congress in Tennessee while Jackson served as President of the United States.  After her father’s time Governor, William also served in the US Senate.

Sophronie Claiborne’s husband Antonie Mandeville de Marigny was a US Marshal after serving in the French Army and was also very well connected from his own wealthy family.  His father, Bernard de Marigny, got rich from the  Marigny family sugar mill  and plantation established in 1829 North of Lake Pontchartrain.  With a playboy reputation, Bernard gained hero status in the Creole community after being elected President of the Louisiana Senate.  Bernard’s sister Celeste de Marigny is also the one who sold the Livaudais Plantation in 1832 to create the Garden District neighborhood.  As you can see from connecting all the dots, this was the  ultimate power family .

The Redemptorist Fathers later bought the Claiborne Cottage in 1923 to be a chapel, but ended up converting it into a school instead.  After later being turned back into a home, a 14-year-old  Anne Rice  moved here when her family rented it in 1955.  Just 2 block from her childhood home, the young author Rice was deeply inspired by the cozy Claiborne Cottage during her teenage years.  Forty years later in 1995, Rice bought the Cottage and it became the primary setting for her famous  ghost novel  Violin  published in 1997.  In the book, the main character Triana sees a ghost playing a violin on the street corner in front of the house.  This is just one of the many Anne Rice related stops you will visit on the New Orleans Garden District walking tour.

3. Briggs-Staub House ( 2605 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Briggs-Staub House Prytania Street

About The Briggs-Staub House :  As you reach the end of the first block on this walking tour, look for the unique windows of the Briggs-Staub House.  When Charles Briggs had this  Gothic Cottage  built in 1849, most of his rich neighbors looked down on the Gothic Style, but Briggs was from London and didn’t care what they thought.  The neighbors’ real reason for not liking the style is because it reminded them, mostly Protestant, of their Catholic Creole counterparts living in The French Quarter.

Even though the cottage isn’t mansion-sized, we really like how it contrasts the other homes in the area with its small,  church-like windows .  The Charles Briggs’ home was also one of the first in the neighborhood to have Irish indentured servants and free men of color as workers  instead of using slaves .  The home is still considered the only Gothic-style mansion in the Garden District.  You will get a better view of the front of the Briggs home when we pass by it again in a few stops.

4. Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel ( 2523 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel House Prytania Street

About The Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel :  Built in the mid-1800s by merchant  Henry Lonsdale , the Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel is one of the most iconic homes on our New Orleans Garden District walking tour.  Lonsdale had started his career as a 16-year-old burlap trader, then hit it big after the Civil War selling a unique blend of coffee mixed with bitter chicory roots.  The blend was first introduced in the after a French blockage in the early-1800s, but thanks to Lonsdale, is still very popular in New Orleans today.

In 1925 the Redemptorist Fathers bought Lonsdale’s massive Greek Revival-style mansion and  turned it into a Catholic Chapel .  The Redemptorist Fathers were in desperate need of a new chapel at the time as the group’s church had been badly damaged by a hurricane in 1918.  The coolest remaining element from the mansion’s time as a chapel is a vine-covered,  iron cast pavilion  near the fence line which shields a statue of the Virgin Mary.  The pavilion is capped with a dedication to “ Our Mother of Perpetual Help ” in big letters and a large gold cross.

Local writer Anne Rice bought the Chapel as a home in 1996 and used it for some of the scenes in her book  the  Violin .  Even at 13,000 square feet, the Chapel was only a fraction of Rice’s primary home at the huge former Saint Elizabeth Orphanage on the far West side of the Garden District.  Actor  Nicolas Cage  later lived here from 2005 until 2009 before hitting foreclosure and the property is currently part of the Saint George Episcopal School.

The interior of the neighboring Maddox-Mclendon House ( 2507 Prytania Street ) was used in the filming of the hit film Django Unchained , even though you’d never know from the plain exterior.  The mansion was built in 1852 for the owner of the New Orleans Daily Crescent, Joseph Maddox.

5. Women’s Opera Guild Home ( 2504 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Womens Opera Guild House Prytania Street

About The Women’s Opera Guild Home :  This magnificent mansion was built in 1859 for merchant Edward Davis.  It was later purchased in 1944 by Doctor & Mrs. Herman Seebold who then willed it to  Women’s Opera Guild  upon their deaths in 1965.  The mansion was originally filled with European & American furniture, artwork, and antiques from the 1700-1800s, most of which is still on display here today.

The  well-preserved interior  is fitting as the Opera Guild itself has been in New Orleans since 1796.  Because of the strong attention to detail with the furnishings, the mansion has been featured in numerous Hollywood films including Elsa & Peter as well as Django Unchained.  Today the Women’s Opera Guild Home is available to rent for weddings, receptions, dinners, luncheons, coffees, teas and beautiful social events.

As you leave the Opera Guild Home and backtrack down the block , make sure to observe the John Parker House ( 2520 Prytania Street ).  The pink, almost Gothic-style home was built in 1853 by a local merchant and later sold to John Parker in 1882 whose son, John M Parker, went on to be Governor of Lousiana from 1920-24.  We love the horsehead tie posts lining the sidewalk near the house like antebellum horse parking stalls.

Guided Tours :  Mondays from Mid-September-May from 10am-4pm for $15.  Outside of the official tour times, you can also enter for $37 with the Grey Line walking tour company, but it’s the only home they enter so following our free walking tour makes more sense.   Mansion Website :  ( HERE ).

6. Sully Mansion Bed & Breakfast ( 2631 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Sully Mansion Hotel Bed & Breakfast Prytania Street

About The Sully Mansion :  Sully Mansion was designed by renowned architect Thomas Sully ( 1855-1937 ) in 1890 for the Rainey Family.  Thomas Sully, was among the first to form the unique architectural look of Uptown New Orleans.

The Mansion is the most intact of the few remaining ‘Sullys’ in the city.  Original stained-glass windows, ornate ceiling medallions, heart-pine floors, grand stairway, 14-foot ceilings, the double entry door, glass transoms throughout the house, turned wood balustrades on the staircase and second floor landing, and fish scale wood shingles on the upper portions of the exterior walls are just a few of the features of this rare three-storied Queen Anne-style home. Descendants of the original owner of the home still live around the corner. From the original carriage stone at the curb to the pocket doors in the foyer, this home has welcomed guests as a bed and breakfast for four decades.

The beautiful fully restored front porch overlooks the luxurious garden and 100-year old oak tree. It provides the perfect spot for breakfast, cocktails, conversation or just taking in all that the Garden District has to offer. Gracious rooms, antique accents, and comfortable furnishings create a casual yet intimate atmosphere.

Hotel Website : Here .  Alternative Options : There are four other Bed & Breakfast Inns nearby with the Grand Victorian ( website ), Hubbard Mansion ( website ), & The Columns ( website ) all on St. Charles Street, plus the Magnolia Mansion Hotel ( website ) on Prytania Street which we will visit later on this Garden District walking tour.

7. “ Cornstalk Fence ” House ( 1448 Fourth Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Prytania Street colonel shorts villa cornstalk fence house

About The “Cornstalk Fence” House :  The “Cornstalk Fence” House, also known as  Colonel Short’s Villa , is one of the most beautiful homes in New Orleans.  In 1859, merchant Colonel Robert Short bought the empty lot and began work on what is maybe the most popular home on this free Garden District walking tour.

The main draw to the magnolia-lined mansion is the decorative  rod iron cornstalk fence  that circles the entire lawn.  It is said that Short ordered the lavish custom fence for his wife after she started to miss the cornfields of her native Iowa.  The fence itself was cast by the Foundry of Wood all the way in Philadelphia which was a fairly expensive thing to do back then.

During the Civil War in 1863, Short’s Villa was seized by the Federal Army and served as the home to the new  Federal Governor of Louisiana  Michael Hahn.  This arrangement was short-lived however as the US Government returned the home to Colonel Short right after the Civil War and he lived here until his death in 1890.

8. “ The Rink ” Garden District Bookshop ( 2727 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - The Rink Book Shop Store

About “The Rink” Bookshop :  Originally called the  Crescent City Skating Rink , this historic bookstore started out as a wooden floor roller rink built for the  1884 World’s Fair .  The Rink, as it was nicknamed, became very popular as rollerskating was a huge craze at the time.  After staking died out, the building was later used as a livery stable, a mortuary, a grocery store, and a gas station.

Today the building holds a series of small shops and a popular bookshop which is a favorite of local famous  writer Anne Rice .  Anne often holds book signings at the bookstore, but in case you don’t catch her, they always have signed books on hand that you can buy.  The bookshop always seems to have an event of some kind going on and their selection of novels set in New Orleans are awesome.

If you need a little pick-me-up or snack for your walk stop in the  Still Perkin Cafe  on the street level corner of the Rink building.  One of the local specialty coffees served here is blended with bits of Chicory root which started during a French blockage in the early 1800s and became more widely popular after the Civil War.

Bookshop Hours :  Monday-Saturday 10am-6pm; Sunday 10am-5pm.   Bookshop Website :  ( HERE ).   Cafe Hours :  Monday-Friday 7am-6pm; Saturday-Sunday 8am-6pm.

9. Lafayette Cemetery #1 ( 1400 Washington Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Lafayette Cemetery #1 Tour

About Lafayette Cemetery #1 :  The historic, and spooky, Lafayette Cemetery #1 was  established in 1833  with Spanish-style above ground tombs, the same year a Yellow Fever outbreak hit the city.  The large family tombs were often called  Cities of the Dead  as they followed grids of walkways resembling streets.

While above ground cemeteries were also popular in France and Spain at the time, it became an important way to do things in New Orleans.  Formed off the swampy delta of the Mississippi River, New Orleans has a  very high water table  and large parts of the city sitting below sea level, which made burials difficult.  Placing caskets more than a couple feet under the ground put them into soggy, waterlogged soil which often slowly pushed the below ground caskets back to the surface.

Another reason for using above ground tombs was that bodies didn’t decompose well in the swampy soil, but cremation was still frowned upon.  The large tombs would basically serve as  cement ovens  in the Summer heat, quickly breaking down the bodies and wooden caskets.  After 1 year and 1 day had passed, the bones would be pushed to the back of the tomb and another member of the family could take its place.  When epidemic would hit and a large number of bodies were buried above ground at once, it caused horrible smells so the practice was banned except in existing cemeteries.

Famous figures buried here include Judge Ferguson of the  Plessy vs. Ferguson  separate-but-equal case, Brigadier General Harry T. Hays who led the 1st Louisiana Brigade in the Civil War, and the Brunies family of jazz musicians.  Walking among the shades tombs is and learning the history quite enjoyable and is really great if you like taking photos.  Perhaps the most famous tombs of the cemetery are the fictional ones.  Among the fictional characters to buried here are the family of Mayfair Witches from Anne Rice’s  Witching Hour  book series and the vampire Lestat from the another Rice novel  Interview with a Vampire .  In 1994 Interview with a Vampire was made into a movie starring Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise and all the cemetery scenes were filmed at Lafayette Cemetery #1.  Numerous other movies have also been filmed here including  Double Jeopardy  in 1999.

Cemetery Hours :  Dawn to Dusk.   Entrance Cost :  Free to walk through and explore.   Guided Tours :  The best tour is run by Save Our Cemeteries.  Their 90-minute tours leave daily at 10:30am & 1pm and costs $15, but is free for kids. Get to the cemetery gates 10-15 minutes early and bring cash.  Tour Overview :  The tours by Save Our Cemeteries goes very in-depth not only into the cemetery itself, but also the time in which it grew, and how it contrasts with cemeteries in the French Quarter.  Other tour companies charge from $30 to $50 per person for pretty much the same tour, however, the money that Save Our Cemeteries makes goes toward the restoration of the tombs.   Save Our Cemeteries Website :  HERE .

Cemetery Safety :  While the other historic cemeteries in the French Quarter can be dangerous to visit alone, even during the day, this one is pretty safe just like the rest of the central Garden District.  We always use caution in any big city, but have had no issues and always felt comfortable in this cemetery.

10. Commander’s Palace Restaurant ( 1403 Washington Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Commanders Palace Restaurant Washington Ave

About The Commander’s Palace Restaurant :  Emile Commander started a large Saloon here in 1880 which was often visited by famous clients from Jefferson Davis and Mark Twain.  By the 1900s the Commander’s Palace had already turned into one of the top restaurants in the United States. Today the Restaurant is still one of the best and its classic bright blue and white exterior taking up half a city block if a favorite among photographers.  It is one of the most popular places for locals to eat, especially for weekend brunch.

Restaurant Hours :  Lunch Monday-Friday 11:30am-2pm; Dinner Daily 6:30-10pm; Jazz Brunch Saturday & Sunday 10:30am-1pm.   Dress Code :  No shorts or t-shirts allowed and jackets preferred at dinner.  Men must wear closed toed shoes.   Restaurant Website :  ( HERE ).

11. “ Benjamin Button ” House ( 2705 Coliseum Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Benjamin Button House Coliseum Street

About The “Benjamin Button” House :  Built in 1832, this large white house draws in tourists as it served as the main house in the Brad Pitt movie  Benjamin Button .  In the movie, based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald story, the lead character Benjamin Button is raised in this home.  If you’ve seen the movie you can recall many of the scenes which take place on the porch and steps leading up to the home.  Although other homes on this free Garden District walking tour are more impressive, the Benjamin Button House continues to be a tourist favorite.

12. Koch-Mays House ( 2627 Coliseum Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Koch-Mays House Coliseum Street

About The Koch-Mays House :  Make sure to check out the facade of the creole-style James McCracken House ( 2601 Coliseum Street ) from 1878 on the way to the enchanting Koch-Mays House.  The postcard-perfect Koch-Mays House was built by US Senator and Ambassador to France James Eustis in 1876.  It’s said that the inspiration for the style of the home came from a plate in a home catalog.  The coolest thing about the home’s layout is how the 3 main sections of the house are staggered to  maximize the sunlight  each area gets no matter what time of day it is.  Later owned by historian Richard Koch, the mansion has been a home of the actress Sandra Bullock  since 2009.

As you leave the Koch-Mays House, make sure to check out the porch and low-profile facade of the  James McCracken “Creole” Home ( 2601 Coliseum Street ).  With a sweeping double staircase, this home was built in 1878 for James McCracken, owner of the Royal Furniture Store, and is one of the only Creole-style homes left in the Garden District neighborhood.

13. Walter Robinson House ( 1415 Third Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Walter Robinson House 1415 Third Street

About The Walter Robinson House :  As a wealthy banker from Virginia, Walter Robinson was able to build this wonderful mansion from 1857-67 thanks to the fortune he made selling tobacco and cotton.  The mansion is one of the first in the Garden District to have 15-foot-high ceilings and the 1st in New Orleans to have  indoor plumbing  thanks to a water collection roof design.  The mansion itself is over 10,000 square feet with seven large bedrooms and eight-bathroom.  The interior has a lavish ballroom, a grand central staircase below a stained glass window, a gorgeous outdoor pool, and even has an elevator.

After Walter Robinson died, his house became a fancy boarding house in the 1890s, then was the home of the president of the Canal Barge Company (1910-2000), before being bought as a private home again.  The mansion has been featured in many movies over the years including Jason Statham’s  The Mechanic  in 2011.

The neighboring 1,500 square foot carriage house of the Walter Robinson Mansion has been turned into a 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom guesthouse.  The carriage house is believed to have been part of the large Livaudais Plantation ( pronounced Lee-Voo-Day ) that covered the neighborhood before it was divided out into the Garden District.

14. Musson-Bell House ( 1331 Third Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Musson-Bell House 1331 Third Street

About The Musson-Bell House :  This big pink house was originally completed in 1850 for the wealthy tobacco grower, and President of the Cotton Exchange, Michael Musson.  He was  one of the few Creoles  to build mansions in the largely American Garden District.  Musson was also the uncle of  painter Edgar Degas  who stayed a short time before moving back to the Quarter to be closer to the other Creoles.  After the Civil War began to dig into his fortune Musson sold the home to a new owner added the beautiful black cast iron gallery in 1884.

15. Montgomery-Hero House ( 1213 Third Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Montgomery-Hero House 1213 Third Street

About The Montgomery-Hero House :  The president of the Crescent City Railroad, Archibald Montgomery, had this large Swiss Chalet-style house built in 1867 to reflect new homes he liked on America’s Northeastern coast.   It’s interesting that the property has retained its large 360-degree lawn over the years as many of the eraly mansions in the Garden District had their lots divided out and now have other homes very close to them.

16. Warwick Manor ( 2427 Camp Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Warwick Manor 2427 Camp Street

About Warwick Manor :  Built for merchant Hiram Anderson in 1852, this huge pink mansion has served as a home and as a private school for wealthy children.  Since its heyday, Warwick Manor is one of the only mansions in the Garden District that  has been divided  into a multi-unit apartment building.  Knowing that so many different people live here now makes it hard to imagine that it used to only just a single family home when it was built.

Across the road from Warwick Manor is the more modestly sized white “Stained Glass” House ( 1137 Second Street ).  What really stands out on the facade of the mansion is the over the top amount stained glass that lines the doors and portal windows of the entryway.  The home is also very unique to the Garden District walking as the Victorian style was mainly in the Uptown neighborhood of New Orleans.

17. The “ Jefferson Davis ” House ( 1134 First Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Confederate President Jefferson Davis House He Died In 1134 First Street

About The “Jefferson Davis” House :  Officially called the Payne-Strachan House, this mansion was built in 1849 for Jacob Payne who got rich marketing and shipping cotton.  Payne was very well connected from is own business and from his son-in-law Charles Fenner who was a local judge.  One of Fenner’s friends was Jefferson Davis, who at the time was the President of the Confederate States of America.  Jefferson Davis was brought to the Payne House after becoming ill and later died in the upstairs of the home on December 6th, 1889.

18. “ Mayfair Manor ” ( 1239 First Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Mayfair Manor Brevard-Rice House Anne Rice Witches First Street

About “Mayfair Manor” :  The eerie Brevard-Rice House was built in 1857 by merchant Albert Hamilton Brevard.  You can tell home wealthy Brevard was as the large section of the home facing Chestnut Street was built as a library wing.

Fans of Anne Rice novels will know this mansion as  Mayfair Manor  as the author bought the home in 1989.  Anne used the home as the setting for her famous book  The Witching Hour  which started a series about the fictional Mayfair family of witches who lived in the home.  Rice was already renown for her other hit series of books at the time called The Vampire Chronicles.

19. Carroll-Crawford House ( 1315 First Street ):

tour new orleans garden district

About The Carroll-Crawford House :  In the 1860s,  bricklayer Samuel Jamison  decided to try his hand at building houses on his own.  His successful career began here with a home built for Virginia cotton man Joseph Carroll.  Completed in 1869, the design included one of Jamison’s signatures with his amazing plasterwork which can still be seen throughout the interior.  Author  Mark Twain ( Samuel Clemens )  often came to the huge parties the original owner Joseph Carroll would throw inside.

The exterior of the Carroll-Crawford House just  screams Halloween  with its dark iron accents and gnarly oak trees.  The exterior grounds are truly stunning.  While this is one of the coolest looking homes in New Orleans, it is not the inspiration of Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion as some other websites say as they look nothing alike.  Disney used the Shipley-Lydecker House in Baltimore for the mansion in his theme park.

20. Morris-Israel House ( 1331 First Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Morris-Israel House First Street

About The Morris-Israel House :  Along with the mansion you just saw at 1315 1st Street, this was bricklayer Samuel Jamison’s second home project as a new builder.  It was also completed in 1869, but has a little different style to it.  This home looks almost exactly like the Musson-Bell House from stop #11, which Jamison had worked on it with other partners in 1859 before starting his solo career.

Aside from the style, the biggest draw to the Morris-Israel House is that locals tell us that it is haunted .  The biggest scare that happened here was when a skull and bones were found under some floorboards during repairs to the mansion.  It’s not so much that everyone feels there are ghosts that reside inside the house, but that  ghosts are drawn to the home  and try to get in your pictures after dark.

21. Joseph Merrick Jones House ( 2425 Coliseum Street ):

About The Joseph Merrick Jones House :  Built in 1850, this huge mansion became home to lawyer Joseph Merrick Jones in the mid-1900s.  In addition to being an attorney, Jones also served as Secretary for Public Affairs for the US State Department in WW2.  He continued serving the State Department off and on but is best known as the  President of Tulane University  where he had gone to college.  Jones became one of the first school presidents in the country to  allow integration  in 1963, but he and his wife were killed in a house fire near the college shortly after.  A student hall at Tulane was later named in his honor.

In the 1990s, rockstar Trent Reznor from the band  Nine Inch Nails  lived in Jones’ former home and was known for throwing huge parties.  Large parties are fun, unless your neighbor happens to be a local Council Woman ( Peggy Wilson ), so it didn’t take long for a noise ordinance to kick in and drive Trent away.  Celebrities seem to love the house as actor  John Goodman  then became the next owner in 2005.  John’s wife Annabeth even owns a children’s clothing store called Pippen Lane located at 2930 Magazine Street.

22. “ Seven Sisters ” Houses ( 2305-2329 Coliseum Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Seven Sisters Shotgun Houses 2305 Coliseum Street

About The “Seven Sisters” Houses :  Local folklore says that these houses were made for a wealthy man who wanted all 7 of his daughters to live next to each other.  The story is more legend than truth and there are actually 8 houses but they are still very interesting.  What makes them cool is that they were all designed as side-hall  Shotgun Houses .  This means that if you shot a shotgun through the front door of any of the long 1-room-wide houses the pellets would pass untouched through the back of the house.  These skinny houses are still very today popular today mainly in New Orleans’ poor neighborhoods.

23. Pritchard House ( 1407 First Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Pritchard House 1407 First Street

About The Pritchard House :  In 1858 wealthy cotton farmer Richard Pritchard started building this home, although it took him many years to finish it.  The next owner tried to completely change the style and remove the  Greek columns  in the early-1900s, but did a very poor renovation.  Luckily later in the 1990s Dr. John Piggot bought the Pritchard House and resorted it to its former glory.  With its 4 powerful columns, the Pritchard House is one of the few really great examples of Greek revival in the Garden District.  We have always been a fan of the grand Romanesque columns on mansions as it tends to make them look even bigger than they are.

As you move on from the Richard Pritchard House, make sure to inspect the stone horse carriage step along the sidewalk across the road ( 1408 1st Street ) which dates back to 1846.

24. Archie Manning’s House ( 1420 First Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Archie Manning House Peyton Eli 1420 First Street

About Archie Manning’s House :  Since 1982, this has been the home of beloved former NFL Quarterback  Archie Manning  who played for the New Orleans Saints in the 1970s.  Archie is still highly regarded by football fans in New Orleans even he didn’t win a championship because he showed great loyalty by staying with the Saints even when he was the team’s only bright spot.

People who didn’t follow the Saints in the 1970s know Archie better as the father of his Super Bowl-winning sons  Eli & Peyton Manning .  Both of the boys in this stellar football family and their brother older Cooper all grew up in this house.  Cooper is a little lesser known outside of New Orleans as he had to end his very promising football career early due to medical issues with his spine in college.  You can imagine the family all playing catch in the large front yard.  Before leaving make sure to check out the neighbor’s carriage step along the road.

Across the road ( 1423 1st Street ) is a great home to take photos of with a yard jam-packed full of palm trees.

25. The “ Horse ” House ( 2401 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Pink Horse House Greek 2401 Prytania Street

About The “Horse” House :  This massive 7,000 square foot pink mansion has a giant relief of two white horses below its First Street facing third story gable.  There are also numerous horse elements throughout the lawn sparking us to call it the Horse House.   We really couldn’t find much verifiable history on the beautiful mansion, but it is one of our favorite in the neighborhood to take photos of.  By far the pink Horse House one of the most memorable stops on our free Garden District walking tour.

Directly across Prytania Street ( at 2406 ) is a Colonial-style brick mansion built in 1905 for local attorney John May.  The home was bought by the Government of France in 1957 and serves as their US Consulate.

26. Bradish Johnson House ( 2343 Prytania Street ):

tour new orleans garden district

About The Bradish Johnson House :  This amazing mansion was built in 1872 for Bradish Johnson, who had gotten super rich from his family’s sugar cane plantations.  Bradish’s Whitney Plantation, named after his grandson, opened for tours in 2014 and focuses on the lives of the slaves, ( more info ).  The impressive Garden District home built with the plantation income cost of $100,000 to build which was a huge amount of money back then, equal to over $1.5 million today.

Since 1929 the Mansion has served as the private  Louise S. McGehee School  ( website ) for girls which was founded in 1912.  The move helped the school grow from 30 to over 200 students with classes starting at 5th grade.  The school has since expanded to cover an entire city block with pre-kindergarten through high school buildings, but the Bradish House is still used for academics.  To get an  idea of the scale  of the original Bradish property, the old carriage house is now the school gym and stable is the cafeteria.   Today the McGehee School is very esteemed in not only academics, but also in arts and athletics.  Thinking about sending your daughter here?  Tuition ranged from $11,000-18,000 per year.

27. “ Toby’s Corner ” House ( 2340 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Toby’s Corner House White Fence 2340 Prytania Street

About “Toby’s Corner” :  Philadelphia plantation manager Thomas Toby built this timeless home in 1838, making it the  oldest home in the Garden District  still standing today.   Toby’s plantation background is definitely visible as the home is built in a Creole-style much like the famous Laura Plantation just outside of New Orleans.

A series of columns circle the entire house creating a covered wrap around patio and the raised brick foundation not only protects floods, but also helps to circulate air in the mid-Summer heat.  If you look closely, you can even see the fountain with a sugar cane bowl which also ties back to Toby’s roots as a plantation manager.  There used to be a sweeping staircase leading from the 2nd floor into the home’s large garden, but it was removed during a remodel shortly before Toby lost the home to foreclosure in 1858.  Soon after the foreclosure, Thomas Dugan of the  Westfeldt Family  bought it and they still own the mansion today.

We love the heavy foliage which creates almost a jungle of a yard and gives you a great look into why the Garden District got its nickname.  As you round the Northside of the lush property in a few stops, you will great an excellent peek at the front of the house.

28. Buckner Mansion ( 1410 Jackson Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - American Horror Story Buckner Mansion 1410 Jackson Street

About The Buckner Mansion :  Wealthy cotton grower Henry Sullivan Buckner had this plantation-style mansion built in 1856.  The  22,000 square foot home  has 48 Ionic and Corinthian fluted cypress columns on wraparound double galleries.  In addition to the sure size of the home and number of columns, the mansion also has excellent ironwork and floor-to-ceiling windows.

This is one of the finest examples of  Southern Antebellum architecture  and elegance still standing inside the city of New Orleans.  The huge mansion was home to the prestigious Soule Business School from 1923-1983 before being turned back into a private home.  The Buckner Mansion was also one of the filming locations for the hit TV show  American Horror Story  which filmed its third season in New Orleans.

29. Magnolia Mansion Hotel ( 2127 Prytania Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Magnolia Mansion Hotel 2127 Prytania Street

About The Magnolia Mansion Hotel :  With an eerie history, this mansion was built in 1858 by cotton merchant Alexander Harris for his young bride Elizabeth Thompson.   Nicknamed Lizzie , Elizabeth was still a minor at the time of their marriage.  The mansion was designed by James Calrow who also made the home at 1239 First Street which vampire novelist Anne Rice later used as Mayfair Manor.  That is just the start of the spooky connections as there were also a  series of unlucky events  surrounding Magnolia Mansion.

In 1869 the original owner Alexander Harris and his brother Aaron  both mysteriously died  from yellow fever within 24 hours of each other.  Alexander’s funeral took place right in the mansion.  Following his death, the mansion and family fortune of $200,000 was left to Alexander’s young bride Lizzie.  There were huge  family trust issues  between Lizzie and her family following the deaths.  The cast aside her brother-in-law’s widow and then shortly after remarrying Lizzie sold the mansion and land to cotton miller John Henry Maginnis in 1879 instead of willing it to her own children.

John Maginnis, who was one of the richest men in the deep South, didn’t last long as he was struck by lightning and killed while on vacation in Mississippi on the 4th of July, 1889.  His fortune and 1,000 employee cotton empire were then left to his wife Elizabeth Tweed,  who also nicknamed Lizzie  just like the first widow owner.  Lizzie Maginnis had already had rumors floating around her as her sister had mysteriously died just 2 years before her husband’s lightning strike.  The luck started to change when the Maginnis’ daughter Josephine took over the property.  Josephine was named the Queen of multiple Mardi Gras parades and hosted many social events.  When she died in 1939, Josephine willed the estate to the American Red Cross.

Today the Mansion is not the Widow Maker it started and has served as an  award-winning bed & breakfast  since 2001.  The awards range from Most Romantic B&B in Louisiana to one of the Top Ten Haunted Inns in America.  Even cooler than the hauntings are the  9 uniquely themed rooms  throughout the mansion.  The best ones are the Gone With the Wind room with a grand bed and large draped green blinds, the Moulin Rouge themed room, and Lafitte’s pirate hideaway, not to mention the grand common areas.

Hotel Website :  ( HERE ).

30. House of Broel ( 2220 Saint Charles Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - House of Broel 2220 St Charles Ave Dollhouse Museum

About The House of Broel :  In 1851, local merchant George Washington Squires built his home here just before the neighborhood was annexed into the City of New Orleans.  The next owner raised the house up and added the current grand 1st floor to the mansion in 1884.  The Polish Countess, and local dressmaker,  Bonnie Broel  bought the mansion and threw her own wedding here in 1980.  It was such a success that Ms. Broel decided to open her home for tours and other couples weddings.

The first floor is staged in all of its 1800s beauty and has a great intimate feel.  Upstairs is the real treat where you can tour the  collection of antiques  Ms. Broel collected over the decades.  The collection includes a desk made for the Duke of Dresden in 1800, a piece of linen from Egypt that is over 2000 years old, a chandelier with hand-blown grapes cascading from its arms.

Maybe the best area of the house is an extensive  collection of magical dollhouses  that Ms. Broel personally designed and decorated for over 15 years.  The enchanting collection of 60 historically has accurate scale model mansions, houses, and shops filled with elaborately costumed figures from the mind of a dressmaker.  With great decor, our favorite models are the English manor house, an antebellum plantation, a sweet shop, and a 28 room  Russian Palace .

The Russian Palace dollhouse is 10 feet tall and 12 feet wide, covering almost an entire wall of the second-floor hallway.  The display is filled with rich tapestries, romantic paintings, fine wall coverings, ornate furniture, and period-dressed dolls.  The faux Fabergé eggs and spiral staircases of the Russian Palace model remind us of a time before the Russian Revolution, in the early-1900s.  Also featured are charming Victorian homes, an Asian art shop, a Baronial hall and the smallest house of all, a fairy hut complete with lace curtains.

Guided Tours :  Tours available Monday-Friday 10am-3pm, by appointment only.  Call 504-494-2220 for your guided tour.   Tour Cost :  Adults $10, Children $5.   Mansion Website :  ( HERE ).

31. Anne Rice’s Childhood Home ( 2301 Saint Charles Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Author Anne Rices Childhood Home 2301 St Charles Avenue

About Anne Rice’s Childhood Home :  Fans of Author Anne Rice will be happy to know that this home on Saint Charles Street is where the famous local author grew up as a child until age 14.  This is where Anne’s stories of Vampires and Witches that so many readers have grown to love got their true start.  After visiting so many homes associated with the author, seeing where the young Anne Rice grew up helps to bring this free New Orleans Garden District walking tour full circle.

32. John Morris House ( 2525 Saint Charles Avenue ):

About The John Morris House :  In the 1860s a small cottage stood here with a lot that spanned an entire block to the North.  The large lot bought in 1888 by the wife of gambler John Morris who built the current home you see today.  After graduating from Harvard, John Morris started a horse race track outside of New York City.  This racing facility  hosted the Belmont Stakes  from 1890-1904 as well as the Preakness Stakes in 1890.  After starting the horse track, Morris moved to New Orleans and invested heavily in stocks of the State Lottery which made him very rich.  His wife sold the home when Morris died in 1895.

Robert Downman later bought the home and quickly became the  King of Mardi Gras , known as the Rex.  Each year he would stop the Mardi Gras parade in front of his house to give a toast which the each year’s Rex still does today during the festival.

33. Alfred Grima House ( 2701 St. Charles Avenue ):

About The Alfred Grima House :  Built by Bicknell Payne in 1859, but drastically remodeled by attorney Alfred Grima in 1890 into an Italianate style.  During the remodeling, the entrance was moved from 2701 Saint Charles Avene to 1604 Forth Street.  When Alfred’s widow Clarisse died in 1981 he donated the property to the Historic Society of New Orleans, but has been a private home since 1987.

Other Nearby Attractions:

34. elms mansion ( 3029 saint charles avenue ):.

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - Elms Mansion 3029 saint Charles Avenue

About The Elms Mansion :  An amazing large white mansion was built in 1869 for,  “Yankee in Gray”  Watson Van Benthuysen II.  Watson was a relative of Jefferson Davis by marriage and served as an officer in the Confederate Army prior to building this mansion.  His wealth mainly came from wine & tobacco trading, but Watson also served as the President of a Saint Charles streetcar company.

From 1931 until the start of WWII, the mansion served as the German Consulate.  In 1952, John Elms Sr., owner of the largest coin-operated amusement company in the South, purchased the home.  Since Elms’ death in 1968, the family has been using the mansion to host weddings and special events.

Mansion Tours :  Self-guided tours are available Tuesdays-Fridays, 10am-2pm.   Mansion Website :  ( Here ).

35. The Columns Mansion Hotel & Restaurant ( 3811 Saint Charles Avenue ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - The Columns Hotel and Restaurant 3811 Saint Charles Avenue

About The Columns Mansion Hotel :  This enchanting columned mansion was built in 1883 for  cigar baron  Simon Hernsheim.  By the 1890, Simon’s company sold 39 million La Belle Creole cigars a year.  After Simon’s death in 1898, the mansion switched hands many times before being turned into the Columns Hotel in the 1980s.

Today the mansion is the only survivor out of a group of Italianate-style mansions that famed local architect  Thomas Sully  built nearby in the 1880s.  The interior of the mansion is still considered one of the grandest in any late-nineteenth century Louisiana residence.  One of the most dramatic interior features is the mahogany stairwell which rises to meet an extraordinary square domed, stained glass skylight in a sunburst motif.

The  Hotel’s Victoria Lounge  is one of the most unique places to get a drink in New Orleans as you are transported back into the 1880s.  This is a great place to grab lunch and recharge from our free self-guided Garden District walking tour.  They also have a jazz brunch every Sunday from 11am to 3pm.

Mansion Website :  ( Here ).

36. The Brown Mansion ( 4717 St Charles Ave ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - The Brown House Stone Mansion Largest Saint Charles Avenue

About The Brown Mansion :  This gigantic 22,000 square foot, 4-story, 9 bed, 9 bath, Richardsonian Romanesque Revival mansion is the largest on St. Charles Street and the most palatial home in New Orleans.  It was built from 1901-04 by Cotton King of New Orleans, W.P. Brown who was one of the richest men in the South at the time.  It has rare and expensive ‘flame’ mahogany covering the inside, antique tapestries, stained glass windows, a chandelier from 1780 and mantels from the mid-1700s.  The stately home even has a bed once owned by Marie Antoinette with her crest on the footboard.  In 2012 the estate was bought and restored by local attorney and businessman John Houghtaling.

It is also worth noting a few of the other amazing buildings that are within a block of the Brown Mansion and are included above on our free Garden District walking tour map.  These include the neighboring ‘Anthemion’ House ( 4631 St. Charles Ave ) which served as the US Consulate To Japan from 1938 to 1941 and another block over the stunning Academy Of The Sacred Heart ( 4631 St. Charles Ave ).  The Academy Of The Sacred Heart is a huge palace of a building built in as a private school 1887 and the academy itself goes back to 1857.  Directly across the street from the school is the Smith House ( 4534 St. Charles Ave ) built for the president of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange William Smith.

37. National World War 2 Museum ( 945 Magazine Street ):

FREE New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour Map Mansions - National WW2 Museum

About The National WW2 Museum :  Often considered the best museum in New Orleans.  The museum originally opened as a  D-Day museum  as the amphibious Higgins vehicles used in the beach invasions of WW2 were made and tested in New Orleans.  As the excellent museum expanded, Congress declared it America’s official National World War II Museum in 2003 and it gained association with the  Smithsonian Institution .

Some of the many highlights include aircraft displays, D-Day exhibits, plus interactive areas covering the Road to Berlin and the Road to Tokyo.  The museum does a great job and letting you experience what the war and planning were like in both Europe and the Pacific.  Food is available.

Museum Website :  ( Here ).

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East and Southern US , Louisiana , North America · August 11, 2022

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans’ Garden District

The Garden District is arguably the most beautiful neighborhood in New Orleans.

Here you will find quiet streets lined with oak trees, stately mansions surrounded by ornamental cast iron gates, and historic homes tucked behind manicured gardens.

It’s no wonder that over the years, many celebrities and well-known public figures have chosen to call this neighborhood home.

The Garden District is located only a few miles from Bourbon Street, but feels like it’s a world away!

It is a very walkable neighborhood, so be sure to set aside a few hours to take this self-guided walking tour to discover 18 of the best places to see in the New Orleans Garden District!

* Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase or book a reservation through the provided link then we will receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. We really appreciate your support!

18 Famous Places to See in the New Orleans Garden District

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

A brief history of the Garden District

The New Orleans Garden District was first established in the early 1800s by wealthy plantation owners.

The sprawling plantations were eventually parceled out and the lands were purchased by some of New Orleans’ most affluent residents.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Simply Wander #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Regal mansions surrounded by seductive gardens began populating the area known as the city of Lafayette.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

As the area grew, Lafayette became annexed into the city of New Orleans and the lots were further subdivided.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Simply Wander #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

This led to the Garden District’s distinct eclectic mix of opulent antebellum mansions, ornate Victorian homes, and utterly charming shotgun cottages.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

Many of the original homes still remain, and this area is considered to have one of the largest and most well-preserved collections of historic mansions in the South.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The Garden District has even been designated a National Historic Landmark.

As you walk around, you’ll notice historical markers on the gates of some of the more significant homes. It is so interesting to read the history about the homes and the families that lived there.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The Garden District’s boundaries extend approximately from St. Charles Avenue on the north, Josephine Street on the east, Magazine Street on the south, and Toledano Street on the west.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | Simply Wander #gardendistrict #neworleans

This walking tour begins at St. Charles Avenue and Josephine Street. The St. Charles Avenue streetcar line has a stop conveniently located here if you are coming from the French Quarter.

See below for a self-guided walking map:

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour

1. pontchartrain hotel.

Address: 2031 St Charles Ave

The Pontchartrain Hotel is an iconic historic hotel that dates back to 1927. It first opened as a luxury apartment building before transitioning to a high-end hotel in the 1940s.

Pontchartrain’s guest list includes the likes of movie stars and presidents such as Frank Sinatra and Gerald Ford.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Pontchartrain Hotel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

But the real reason that we are starting this New Orleans Garden District walking tour here, is for the mile-high pie at the hotel’s restaurant!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Pontchartrain Hotel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Jack Rose is located inside the Pontchartrain Hotel and is one of the most photogenic restaurants in New Orleans.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Pontchartrain Hotel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

The dining rooms are both elegant and whimsical and the food is delicious!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Pontchartrain Hotel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

You’ll find a well-executed menu with a modern twist on classic Creole dishes. Just be sure to save room for the mile-hie pie for dessert!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Pontchartrain Hotel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Now that you are sufficiently stuffed, it’s time to burn some calories and head out on a walking tour of the New Orleans Garden District!

2. St. Mary’s Chapel

Address: 1516 Jackson Ave

St. Mary’s Chapel was built in 1844 and was the original church of the St. Alphonsus Parish.

It was the first Roman Catholic church in the city of Lafayette, which was later incorporated into the city of New Orleans.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | St. Mary's Chapel #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

This was also the first church for German-speaking Catholics in Louisiana.

The small and intimate one-room chapel has been moved three different times and lovingly rebuilt board by board.

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | St. Mary's Chapel #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The chapel is generally closed to the public except during mass. We lucked out as the priest just so happened to pull up as we were walking by and let us in to take a look.

The interior is simple yet charming, just as you would expect a neighborhood church in the south to look!

A Self-Guided New Orleans Garden District Walking Tour | St. Mary's Chapel #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

Mass is held six days a week. Here is the schedule if you would like to participate.

3. Magnolia Mansion

Address: 2127 Prytania St

Magnolia Mansion is the epitome of a southern antebellum-era mansion with a sprawling wrap-around porch, haint blue paint, hurricane shutters, and gas lanterns.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magnolia Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

But Magnolia Mansion also has a storied past.

It was originally built in 1857 by investment broker Alexander Harris for his underage bride.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magnolia Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

Eleven years later, Harris died in the home of yellow fever and after much family drama, his widowed wife sold the home to the Maginnis family.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magnolia Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

After living in the home for 10 years, tragedy literally struck again. On the fourth of July, John Maginnis was struck and killed by lightning, leaving yet another widow to care for the home.

His widow, Lizzie, continued to live in the home and their daughter, Josephine, thrived here. She was one of New Orleans’ most beloved debutantes and went on to become a Mardi Gras Queen.

She hosted many lavish parties and social gatherings in the home and brought some much needed joy inside these walls.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magnolia Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

Josephine later gifted the Magnolia Mansion to the New Orleans chapter of the Red Cross. During WWII, the home was filled with volunteers cutting and hand-rolling bandages.

In 1954, the home became a private family residence once again until 2021 when it reopened as an elegant boutique hotel .

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magnolia Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The rooms are reasonably priced, the location is great, and it’s quite a memorable experience to spend the night in a historic southern mansion!

4. Buckner Mansion

Address: 1410 Jackson Ave

Buckner Mansion is perhaps the most regal and most photographed home in the Garden District.

This 20,00 square-foot mansion was built by cotton tycoon, Henry Sullivan Buckner in 1856.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Buckner Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

It was meant to be the most grandiose home in the south, with three ballrooms and a wrap-around porch featuring 48 columns.

The home stayed in the family for 67 years until it was sold to the Soule Business School, one of the finest schools in the south.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Buckner Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

Buckner Mansion once again became a private residence in 1983. Today it is supposedly available to rent for a whopping $4,700 per night, but I couldn’t find the listing.

But one thing I can confirm is that the Buckner Mansion was featured in seasons 3 and 8 of American Horror Story: Coven.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Buckner Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The exterior of the home served as Miss Robichaux’s Academy For Exceptional Young Ladies. It is quite fitting, considering that this house is rumored to be haunted.

Miss Josephine was a former slave of the Buckner family. After the Civil War, she stayed on as the family’s governess and midwife and many believe she never left.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Buckner Mansion #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

There have been reports that the ghost of Miss Josephine can be heard sweeping the floor, opening and closing doors, and turning lights off and on.

People have even occasionally caught the hint of lemon wafting by which was her favorite scent.

5. Trinity Episcopal Church

Address: 1329 Jackson Ave

The Trinity Episcopal Church was the first non-catholic church in the original French colony that settled in Louisiana.

The congregation was formed in 1847 in a small one-room building. The current Gothic Revival Style church building was consecrated in 1866 and has stood as a beacon in the community ever since.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Trinity Episcopal Church #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The interior features some of the original furnishings dating back to the late 1800s with intricate stained glass windows and hand-cut timber flooring.

Next to the church, you’ll find the private Trinity School housed in the most beautiful pink historic home.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Trinity Episcopal Church #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

6. Magazine Street

The 6-mile-long Magazine Street is filled with antique stores, boutique shops, and art galleries all with richly embellished storefronts.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magazine Street #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

This is the best spot in the Garden District to pick up a unique souvenir, score that one-of-a-kind antique, and discover handcrafted gifts.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magazine Street #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

You’ll even find an alligator museum and the coolest Free People store I’ve ever seen!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magazine Street #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

The best shops can be found starting at Felicity Street and extending about four blocks down Magazine Street to Philip Street.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Magazine Street #simplywander #gardendistrict #neworleans

7. Goldsmith-Godchaux House

Address: 1122 Jackson Ave

The Goldsmith-Godchaux House has a delightful color scheme with pink siding, kelly green shutters, and a haint blue porch ceiling.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

But the interior is the real showstopper. This home was designed in 1859 by the well-renowned 19th-century architect, Henry Howard.

The soaring 15-foot walls are splashed with bright hues of pink, green, and gold. You’ll also find more fresco wall paintings and stenciling in this home than in any other home in the South from the same era.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

The original paint colors and patterns have all been painstakingly preserved by the current owners, the Sheen family.

This home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places but is closed to the public as it is a private residence.

Click the link to see photos of the interior and learn more about this home.

8. District Donuts Sliders Brew

Address: 2209 Magazine St

If you need a pick-me-up during your New Orleans Garden District walking tour, then be sure to stop at District Donuts.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Here you will find some of the best donuts in all of New Orleans. They make their donuts fresh from scratch every morning. Everything is homemade, even the sprinkles!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Their menu features a rotation of six different flavored donuts.

This includes classics like glazed and chocolate, and a few unique creations like Girl Scout Cookie, Maple Bacon, Blueberry Cheesecake, Horchata, Nutter Butter, Hibiscus, Pink Lemonade, and so many more!

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

District donuts is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. In addition to their donuts, the menu also includes a selection of sandwiches, sliders, and salads.

And as their name states, they are also known for their freshly brewed coffee.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

District Donuts has a few locations around New Orleans, but the Garden District location is our favorite.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Goldsmith-Godchaux House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

The hip coffee shop is housed in a historic building and is bursting with character. You’ll find original brick walls, exposed ductwork, and brass fixtures.

9. Brevard-Rice House

Address: 1239 First St

This Greek Revival home was built in 1857 and was once the home of novelist Anne Rice and her husband Stan Rice who was a poet and painter.

It is rumored that this home was the setting for her famous Mayfair Witches novels.

Unfortunately, we didn’t get a chance to stop here so I don’t have a photo, but click the link for a photo and more information.

10. John Goodman House

Address: 2425 Coliseum St

John Goodman is a beloved American actor who is best known for his role as the family patriarch in Rosanne .

He also starred in movies such as The Babe, The Flintstones, Blues Brothers, Evan Almighty, The Hangover III , and dozens more.

His iconic voice is behind the animated character Sulley in Monster’s Inc. , as well as Baloo in The Jungle Book , and many more.

When Goodman is not busy filming, he likes to call New Orleans home. His wife is a NOLA native and the two bought this beautiful home in the Garden District.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | John Goodman's House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

He is well-loved in the neighborhood and can often be seen walking his dog around the block.

The home, also known as the Joseph Merrick Jones House, was originally built in the 1800s by Jones who was a well-known doctor and professor of medicine at Tulane University.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | John Goodman's House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

This mansion was also home to another famous face. One of the previous owners was Nine Inch Nail’s lead singer, Trent Reznor.

His neighbor just so happened to be a councilwoman and shortly after he moved in, a new anti-noise ordinance was put into place. He didn’t end up sticking around too long!

11. D’Arcy Manning House

Address: 1420 First St

This home was originally built in 1844 for the notable hatmaker James D’Arcy and his new bride.

They commissioned Irish-born architect Henry Howard to design the home.

This was his first ever contract and he went on to design over 280 other homes and buildings in Louisianna, including the previously mentioned Goldsmith-Godchaux House.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | D'Arcy Manning House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Over the years, eight other families lived in this home, including a state representative. But perhaps the most famous residents are the Manning Family.

In 1982, NFL Quarterback Elisha Archie Manning III moved his wife and three sons into this home.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | D'Arcy Manning House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Archie played for the New Orleans Saints for over a decade and two of their sons, Peyton and Eli, went on to play in the NFL as well.

While the Mannings no longer reside here, it is still cool to see Peyton Manning’s childhood home and imagine all the footballs that were tossed on this lawn.

12. Toby’s Corner

Address: 2340 Prytania

The Toby-Westfeldt House is a Greek Revival-style home that was built in 1838.

The significance of this home is that it is the oldest house in the Garden District. 

We didn’t get a chance to stop here so I don’t have a photo, but click the link to see photos of the exterior and gorgeous interior.

13. Bradish Johnson House

Address: 2343 Prytania St

Many of the mansions in the Garden District reflect the Greek Revival style. However, the Bradish Johnson House is unique in that this post-Civil War mansion was built using the French Second Empire–style.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Bradish Johnson House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

The home was originally built in 1872 for Bradish Johnson, a wealthy industrialist. He owned a large milk distillery in New York and several sugar plantations and refineries in Louisana.

His distillery was involved in the “swill milk” scandal that led to stricter consumer protection laws.

The Bradish Johnson House was one of the finer homes in the neighborhood and cost $100,000. That would be the equivalent of around $2.7 million today.

It was one of the only homes in the city that had a basement, and it even had an elevator.

This was just one of the many properties owned by Johnson. At the time of his death, his real estate investments included 31 properties in New York and 6 plantations in Louisianna.

In 1929, the home was purchased by the Louise S. McGehee School, an elite private girls school.

The home was extensively renovated, turning parlor rooms into classrooms, the stable into a cafeteria, and the carriage house into a gym.

Over the years, the school has continued to expand and now owns nearly the entire 2300 block of St. Charles Avenue.

They have acquired six historic mansions that have since been repurposed into stunning classroom buildings as part of the McGehee Garden District campus.

14. Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel

Address: 2607 Prytania St

This structure is an example of an Italianate-style mansion. It was built in 1857 and designed by the famed architect, Henry Howard.

In 1925, the home was purchased by the Redemptorist Fathers and was turned into a Catholic Chapel.

In 1996, novelist Anne Rice purchased the chapel and turned it into her private residence. This home was even used for several scenes in her book, The   Violin .

The home was then purchased in 2005 by actor Nicolas Cage. He lived here until 2009 when the home went into foreclosure.

The structure currently serves as part of the Saint George Episcopal School. It was undergoing extensive renovations when we visited, so unfortunately we weren’t able to get a very good picture.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Our Mother of Perpetual Help Chapel #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

If you do get a chance to peek into the yard, you’ll notice an iron pavilion with a statue of the Virgin Mary inside. This is an original statue from the Mother of Perpetual Help chapel.

15. Nolan House

Address: 2707 Coliseum Street

The Nolan House has been made famous as the childhood home of Brad Pitt’s fictitious character, Benjamin Button, in the blockbuster movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button .

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Nolan House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

The 7,800-square-foot mansion was originally built in 1832 for the family of William T. Nolan. It was substantially renovated in 1872 and features 6 bedrooms, a library, a reception hall, and a music room.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Nolan House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

It is remarkable to note that until recently, this home had remained in the Nolan family for three generations over the past 180 years.

The home went on the market in 2014 and sold for $1.5 million. It reportedly went up for auction a few years later and was listed for a cool $2.85 million.

The director of the movie had his heart set on this home and went to great lengths to negotiate with the family who had evacuated the home after a storm.

After flying to Houston to have tea with the owner, they were gracious enough to agree and filming took place in almost every room of the house.

One of the Nolan daughters, Ashley, even played the role of a doctor in the movie!

16. Sandra Bullock’s House

Address: 2627 Coliseum Street

Sandra Bullock may not be a native of New Orleans, but a piece of her heart belongs here.

She first fell in love with the city while helping with the Hurricane Katrina recovery effort.

She also starred in the film The Blindside which was written by Michael Lewis, a NOLA native.

In 2009, Sandra Bullock and then-husband, Jesse James, put down roots and purchased this hauntingly beautiful 6,615-square-foot Gothic Victorian mansion for a little over $2 million.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Sandra Bullock's House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

A year later, Bullock adopted her son Louis Bardo Bullock, who was born in New Orleans. She even named him after Louis Armstrong, New Orleans’ most beloved jazz musician. 

Bullock currently owns multiple properties in different states, but spends most of her time here in New Orleans with her two kids.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Sandra Bullock's House #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

*Related Post: For more recommendations, see our guide How to Spend an Unforgettable Weekend in New Orleans !

17. Commander’s Palace

Address: 1403 Washington Ave

Commander’s Palace is one of the most iconic restaurants in New Orleans.

It first welcomed guests in 1893 and has been a fixture in the Garden District ever since.

Commander’s Palace is known for its bright turquoise exterior, high-end Creole cuisine, and .25-cent lunch martinis.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Commander's Palace #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

Some of New Orleans’ top chefs have worked at this world-famous restaurant, including celebrity chef, Emeril Lagasse.

The three-story restaurant has plenty of seating, but it’s also one of the most popular restaurants in New Orleans so you’ll need to make reservations in advance.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Commander's Palace #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

And if you’re looking for more restaurant recommendations, be sure to check out our guide 8 of the Best Places to Eat in New Orleans !

18. Lafayette Cemetery No. 1

Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 was established in 1833. It was the first cemetery in the city of Lafayette and is one of the oldest cemeteries in New Orleans.

This plot of land was originally part of the expansive Livaudais Plantation that was subsequently subdivided into city squares.

Many of the tombs belong to early German and Irish immigrants who settled in the city of Lafayette.

A few other prominent citizens that are buried here include Samuel Jarvis Peters, the founder of the New Orleans public school system, and Confederate General Harry T. Hays.

As with the other cemeteries in New Orleans, the tombs at Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 are mostly above ground. This is due to the high water table and the early French and Spanish influence.

The cemetery has been closed indefinitely to the public since 2020 in an effort to preserve and restore the historical graveyard that has been overrun with tourists.

However, if you are interested in touring a cemetery, St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 is open for guided tours.

18 Famous Places to See in New Orleans' Garden District | Lafayette Cemetery No.1 #simplywander #neworleans #gardendistrict

St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 is the final resting place for Marie Laveau, the Voodoo Queen of New Orleans. This is also where Nicolas Cage has erected a pyramid-shaped tomb.

For more details about the tour, see our guide 12 Things to do in the French Quarter .

I hope you find this self-guided New Orleans Garden District walking tour helpful! And if you prefer to take a guided tour to learn the history from a local, I would recommend this guided walking tour for only $29.

A few more stops on a New Orleans Garden District walking tour:

If you have time, here are a few more historic landmarks in the Garden District that are worth visiting.

  • Payne-Strachan House : (1134 First Street) Originally built for Judge Jacob Payne in 1849. It is also the former home of Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the confederacy, who died in this house in 1889. 
  • Carroll-Crawford House : (1315 First Street) This vibrant pink home with deocrative iron lace railings was built in 1869 for cotton magnate Joseph Carroll. He was known for throwing extravagant parties and even rubbed shoulders with Mark Twain.
  • Colonel Short’s Villa : (1448 Fourth Street) This home was built in 1859. Although the home is beautiful, it is the wrought iron fence that really steals the show. The fence features a detailed pattern of morning glories and cornstalks. It was commissioned by Colonel Short for his wife who was homesick for her hometown in Iowa.
  • RN Girlings English Apothecary : (2726 Prytania) In the 1880s, this building was home to Robert Nash’s Girling’s English Apothecary. Nash was instrumental in helping Louisiana become the first state in the nation to license pharmacists. The building continued to be used as a pharmacy until the 1950s. 
  • The Rink : (2727 Prytania St) Right next door to the apothecary, you’ll find a 19th-century skating rink that has since been converted into a small shopping center. It was originally built in the 1880s as the Crescent City Skating Rink and was a popular gathering place for Garden District residents.
  • Beyonce & Jay Z home: (1527 Harmony St) This former home of Beyonce and Jay Z was once an old Presbyterian church. The vacant home caught on fire and the police suspected arson. It is located a little further away so you may want to drive to this spot.
  • What celebrities live in the Garden District? John Goodman and Sandra Bullock currently live in the Garden District. Former celebrities and famous people that once lived in the Garden district include Beyonce & Jay Z, Peyton Manning’s family, Nicolas Cage, Nine Inch Nails rocker Trent Reznor, novelist Anne Rice, confederate president Jefferson Davis, and countless political figures.
  • Is the Garden District safe? The Garden District is one of the safest neighborhoods in New Orleans. However, it is still advised to avoid walking the streets after dark.
  • Why is it called the Garden District? This area was once home to sprawling plantations. It was then developed with only a few houses per block. These houses were surrounded by lush gardens which led to the name “Garden District”. As the city grew, the lots continued to be subdivided and more houses were built. Today, the main draw is the architecture, but there are still plenty of beautiful gardens in the neighborhood.
  • What is considered the Garden District? The Garden District is located about 2.5 miles southwest of the French Quarter. The boundaries extend approximately from St. Charles Avenue on the north, Josephine Street on the east, Magazine Street on the south, and Toledano Street on the west.
  • What is the Garden District known for? The Garden District is known for it’s historic southern mansions and leafy avenues. It is considered the most beautiful neighborhood in New Orleans.

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tour new orleans garden district

Garden District Walking Tour

Tour details, garden district: america’s prettiest neighborhood..

The New Orleans garden district deserves special attention due to the fact it boasts the world’s largest collection of 19th century American Southern Style Mansions. View the unique architecture as you walk by some of New Orleans most famous homes. Enter an ancient cemetery and see the homes of some of America’s most famed celebrities. Join us on New Orleans’ best garden district tour.

  • Groups allowed
  • Local Tour Guide

tour new orleans garden district

What’s Included

Enjoy a two-hour tour through the New Orleans Garden District.

  • One of America’s most beautiful neighborhoods. The best New Orleans has to offer!
  • Celebrity homes, Movie locations, Lafayette Cemetery, beautiful architecture, majestic mansions, and so much more!
  • Tour starting location is at Gracious Bakery. Please allow 15 minutes for pick-up.
  • Tour begins at 2:00 pm.
  • Tour is approximately 2 hours long.

Adults: $29.99

Children under 6: free

Save 33% by booking now!

Nola Tour Guy

  • Free Cemetery Tour
  • Free Garden District Walking Tour
  • Free French Quarter Tour
  • Free Self-Guided Walking Tours of New Orleans with maps
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  • New Orleans Jazz Music Tours
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  • Book A FREE Tour

Garden District Tour

New Orleans Garden District - a guide from a local.

It’s more than hype-the beautiful Garden District of New Orleans lives up to its name. In a city that’s one big fairytale, the Garden District is the capital of southern charm.

Here, you’ll find wise old oak trees, classy streetcars, mansions and mansions turned into apartment buildings, and quirky local businesses. Exploring the Garden District is a must-do on any trip to the Big Easy. It can also be a great place to stay on your vacation to New Orleans, check out our guide to the best hotels in the Garden District here.

The Garden District should be on your New Orleans bucket list whether you’re making memories with your family , as a solo female traveler , during Mardi Gras , or a bachelorette party.

Did you want to learn more about The Best Tours of New Orleans? Click here

Read on and find out more about New Orleans’ Garden District, a bit of history and why you should definitely visit it.

Here’s our guide to New Orleans’ Garden District, created with love by locals-

Free French Quarter Walking Tours

The Streetcar is a great way to get to the Garden District.

Where to find the Garden District of New Orleans

Fun fact: The Garden District is part of Uptown New Orleans – meaning upriver from the Mississippi River (as opposed to downtown/downriver).

The Garden District was the product of American settlers who wished to distance themselves from the Creoles who had already settled in the French Quarter. Today, the Garden District is still one of the most upscale parts of town, where the city’s wealthiest residents and most famous celebrities live and grand mansions can be found. The Garden District is beautiful year-round, and there is never a wrong time to visit.

Garden District Walking Tour

What to Do in the Garden District

When most people think of the Garden District, they envision high-end shopping on Magazine Street, massive mansions lined with ancient oak trees, the hauntingly beautiful Lafayette No. 1 (which is unfortunately closed at the time of this writing), and more of that fantastic Creole and Cajun food that the city is known for .

Well, if that’s what you were thinking, you were right! Here’s what to do in the Garden District, as told by your local guides-

tour new orleans garden district

Take a Walking Tour!

It’s totally free to walk around the Garden District on your own but if you’d like to get a more an unparalleled history of the gorgeous homes of the Garden District you can join us for a our free guided tour of the Garden District or you can take one of our Self Guided tours or our extremely affordable Self-guided Audio tour and learn about these unique homes on your own time. Unlike the French Quarter, the Garden District is a place of leisure and relaxation, where time moves as slow as molasses, and the streets are quieter. Take it easy with a guided tour of the Garden District. Walk it at your own pace with our self-guided walking tour.

What is The Garden District

Visit The Rink

A small collection of shops, a cafe, and a bookstore are housed in what was once a skating rink. The Rink is home to the Garden District Bookshop, a favorite of the late Anne Rice. The author would have an event here every time she released a book, and today the bookshop is a great place to find signed and original copies. Across the hall, also in The Rink, you can stop for an espresso shot and a bathroom break at The Chicory House.

tour new orleans garden district

Visit Lafayette Cemetery No. 1

What is the Garden District Known for?

Lafayette No.1 is one of New Orleans’s famous cities of the dead , beautiful cemeteries filled with raised tombs. Scenes in Interview with the Vampire, Double Jeopardy, and Dracula 2000 were filmed at Lafayette No.1.

Note: As of 2023, Lafayette No.1 is closed for renovations, but our free tours show you snippets of the cemetery through the gates. Check out our list of New Orleans’ cemeteries open in 2023 , and arm yourself with some simple necropolis etiquette before you go.

Shopping on Magazine Street

In the southern tip of The Garden District, Magazine Street is packed with high-end shops. Before Hurricane Katerina, this area was exclusively independent, family-owned boutique shops, which is mostly true today, although some bigger names, like the apparel store Free People, have moved in. The shops are all spread out all over Magazine so pick your favorite shops or grab an uber to get between them.

Check out this map we made of some of our favorite shops to get you an idea of where to go.

Where to Shop on Magazine Street

Buffalo Exchange.

Address: 4119 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115is a used clothing store where you can buy, sell, or trade your gently used threads.

Funky Monkey.

Address: 3127 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 is the Garden District’s favorite eclectic vintage clothing store, offering vintage clothes, costumes, and funky accessories.

Swap Boutique’s.

Address: 5530 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 the place to find modern designer brands in a consignment-style shop when you’re on a budget.

Sunday Shop

Address: 2025 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 sells home decor, with a focus on locally-crafted New Orleans goods.

Alice & Amelia

Address: 4432 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 is a novelty gift and souvenir shop known for selling items with both quality and charm.

Magazine Pawn Shop Address: 3315 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115has been serving New Orleans since 1989, offering all kinds of locally-sold treasures.

Mignon Faget

3801 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 – Mignon Faget is a New Orleans jewelry designer known for her unique and beautiful pieces inspired by the city’s architecture and culture.

Perlis Clothing:

6070 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70118 – Perlis Clothing is a family-owned business that offers a wide range of men’s and women’s clothing, including classic Southern styles like seersucker and linen.

5423 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 – Scriptura is a stationery store that offers a variety of custom-designed invitations, stationery, and other paper goods.

5525 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 – Hazelnut is a gift shop that offers a wide range of unique and eclectic items, including home decor, kitchen accessories, and jewelry.

Trashy Diva:

2048 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70130 – Trashy Diva is a boutique that specializes in vintage-inspired clothing, including dresses, separates, and lingerie.

Fleurty Girl:

3501 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 – Fleurty Girl is a New Orleans-themed gift shop that offers a variety of T-shirts, accessories, and other items featuring the city’s iconic imagery.

Explore the Historic Mansions

For most this is really why you come to see The Garden District. The historic southern mansions that characterize the Garden District are a can’t-miss experience! Stroll along the ancient oak trees, celebrity homes, and iconic gardens as you explore the charming Victorian, Italianate, and Greek Revival estates with our free guided walking tour . If you’d like to explore solo, try our free self-guided walking tour or our affordable Self-guided audio tour.

Free Garden District Walking Tour

Picnic in The Park

New Orleans has several places to walk, jog, or picnic, and one of our favorites is in the Garden District. On the way to the Garden District, Lafayette Square is bordered by Poydras Street and St. Charles Avenue, across from the historical Gallier Hall, former City Hall. The site of inaugurations, yearly pilgrimages by school bands, and jazz concerts for over 150 years, the Square is a lively place for a picnic in the park.

Coliseum Square Park is located nearby the Garden District (28748 Coliseum St, New Orleans, LA 70130, United States). A serene green space with large towering oaks, a water fountain, park benches, and plenty of grassy picnic spots, Coliseum is a local fav for good reason.

Audubon park.

Audubon Park is a public park located in New Orleans, Louisiana. It covers an area of approximately 350 acres and is located in the Uptown neighborhood of the city, adjacent to Tulane University and Loyola University. Audubon Park is a popular destination for locals and tourists alike, and features a wide range of amenities and attractions. Some of the highlights of the park include: The Audubon Zoo: Located within the park, the Audubon Zoo is home to over 2,000 animals from around the world, including lions, tigers, elephants, and more. The Audubon Golf Course: A beautiful 18-hole golf course that is open to the public. The Tree of Life: A massive oak tree that is estimated to be over 600 years old and is a popular spot for picnics and relaxation. The Fly: A scenic overlook that offers stunning views of the Mississippi River. In addition to these attractions, Audubon Park also has several walking and jogging trails, playgrounds, tennis courts, and other amenities. It is a popular spot for outdoor recreation and relaxation in the heart of New Orleans.

tour new orleans garden district

Coliseum Square Park is great!

Where to Eat in the Garden District

tour new orleans garden district

Like all of New Orleans, the Garden District is a hot spot for mouthwatering food, unique cocktails, and po’boys. Here’s where to eat and drink in the Garden District-

Mollys Rise & Shine Perfect for brunch and coffee to re-fuel with, Molly’s Rise and Shine is a Garden District staple. The Bloody Marys at Molly’s are good any time of the day.

Address: 2368 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70130

Joey K’s Everyone’s a local at Joey K’s . This happy little cafe is known for its mouthwatering Creole eats and 18-oz. beers in frosted mugs.

Address: 3001 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115

Camellia Grill The counter seating and vintage uniforms inspire a retro feel at the iconic Camellia Grill, where things haven’t changed much since the restaurant’s opening in 1946. Don’t leave without trying a slice of Chocolate Pecan Pie!

Address: 626 S Carrollton Ave, New Orleans, LA 70118

Slim Goodies Diner Locally owned and locally loved, Slim Goodies is a funky little diner that is vegetarian-friendly and knockout delicious. Purple walls and leather diner-style seating perfectly complement a menu of omelets, eggs, hashbrowns, etouffee, and other classic NOLA breakfast favorites.

Address: 3322 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115

Stein’s Market & Deli Stein’s Market and Deli is a Jewish and Italian deli in the Lower Garden District. Go to Stein’s for traditional New Orleans sandwiches and specialty items. Tip: Snag a breakfast sandwich served all day.

Address: 2207 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70130

Superior Seafood & Oyster Bar It’s all in the name: Superior Seafood & Oyster Bar is a cut above the rest. Here you can get seafood with Creole flair in a sunny little space, topped off with views of St. Charles Avenue.

Address: 4338 St Charles Ave, New Orleans, LA 70115

Commander’s Palace Worth the required advanced reservations, Commander’s Palace is hands down the best fine dining restaurant in The Garden District. Established in 1893, the Palace has earned its title as one of the city’s most haunted sites and one of the best places to get tasty, authentic Creole food.

Address: 1403 Washington Ave, New Orleans, LA 70130

Atchafalaya Restaurant Another example of fine Louisiana dining, Atchafalaya Restaurant is set in a rustic yet elegant cottage. Take one Bloody Mary and one order of Shrimp n Grits, and call us tomorrow.

Address: 901 Louisiana Ave, New Orleans, LA 70115

Gracious Bakery Need a quick bite to eat or breakfast? Pop into gracious bakery. They are known for their delicious pastries, cakes, bread, sandwiches, and coffee. They use high-quality ingredients and traditional baking techniques to create their products, and they offer a variety of gluten-free and vegan options as well. Their cafes are cozy and welcoming, making them great places to grab breakfast or lunch, meet up with friends, or work on a laptop.

Address: 2854 St Charles Ave, New Orleans, LA 70115

Turkey and the Wolf

Looking for a traditional American comfort food check out Turkey and the Wolf Address: 739 Jackson Ave, New Orleans, LA 70130-4937

What is The Garden District Known For?

Drinks in the Garden District

After all that walking, you’ll need a drink to cool off. What better time to try one of New Orleans cocktails? Some drinks like Sazerac, the Hurricane, Vieux Carre, and the French 75 were born right here in the Big Easy! Other notable drinks include Bloody Marys, Ramos Gin Fizz, and Grasshopper. Here’s where to drink in the Garden District-

tour new orleans garden district

Columns is a great place to grab a cocktail.

Courtyard Brewery Folks head to Courtyard Brewery for its tasting room, perfect for beer connoisseurs. This brewery is an all-around great place to hang out, and the vibes here are inclusive, laidback, and welcoming. Specialties at Courtyard include a 3-barrel brewing system, IPAs, and Saisons.

Address: 1160 Camp St, New Orleans, LA 70130

Parasol’s We love Parasol’s, a dive bar with Cajun food and a locally-famous Roast Beef’ Po-boy. A block away from Magazine Street, Parasol’s is low-key all years, except for during their legendary St. Patty’s Day parties.

Address: 2533 Constance St, New Orleans, LA 70130

The Columns Classy but not stuffy, The Columns Restaurant & Bar inside the hotel of the same name is a favorite Garden District meeting spot. The Italianate mansion’s moody charm and craft cocktails make for great photo backdrops and good times.

Address: 3811 St Charles Ave, New Orleans, LA 70115

tour new orleans garden district

Our guide to Planning your Trip to New Orleans

Let us help you plan your trip to New Orleans. We are experts of all things New Orleans and we’ve been putting our knowledge together into a guide. This guide is a collection of articles that can act as a free trip planning guide giving you an idea of some of the best things to do, tours that are worth your time and money, places to see and where to eat. So check out our free trip planning guide.

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What we are about:

Nola Tour Guy is a collective of passionate guides, both men and women, who are experts in the history of New Orleans. Our goals are to give walking tours of New Orleans that are intellectually stimulating, historically accurate and FUN. We only offer walking tours because we believe that walking is the best way to see a city and learn about it and at a price everyone can afford. Nola Tour Guy offers no novelty tours only the real history brought to life by our passionate guides. Join us, you won’t be disappointed..

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Author:  Courtney Lux

Courtney is a Dallas-based writer who spends more time living in the thrill of an adventure than in commonly accepted reality. She’s a travel blogger, a daydreamer, a poetry fanatic, and a lover of all things whimsical. Courtney writes early in the morning, then spends the rest of the day cuddling with her pets and planning more travel.

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Dat Dog on Frenchmen

Historic Garden District Homes

Explore the beautiful architecture and deep history of one of new orleans’ oldest and most famous neighborhoods.

The wide swath of homes that are considered part of Uptown in New Orleans holds some of the most opulent and unique architecture in the city, and the homes in the Garden District are quintessential examples of both. However, within this 19-block stretch—running St. Charles Avenue to Magazine Street and Jackson Avenue to Toledano Street—more than a few of these hundred-year-old houses have plaques displayed that detail the building’s long lives. Think of it as a living, breathing museum of both architecture and history for you to explore. 

Whether you take a guided tour or walk your own path, these are just a sample of the beautiful, historic places that make up one of the oldest neighborhoods in New Orleans.

Buckner Mansion

Buckner Mansion - 1410 Jackson Ave.

The first house is, according to local tour guides and travel sites alike, one of the most popular sites to see in the Garden District; just at a glance, it’s not very surprising to see why. Fans of American Horror Story will recognize it from seasons three and eight of the series, and the house itself owes its construction to a bit of the “friendly” rivalry so common among the students at “Miss Robichaux’s Academy for Exceptional Young Ladies.” 

In 1856, Kentucky-born cotton factor Henry Sullivan Buckner officially became business partners with prominent Irish-born cotton broker and plantation owner Frederick Stanton. In his chosen hometown of Natchez, Mississippi, Stanton was mid-construction on his grand estate and future National Historic Landmark: Stanton Hall, an opulent Greek Revival-style manor that encompasses an entire city block that he would later die in after only three years in residence. Despite already owning several other impressive homes in New Orleans, Buckner hired Lewis E. Reynolds, Stanton’s architect, to design another mansion in 1857 to rival that of his business partner. Situated on the corner of Jackson Avenue and Coliseum Street, the grand, two-story structure includes a basement, the regal stone and cast-iron front gate (with lanterns), and a wide wrap-around balcony and veranda sporting Corinthian and Ionic columns respectively. 

When they moved into their newest, most opulent home in 1860, the Buckners numbered seven in total: Henry, his wife Catherine, and their five children ranging from 23 to 5 years old. By 1880, the eldest Buckner daughters were married, though Laura, the second daughter, her husband Cartwright Eustis, and their own five children joined Mr. and Mrs. Buckner and the family’s one live-in maid Sally. By 1883, both Buckners had died, and the Eustis family purchased the home from the remaining Buckner siblings. In the next seven years, Laura had another five children, and she and multiple children and grandchildren continued living in the home until 1920. Laura sold her home of 60 years to Albert and Edward Soulé who moved their business school—started the same year Buckner was inspired to create the estate—into the Buckner Mansion. They added a brick classroom building to the back of the property in later years, holding classes until the school closed its doors in 1983. In 1990, Sandra and Norman King purchased the building and began a series of major restorations that were continued in 1997 by the current owners Susan and Charles Zambito. 

Monroe Adams House - 1331 Philip St.

The Monroe Adams House is something of a novelty among the strictly Greek Revival and Italianate-style homes in the surrounding neighborhood. It blends Italianate and French Second Empire-style elements with the Federal or Adam-style architecture most characteristic of the early days of the United States (1780 to around 1840)—making the style most common in the original thirteen colony states including Woodlawn Plantation, Tudor Place, and Decatur House, all located in the greater Washington, D.C. area. These buildings are most defined by their simple, symmetrical box shape, are between two and three stories, and are two rooms deep. This house and others in the Garden District with similar architectural influences usually feature box columns, roof cresting, a cast-iron gallery rail, and a simple cornice with paired brackets. 

This “cottage,” completed in 1880, was commissioned by Thomas D. Miller, then-director of Crescent City Oil. Miller owned the house for nine years before selling it to John and Lilia Kennard, who then sold the house in 1916 to Frank Adair and Alice Blanc Monroe for $7500, the equivalent of about $188,700 in 2021—this same year, the house’s estimated value is around $2.1 million. At the time, the Monroes were prominent lawyers, judges, and politicians in Louisiana, especially patriarch Frank who served on the Louisiana Supreme Court for just under 23 years and as Chief Justice for eight. The Monroe heirs sold the home again in 1936 to Roger Thayer Stone, the namesake of Tulane University’s Center for Latin American Studies. After another handful of owners in the mid-20th century, Theresa McAlister and Jesse R. Adams acquired the home in 1979. They made many major updates and renovations in their 22 years of ownership which were continued by Klaus-Peter Schrieber and his wife Dianne Anderson. The Schriebers spent 16 years at 1331 Philip St. until the current owners, Drs. Miranda and Paul Celesire purchased the property for their family in 2018. 

The Seven Sisters/Brides Row - 2329 Coliseum #5768

To start: both names for this next entry are misleading. The first is obvious when you get there; this row of homes beginning at the corner of Coliseum and Phillip Streets is made of eight houses, not seven. The second name stems from a heartwarming local legend—a local father was said to have built the homes as gifts, one for each of his daughters to receive on their wedding day. 

The true story: in 1867, a builder commissioned Henry Howard—the architect behind almost 300 buildings in Louisiana, including the famous Pontalba buildings and more than a few homes on this list—to design the row. Howard designated a 30-foot lot for each house, alternating between Greek Revival- and Italianate-style facades while using the same side-gallery shotgun floorplan. This little row is the closest New Orleans gets to cookie-cutter suburban homes. 

Pritchard-Pigot House - 1407 First St.

The first difference between this house and the others on this list is a simple one: neither Pritchard nor Pigot were surnames of any of the property’s notable owners. The second: the grandiose Neoclassical Revival architecture came from renovations made 37 years after the building was completed. The original owners, Virginian merchant Marshall J. Smith Sr. and his wife Mary, had built a double-gallery side-hall townhome in 1867 to house their three children along with two school-aged boarders and two live-in maids. In this case, the resident of renown was actually the Smiths’ then-adolescent son Marshall Jr., who would go on to become a celebrated Louisiana landscape painter. Only two years later, the Smiths were forced to sell the property due to financial trouble, though they continued to live there as renters until 1876. The new owner James Jennings McComb, a self-made millionaire due to his invention of the arrow tie buckle, continued to rent the house to a few prominent residents until he sold it to New York sugar refiner Mark Spelman in 1891. 

The owners who made 1407 First St. the marvel it is today were lumberman John H. Hinton and his wife Emmet who bought the home as a winter getaway from their home in, coincidentally, McComb, Mississippi (no relation between the two McCombs). In their mere six years of ownership, the Hintons transformed their home entirely, adding two additional bays on the home’s left side to center the front door, a wide staircase with a landing— supposedly to hold a quartet to entertain as guests entered the newly-expanded foyer—and of course, the tetrastyle portico with its enormous Doric columns and entablature. And yet, after all of these alterations, the Hintons sold the house to Emmet’s brother in 1910, and it once again fell into life as a rental property. 

Twenty-eight years later, George Hitchings Terriberry, who served as King of Carnival in 1940, purchased the house and, due to his ties to the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra, filled the halls with events and musical recitals until his death in 1948. He left the home to his niece Anne Devall Mays, who owned the home until the 1980s and was followed by a string of subsequent owners who added their own renovations. After years of admiring the home on walks from their Philip Street home with their young sons, the current owners say they couldn’t pass up the opportunity when the house went up for sale in 2013.

The Morris-Israel House

Morris-Israel House - 1331 First St.

This cast-iron adorned, pink, Italianate-style home is one of a neighboring pair designed by Irish immigrant Samuel Jamison. Jamison purchased the lots containing the two homes (and now a third) in 1867 alongside the commissioner and first owner of 1331 First St. Joseph C. Morris, a wealthy local cordage salesman. The two men split the lots in 1869, and construction of the two homes began under Jamison’s direction. Upon its completion in November of that year, Morris’ house garnered enough attention that the Daily Picayune published an article praising the octagonal wings and “really beautiful bedrooms,” calling it “among the most beautiful and elegant houses which have lately been erected in the Garden District.” 

Morris, a Massachusetts native, moved into the house with his wife Elizabeth and their four children, with a fifth on the way. Tragically, after the birth of their son, both Elizabeth and the baby died within the week. The heartbroken Morris never remarried, and his mother-in-law Jane moved in to help raise his other children with the help of five live-in servants. Morris served on the Sewage and Water Board and the local school board until he died in 1903. His eldest daughter Jennie inherited the home and married Dr. Charles Chassaignac, a medical professor at Tulane and a founder of the Ear, Eye, Nose, and Throat Hospital. Much like her mother, Jennie died after barely a year in ownership, leaving the home to her then-4-year-old daughter who she named Elizabeth in her mother’s honor. Dr. Chassaignac remarried and had five more children who all lived in the house until the newly-married Elizabeth reached maturity in 1921 and sold the property—home to the Morris family for over 50 years—to William Feldman.

Feldman began a six-year period of drastic renovations that stole some of the building’s historic beauty; balconies were enclosed into kitchens, mismatched additions were tacked on, and the side yard was sold to Dr. John Elliott, one of Dr. Chassaignac’s colleagues, who built the house that stands between the house and its sibling. In 1926, another Tulane Medical College professor Dr. Ralph Hopkins—a dermatologist famous for his work in Carville, LA, the national quarantine residence/research hospital for people with Hansen’s disease (leprosy)—purchased the home, which remained in his family for over 40 years. The Morris-Israel House became a single-family home again in the 60s and Meryl and Sam Israel Jr. returned it to its former glory.  

The Carroll-Crawford House

Carroll-Crawford House - 1315 First St.

Just one house down from the Morris-Israel house sits its fraternal twin, another pink, cast-iron lined, Italianate-style home complete with a carriage house. The Carroll-Crawford house is a bit grander in scale, spanning five bays wide and topped with a cornice featuring oversized dentils and a central tablet. The carriage house echoes some of the main house’s elements, including a smaller cornice and molding around the arched windows and doors. The exposed patches of brick and creeping vines give the already classic even more of an old-world feel.

This Garden District gem has played host to its fair share of well-to-do residents for over 150 years. It began life as home to Joseph Carroll, a wealthy cotton factor from Virginia (and a good friend of Mark Twain). Fate seemed determined to link the Carroll-Crawford and Morris-Israel houses together even before another was built between them when Carroll’s son Joseph W. married his neighbor, John Morris’ daughter Lilley. Between 1889 and 1920, the home belonged to one of the most prominent New Orleanian families of the era, the Walmsleys—including T. Semmes Walmsley, the 49th mayor of New Orleans. Valentine Merz, the founder of the Faubourg Brewing Company , lived underneath these intricate cast-iron galleries until 1932, when modernist artist Josephine Crawford and her husband Charles, a respected engineer, purchased the home.

The Brevard-Clapp-Rice House, with a bit of decoration for Halloween

Brevard-Clapp-Rice House - 1239 First St.

While the base structure of this house is not much different than most others in the area, the fine details are what set it apart as one of the Garden District’s finest Greek Revival-style mansions. Commission merchant Albert Brevard had lived in New Orleans for five years before contracting architect James Calrow and builder Charles Pride to build a home for him and his family—insect and weather-resistant cypress wood for the galleries outside, cedar-lined closets, protective lightning rods, a 9000-gallon cistern for water, two servant’s rooms, and four bedrooms were all “basic” amenities. The opulence shone through in the internal and external detail. All of the interior decorative wood—including staircases, arches, and washstands—was solid mahogany, the cylinder glass was imported from France, and all the mantels were made of the finest, most-fashionable marble. Outside, the first-floor Ionic and second-floor Corinthian columns are placed en antae (bracketed by box columns), their cream tone contrasting the dark, intricate cast-iron galleries and balustrade. All of this is framed beneath a tall, bracketed cornice and surrounded by a delicate cast-iron fence. 

Unfortunately, Albert Brevard spent very little time in his luxurious dream home, and after his death in 1859 at only 54 years old, his wife and children returned to their native Missouri where she died eight months later. Their children sold the house in 1869 to cotton broker Emory Clapp, the only person to make any substantial architectural change to the building. Before his death in 1880, Clapp added a library and bedroom above it along with a corresponding gallery on the Camp Street side. The Clapp family owned the home until 1935. Larger interior renovations were made by a few subsequent owners, including prominent Republican lawyer and federal Judge John Minor Wisdom who owned the home between 1947 and 1972.

Until 2010, this grand home belonged to New Orleans’ resident queen of supernatural literature Anne Rice and served as the setting for her 1990 novel The Witching Hour. Visitors to the Rice home said the family both preserved the elegant character and details of the historic structure while also adding their own sense of style—including an extensive collection of antique European dolls displayed in the formal parlor. 

The Rodenberg-Lane-Gundlach House

Rodenberg-Lane-Gundlach House - 1238 Philip

Straying from the popular Italianate style so popular in the Garden District is this Greek Revival mansion, built and occupied by German-native and feed dealer John H. Rodenberg in 1853. This grand two-and-a-half-story estate sported bronze door knobs, cypress woodwork, and doors with keyhole locks (invented in 1848; we still use a variation of this same design today!) within 18-inch thick walls and beneath 14-foot ceilings. With over 9,000 square feet of space, Rodenberg and his wife began a sort of tradition at 1238 Philip St.: a full house. Upon moving into the home, the couple was accompanied by their six children—ranging from 17 to 2 years old—their maid Sarah, and their butler Wilhelm. 

The house was sold in 1867 but passed into new hands due to bankruptcy and then an auction, where one woman bought and then conveyed the home to Ann Eliza Gary, the wife of Confederate veteran and cotton factor John T. Hardie in 1869. The Hardie family brought another set of six children along with four live-in servants, adding three more children and one more servant in the first ten years. After an additional four years with 16 people under one roof, Mrs. Hardie purchased an adjacent lot to expand. Three of the subsequent owners were veterans—two Confederate and one from World War I. English awning manufacturer William Henry Dark Brook and his wife shared the home with an adult daughter, two maids, a butler, and two cooks, and his successor, state legislator David Pipes, expanded the property even further to accommodate his wife and seven children. Mrs. Pipes sold the home to her grandson-in-law and federal judge Wayne Borah, whose heirs sold the property to Harry Merritt Lane Jr. in 1966. The Lanes put the house through some major renovations before selling the property to the current owners, the Gundlachs, in 1987. 

The Trufant House

Trufant House - 1239 Philip

Straying far from the typical Greek Revival and Italianate styles of its neighbors, this picturesque Queen Anne-style cottage has belonged to the Trufant family since its construction in 1891. But, before Samuel and Bertha Trufant built this legacy home, the land and two brick buildings on it belonged to Henry du Pont, heir and former owner of what became the DuPont chemical company. There’s a bit of irony to see this delicate and charming home—decked out in gingerbread house-style gables and spindlework—standing where an explosives factory once had. 

While a section of the house was divided into apartments from 1912 to 1985, five generations of Trufants have occupied the main residence and still do today. Even after a fire in 2015, the family had the property meticulously restored to blend the original architect’s design with the comforts of any modern home.

The Dugan House

Dugan House - 1307 Philip

In this case, the land the house sits on has almost more history than the house itself. In 1779, during Spain’s 41-year ownership of New Orleans , this lot was a piece of a larger tract of land purchased by Spanish officer Jacinto Panis. Over the next century, this corner property was sold to speculators, seized by creditors, included in a dowry, owned by a child, and likely more until Thomas C. Dugan and his wife Laura demolished a pre-existing cottage to build their home in 1891. German-born architect Arthur Liebe used Queen Anne-style elements—an asymmetrical octagonal bay, simple windows, and arch detail above the thinner columns—and along with shingle siding that was popular in northeastern homes at the time to create this late Victorian “suburban villa.”

Thomas Dugan operated primarily as a merchant, but he also ran Killona Plantation— one of many plantations along the Mississippi River in St. Charles Parish—along with his father, who lived on nearby Prytania Street. After Dugan’s death, Laura sold the house in 1907, and the property once again bounced between owners. Its appearance has gone through little change over the years, even when milliner sisters Virginia and Sydney Pendergast ran a boarding house there for sixteen years. Finally, it seems the property is enjoying a well-deserved rest period under current owners Amelia and John Koch, who have owned the house since 1993. 

Bradish Johnson House (McGehee) - 2343 Prytania St.

If you have a preconceived idea of Southern elegance and privilege, this Reconstruction-era, white-columned confection will most likely exceed that vision. Built in 1872 and designed by architect James Freret, this French Second Empire and Renaissance-style mansion belonged to Bradish Johnson, the son of wealthy sugar planters. The house is said to have cost around $100,000 ($2.2 million in 2021) to build, due to the inclusion of the most luxurious and high-tech elements available at the time, such as a smoking den, library, conservatory, and even an early version of the passenger elevator. “Grandeur” is the key descriptor of Second Empire architecture, with its signature Mansard roof, Corinthian columns, decorative brackets and cornices, entablatures, window hoods, turned balustrades, and pierced ironwork along the rooftop. The rear of the property held a servants’ wing, carriage house, and stable, and the estate grounds are still home to live oaks and magnolia trees. 

After 20 years with the Johnson family, Walter Denegre and his family lived there for 37 years. Denegre was one of the top lawyers in New Orleans as well as a very prominent member of the city’s social scene—so much so that he was even selected as King of Carnival. However, multiple sources (including The Law Library of Louisiana ) cite Denegre as one of the men behind the mass lynching of 11 Italian men in New Orleans in 1891. 

Since 1929, the grand halls of 2343 Prytania St. have been home to the Louise S. McGehee School for girls. Founded in 1912 as a college prep school, McGehee now continues to be a well-respected school for pre-K through high school girls in the New Orleans metro area.

The Women’s Opera Guild House

Women’s Opera Guild House - 2504 Prytania St.

This beautiful combination of Italianate and Greek Revival-style architecture is another home that now serves as something more. Behind its intricate iron gate, the pristine Women’s Opera Guild House has long stood as a base for the cultivation of New Orleans’ artistic scene. The original house was built in 1858 for merchant Edward Davis by William Freret (cousin of the previously-mentioned James Freret). Sometime in the late 19th century, the distinctive octagonal bay with its delicate entablature was added to the structure. Among the highlights of this well-manicured property include the detailing around the uppermost windows, the elegant design of the front door glass, cast-iron balustrade, and the Corinthian and Ionic columns. 

The most notable owners of the home were Dr. Herman deBachellé Seebold and his wife Nettie Kinney Seebold, known throughout New Orleans for their generous contributions to the arts. Dr. Seebold’s parents and siblings were also fixtures in the city’s artistic circles; his father W. E. Seebold was called the “art connoisseur of New Orleans” as he, along with owning an art shop and being a painter himself, hosted weekly gatherings for artists and writers including Mark Twain and George Washington Cable. Some of Seebold’s art is still hanging in the home today. Part of what drew the couple’s interest specifically to the New Orleans Opera was Mrs. Seebold’s cousin opera singer cousin Baronne de Wartegg who made her debut at New Orleans’ Grand Opera House. Mrs. Seebold was an active member of the Women’s Guild of the New Orleans Opera from its founding until her death in 1966. 

The Seebolds had no children, so upon her death, Nettie willed her home and all of its furnishings and grounds to the Guild, stipulating that they be maintained by the group in perpetuity. Due to a lack of immediate funds, the Guild had trouble completing the extensive repairs needed in the 1970s. Today, thanks to much volunteer work and donations, the house is available for tours and as a rental space for events. 

Briggs-Staub-Ripley House - 2605 Prytania St.

Built in 1849, this “cottage” is a bit of an oddity among the palatial estates of the Garden District as one of only six known examples of Gothic Revival architecture in New Orleans. This artistic movement—reflected in the literature of Edgar Allen Poe and landscape design of Andrew Jackson Downing—began in 1740s England, apropos for the original owner London-born insurance agent Charles Briggs. The original home and carriage house and its later addition in 1880 showcase the lancet windows, pointed arches, and cross gables are prime reflections of the Gothic stone behemoth cathedrals of Europe.

The house was then purchased in 1864 by German native Adolph Frerichs, which began a period of ownership exclusively by German families involved in international cotton trade and shipping, though the second portion of the cottage’s name comes from its long-running 20th-century owners the Staubs. Today, we have Craig and Louise Ripley to thank for their extensive renovations and repairs in the early 90s that brought the house back to its original glory. Don’t forget to peek around the side on Third Street to get a closer look at those Gothic arches! 

The Walter Grinnan Robinson House

Robinson House - 1415 Third St.

This monument to Italianate architecture comes once again from Henry Howard, built for Virginia cotton merchant Walter G. Robinson and his new wife Emily Hanford, a woman over 20 years his junior. Construction began around 1857 but was, naturally, impeded by the Civil War. When it was finally completed in 1867, the estate was a pinnacle of opulence both inside and out. The double-curved verandahs give the house its distinct silhouette and are only enhanced by the cast-iron balustrade, cornice and parapet, and finely-carved front entrance. Overlooking the southern side of the yard— what was once a garden but now has a pool— is an intricate, rose-patterned cast-iron verandah, while the northern side still holds the two-story carriage house, which also contained the kitchen building. Robinson’s interior decor was just as lavish, with delicate plaster cornices and centerpieces on colorful, nearly 16-foot ceilings and a curved staircase in the large front hall. 

Everything changed for Robinson two years later when, at only 31 years old, his wife Emily died. Facing financial hardship and his own illness, Robinson traded houses with his old friend and business partner David McCan, who lived only a block over on Fourth Street. Robinson passed away in his new home in 1875, and the McCan family lived in the home until Mr. and Mrs. McCan died in the 1890s. From the next decade, the property was a boarding house until insurance company owner Peter Pescud and his socialite wife Margaret Maginnis purchased the house in 1905. Following their deaths and multiple sheriffs’ sales, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company bought the entire estate in 1935 for a mere $500. 

Thomas Jordan, president of the Canal Barge Company, purchased and fully renovated the home in 1941 under the instruction of architect Douglas Freret. Though not in the “official” name of the house, the Jordans owned it longer than anyone, spending nearly 60 years impressing their many guests with their additions of fine antiques and scenic wallpaper. Shirley Bakunas and Franklin H. Sinclair, after purchasing the home in 2000, took up another campaign of renovations the following year. When it was last on the market in 2015, all 10,516 square feet, seven bedrooms, and six-and-a-half baths were listed at $7.9 million. 

Musson-Whitney-Bell House - 1331 Third St.

If it weren’t already obvious, nineteenth-century New Orleans architects were deeply in love with cast-iron, and while not as imposing as the neighboring Robinson mansion, the Musson-Whitney-Bell House stands out in its subtle yet intricate cast-iron detailing. The “lacy” galleries surrounding the first and second-story verandahs are complimented by a diamond-motif frieze and topped with even more ornate cast-iron. This home and its spacious garden area were constructed circa 1852, with the design attributed to James Gallier Jr., another renowned New Orleans architect. Three of the property’s ancillary structures—a cistern, a garçonnière (“bachelor’s apartment”), and a horse stable—are still intact over 200 years later. 

The three patriarchs the home is named for are certainly not lacking in notoriety. Michel Musson, who originally commissioned Gallier for his family home, was a cotton merchant and factor...and Edgar Degas’ maternal uncle. The Mussons left in 1869 and were the last to live in the home with its original design—three first-floor bays topped with balustraded balconies. It was the second owner Charles Morgan Whitney, one of the founders and first bank directors of what is now the Hancock Whitney Corporation, who removed the bays in 1884 and added those gorgeous galleries. Though Whitney died in 1913, his widow Laura Sloo Whitney continued living here until 1940. The final notable owner was Bryan Bell, described as a civic and church activist and businessman, though these greatly downgrade the numerous accolades and contributions he received and gave in his 90 years. Bell was not only a decorated World War II veteran— including a French knighthood in the Legion d’Honneur— he also co-founded what is now the National World War II Museum in part due to his own participation on D-Day. Once back in New Orleans, Bell worked in oil and real estate, served as chairman of the board for the United Way, the Bureau of Governmental Research, the Metropolitan Area Committee, and the Family Service Society, and was a board member for multiple other charities related to his faith, to medicine, and to education. He taught economics and Tulane University and co-founded Trinity Episcopal School. Suffice it to say, if this house could talk, it would be more than worth listening to. 

Colonel Short’s Villa, also called the Cornstalk Fence Mansion

Colonel Short’s Villa - 1448 Fourth St.

This Italian-Renaissance-style villa was designed for Colonel Robert Short of Kentucky by, you guessed it, Henry Howard. Though the house is practically lined in intricate cast-iron, the stand-out feature by far is the front fence’s cornstalk and morning glory motif, a design rumored to have been a gift for his Iowa-native wife Margaret. Though it’s far from the only cornstalk fence in New Orleans—the creator Wood, Miltenberger & Company are also responsible for the namesake fence of the Cornstalk Hotel in the French Quarter—the addition of the morning glories is particularly unique. The asymmetrical design accommodates a small “conservatory” shielded by a curved two-story bay, a shape that’s made even more unique by the curved cast-iron gallery around it (most galleries are rectangular, as they are on the other homes on this list).  

The house was seized as “property of an absent rebel” in 1863 during federal occupation of New Orleans during the Civil War and served as both executive mansion for Michael Hahn, the federal governor of Louisiana and then home to Major General Nathaniel P. Banks, commander of the now-defunct Department of the Gulf. In 1865, the house was returned to Colonel Short, who lived there until his death in 1890. The villa underwent a stunning interior renovation before making its debut in 2015 as the most expensive house in the New Orleans real estate market with its 6.5 million dollar listing until the Robinson House firmly took its place that same October.

Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 and Commander’s Palace

While the cemetery requires a tour guide to enter and Commander’s, usually, requires a reservation, be sure to take a peek at these two iconic New Orleans landmarks. Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 is a beautiful example of one of the city’s famous above-ground cemeteries and is home, mainly, to group burial sites including the German Presbyterian Community, the Poydras Orphans Home, the New Orleans Home for Incurables, and, fictionally, Anne Rice’s Mayfair witches who lived at 1239 First St.

Commander’s Palace has been part of the New Orleans culinary scene since 1893, though it took on the form and iconic color that we know and love when the Brennan family—some of the city’s most famous restauranteurs—took over the business in the early 70s. Emeril Lagasse and Paul Prudhomme are just a couple of the notorious chefs to occupy its kitchen, and the restaurant’s continued elevation of Creole cuisine and world-class atmosphere and service continue to make it a prime destination for both locals and travelers alike.

The Robb Dillon House

Robb Dillon House - 1237 Washington Ave.

Complete with a beautiful courtyard and fountain out front, this Greek Revival-style home is another work of James Gallier Jr. through his firm Gallier, Turpin, & Co. and was built to be a rental property. The commissioner and original owner was prominent businessman, entrepreneur, and art collector James Robb who sold the house in 1860—only four years after its completion—likely due, in part, to the Civil War. The property changed hands a few times until Irish-born cotton merchant William Dillon and his wife Katherine “Kate” Redmond purchased it in 1873. It is likely that in the 46 years the Dillons called 1237 Washington Ave. home, they added the intricate cast-iron galleries which compliment the delicate fence surrounding the property. 

The Dillon heirs sold the property in 1919, after which the Baptist Bible Institute (now the New Orleans Baptist Seminary) used it to house professors and their families. In 1954, Dr. Claude C. Craighead and his wife Edith made the home a single-family residence once again and spent another 38 years living there. The most recent renovations and restorations were done between 2008 and 2018 by the Thompson family after they purchased the house in 2007. 

The Clark Cottage

Clark Cottage - 1308 Washington Ave.

This Greek Revival-style cottage is one of the oldest in the Garden District, its construction dating all the way back to 1853. The style is indicative of the formative years of the neighborhood—five bays, a central hall, and, as a common feature of many homes in below-sea-level New Orleans, a raised base—while its additional Italianate features—including the wrought-iron balustrade and side bay window—were added on sometime before 1883. Upon its first sale, the home was described as a “one-story cottage with galleries on the front and side, three large rooms and a pantry, with buildings and a cistern in the rear, and a flower garden and fruit orchard.”

Daniel Clark Jr. originally built the house, but after its first resident Joesphine Clark died in 1854, the house passed through a few different owners before Connecticut-born sea captain brothers Chauncey and Horace Tyler purchased the home to live in with their wives, prominent New Orleanians and sisters Julia and Sarah Jane Whann. The Tyler families occupied the home from 1873 to 1911 before it was purchased by the McKendrick family, who lived there for another 28 years. Much like the neighboring Robb Dillon House, the Clark Cottage was purchased by Dr. James Gwatkin, a founder and faculty member of the then-Baptist Bible Institute, where it served partially as lodging for students and their families, but the home’s true purpose for the Institute was as a music hall. 

When the Baptist Bible Institute changed names and relocated to Gentilly in the early 50s, the cottage went through another series of owners, specifically a series of prominent interior designers. Stella M. Rehm owned the home from 1953-1975, and Lawrence M. Thompson lived there between 1975 and 1993. The current resident is engineer W. Howard Moses, who once again filled the home with music from his daughters’ piano recitals and his own parties. Moses has helped maintain the home’s historical and architectural integrity in his 24 years of residence. 

George Washington Cable House - 1313 Eighth St.

The next house on our list belonged to another famous local author—though he would’ve been more likely to run into Anne Rice’s Louis and Lestat than to write about them. George Washington Cable focused on the unique blend of cultures in New Orleans through a realistic lens. Cable’s Creole-focused fiction as well as his progressive essays on civil rights earned him titles like “the first modern southern writer.” The house itself, designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1962, owes its construction to the success of one publication in particular: “Sieur George,” the short story that brought Cable national attention and the funds to create his family home. Tragically, his outspokenness on the hypocrisy of Creole gentry and his pro-African American civil rights views won him few friends among the New Orleans elite, forcing Cable and his family to move to New England, where he would spend the rest of his life. 

It may seem odd, but this house is considered a single-story; the lower floor is a “full-height” basement, and the columns across the front create an arcade by supporting the wide front porch above. On a balmy summer evening, past the iron fence and well-trimmed hedges, you can almost picture Cable and his contemporaries Mark Twain and Oscar Wilde discussing politics over drinks.

Snack Break on Magazine

If you’ve walked this far, great job! You’ve gone about 1.5 miles and have absolutely earned not only bragging rights but also a break and a delicious snack on nearby Magazine Street . If you continue east down Eighth Street, you’ll run into one of New Orleans’ hubs for boutique dining and shopping. This particular section of Magazine Street (between Louisiana and Jackson Avenues) has some of my favorite places to eat and shop, so take your time meandering to the next stop on the list—after hundreds of years, I can promise these houses aren’t going anywhere.

The Andrew McShane House

Andrew McShane House - 1226 Fourth St.

This 1886 design by James Freret for Clement Penrose is one of few examples of Eastlake architecture in the Garden District. This particular style, in America, acted somewhat as a replacement for the flat-cut gingerbread elements common in the Queen Anne style, favoring three-dimensional geometric detailing made easily by machine. Part of this home’s Eastlake charm comes from the openwork circular motif noticeable in the circle details of the arches, the tops of the front doorway and windows, the porch balustrade details, and the fence. 

In 1891, the home was purchased by Andrew J. McShane for his widowed mother Rosa and sister Sarah. As of 2021, six generations of McShanes have occupied the home for 130 years. Andrew McShane’s legacy is colored by incredible work ethic, business acumen, and political work. He began working for his uncle’s hide business, H. F. Hall & Co., at age nine, became a salesman at 14, and at 21, he purchased the firm and began operating under his own name. McShane served as mayor of New Orleans for only one term, but his administration was praised for its commitment to rooting out corruption. It also organized an efficient garbage collection system, initiated the one-way street system still used today, re-equipped and reorganized the public works department, reordered the city's finances, and improved the condition of city streets.

McShane died in 1936, leaving the house to his wife Agnes and their only child, Rose Mary McShane Kernan, who officially inherited the home in 1969. Though additions have been made through the years, the cottage retains much of its original charming detail. 

The Montgomery Hero House

Montgomery-Hero House - 1213 Third St.

Enclosed behind another beautiful cast iron fence sits another Henry Howard design, though at first glance it seems to have little in common with the palatial Col. Short estate and fits the description of “villa” much more accurately than its predecessor. This country-style “cottage”—adorned entirely with ornamental brackets, scallop-edged awnings, gables, and an arch-framed verandah—with its surrounding gardens give a glimpse into the more rural atmosphere of the early Garden District. The inside is much the same: a combination of stately elements like a ballroom, library, and grand staircase merged with the simplistic ease of a country home. 

President of the Crescent City Railroad Archibald Montgomery commissioned the project in 1868 with this style in mind, and six years after its completion in 1870, “donated” the property and all its contents to his wife Marie as a symbol “of his love and affection for her.” It seems, however, that Marie was not quite so romantic, as she sold the estate to notary Andrew Hero Jr. less than a decade later. For nearly a century, the home remained in the Hero family until investment banker Gus Reynoir and his wife Sissy purchased it in 1978. Today, the house belongs to writer-photographer couple Sara Ruffin and Paul Costello who moved from New York in 2010 with their family. 

Payne-Strachan House - 1134 First St.

In its over 150-year life, this Greek Revival estate has belonged to (technically) only two families, both of whom were elites in the New Orleans social scene. The first was Kentucky-born cotton merchant Jacob Payne, who built the house in 1849 to house his wife, the widowed Charlotte Downs Haynes, his stepson Andrew Haynes, and his and Charlotte’s three children. Nearing the start of the Civil War in 1860, the property was valued at $353,000, equivalent to $11.6 million in 2021, while Payne’s personal fortune was listed as $563,000 ($18.6 million in 2021). Interestingly, Payne was anti-secession, but he still fought for the Confederacy in the war along with his stepson, who was wounded in the Battle of Shiloh before dying in 1862. 

Even with his views, Payne was close friends with Confederate President Jefferson Davis, and Davis frequently visited and stayed overnight at 1134 First St. It was on one such visit in 1889 that Davis died in the Payne family home, but it’s through his death that—through reports from local newspapers—we are given a generous description of the house at the time. One article called the house “one of the most comfortable and interiorly artistic in the city.” It continued: “It is of brown stone stucco, two stories high, with broad verandas and set in lovely grounds where camellia bushes are spiked with blooms and oranges hang in clusters on the trees...The house has a wide hall running through the center with drawing rooms on one side [and] a library on the other…”

During the Payne family’s 62-year ownership, both Charlotte and Jacob Payne also died in the home—Charlotte in 1877 at age 74 and Jacob in 1900 at age 97. At one point, aside from family members, the Payne home also included two entire servant families, a housemaid, a nurse, a laundress, a hostler (a man who runs the horse stable), a coachman, and a handyman. Carrie Payne married the captain of her father’s artillery battery and future Louisiana Supreme Court judge Charles Fenner at the end of the Civil War, and she bought her brother’s share of their family home after their father’s death. She moved out after Charles died in 1911, and the property went through several renters and was divided into apartments. 

In 1935, Carrie finally sold the house to William B. and Hedwig Penzel Forsyth who renovated the home extensively but sold off a large portion of the grounds. Both Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth passed away within seven years of owning the home, so the property was inherited by their daughter Rose, who lived there with her husband Frank Strachan. Rose was renowned for her gardening skill and knowledge, and she designed the current formal gardens on the grounds along with landscape architect Umberto Innocenti. Along with a garden tea house, Mrs. Strachan also added two greenhouses to the property, where she cared for her famed orchids. The home remains in the Strachan family today. 

Special thanks to the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans and its archives and the Garden District Association for much of the information in this article. 

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What Not to Miss on a Girls Trip to New Orleans

N ew Orleans is a vibrant, exciting place brimming with history, music, and amazing food. From its quiet Garden District to bustling Jackson Square, there’s something for everyone in this Louisiana city. If you’re planning a girls trip to New Orleans, you’re in for a great time. 

Ahead, we’re sharing our favorite things to do in the Big Easy (plus the best places to eat!). Whether you’re visiting for a bachelorette party, a mother-daughter trip, or a girlfriend getaway, you’ll make lifelong memories and will be counting down the days until your next trip here. 

*Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links, which means we may receive a commission if you click a link and purchase something that we have recommended. Please check out our  disclosure policy  for more details. Thank you for your support!

How to Get Around New Orleans

If you’re flying into New Orleans, you may wonder if you should rent a car during your girls trip. If your entire group can fit into a taxi or Uber, skipping the car rental may be more cost-effective. Many hotels charge steep parking fees, and you’ll likely do a lot of walking anyway. 

Plus, you can use the New Orleans trolley or call a ride-share when you need time off your feet. 

However, if you’re planning to spend a lot of time exploring the surrounding towns, or if you need to squeeze into a full seven-passenger minivan, then renting a car might give you the flexibility and ease of travel you need. 

Things to Do on a Girls Trip to New Orleans

1. have a spa day.

New Orleans may not feel like the most tranquil city, but it’s still a great place to have a spa day. Most five-star hotels in the Central Business District have world-class spas designed with luxury and relaxation in mind. 

2. Go shopping on Magazine Street

You could easily spend multiple days shopping along Magazine Street. This avenue stretches six miles and features something for everyone. There are yoga studios, coffee shops, boutiques, and fantastic restaurants. Most of it’s locally owned, so you can find plenty of unique treasures. 

3. Admire the Houses of the Garden District

Walking through the Garden District of New Orleans is one of our top things to do in the city. It’s so relaxed and quiet – probably one of the best places in the world to take a stroll. Here, you’ll find intriguing architecture, leafy sidewalks, and a few cafes. 

Come in the morning or evening to stretch your legs and enjoy this unique place. Or, book a walking tour of the Garden District to learn about the history of this beautiful place. 

4. Take a Food or Cocktail Tour of the City

You only have so many meals and cocktail hours during your girls trip to New Orleans. Don’t leave them up to chance. A guided food or cocktail tour will make sure you’re hitting up all the best places – and ordering the best things. 

Whether you want to sip the best drinks or try the most delicious Cajun cooking, a guided tour is an excellent investment for your limited time in the city. 

And if you want to get really creative, consider taking a cooking class in New Orleans. Find some options HERE

5. Get Dressed up for Fancy Brunch 

You need to enjoy a fancy brunch while vacationing with your girlfriends in New Orleans. We’re sharing a few of our favorite spots below. Be sure to make reservations at all these New Orleans brunch spots, as they’re very popular (for good reason). 

  • Commander’s Palace: We’re always quick to recommend Commander’s Palace for its white-glove service and exceptional style. They open late morning on Saturdays and Sundays for their jazz brunch. There’s a dress code here, so it’s a great chance to dress up for an Instagram-worthy outing. 
  • Court of Two Sisters: You can’t beat a courtyard brunch in the French Quarter. Dine al-fresco in a secret garden-style setting as you enjoy jazz music and a delicious buffet meal. They have a great selection of classic brunch fare and Cajun favorites, like gumbo and duck a l’Orange. Court of Two Sisters also offers brunch throughout the week, so it’s a great option if you’re in town on a weekday. 
  • Muriel’s : We love the ambiance of Muriel’s on Jackson Square. Its multiple rooms and patio each have a distinct character. Besides its perfect setting, the classic Muriel’s Bloody Mary is reason enough to visit this great place. But their entire menu is delicious. Come on Saturdays for a classic brunch or Sundays for a jazz brunch.

6. Find Cocktails with a View

Whether you are day drinking your way through the city or just want to sip with some scenery, you need to find the New Orleans bars with the best views. We think Hot Tin is one of the best rooftop bars in the city, as it overlooks the New Orleans skyline and has such a sleek ambiance. For something closer to the French Quarter, head to Vue Rooftop Bar at the SpringHill Suites.

7. Visit a Museum

You could dedicate your entire New Orleans vacation to museum hopping. And for your girls trip, we recommend you visit at least one of these fascinating places. 

  • New Orleans Museum of Art has an array of artwork, but its sculpture garden is its main draw. Plus, its location in City Park allows you to get away from the Business District and French Quarter to see another great area of the city. 
  • The National WWII Museum is a surprising gem in New Orleans. History buffs in the group will love the stories and artifacts from this world-changing era. It’s located on Magazine Street and you can get tickets HERE .
  • Mardi Gras World is the perfect place to get up close to the wonders of Mardi Gras, as it’s home to the famous parade floats. Take a guided tour to see how they build these incredible masterpieces from the ground up. 

8. Tour a Plantation

If you want to get out of the city and walk through history, then a plantation tour could be a great thing to add to your New Orleans itinerary.

Whitney Plantation is our top recommendation because it focuses solely on the experiences of enslaved people. Laura Plantation also features the stories of enslaved people and how they influenced Creole culture.  Oak Alley Plantation looks straight out of a movie with its giant oaks draped in Spanish moss. Some of “Interview with a Vampire” was filmed here.

9. Join a Walking Tour of the French Quarter

Even if you spend days wandering around the historic French Quarter, you’ve still only hit the surface of this amazing place. The music, art, scenery, architecture, and (most importantly!) the people’s stories are so interwoven. The best way to better appreciate the vibrancy of the French Quarter is through a walking tour. 

An expert tour guide will take you through the neighborhood, highlighting some of its most interesting parts and revealing hidden gems. 

New Orleans Tours We Recommend

  • New Orleans Sightseeing Tour with Viator
  • New Orleans Garden District Tour with Get Your Guide
  • The Ultimate Historical Plantation Day Tour – WithLocals

10. Cruise on the Creole Queen Riverboat

See New Orleans from a different point of view while enjoying quality time with your girlfriends. The Creole Queen is an authentic paddle-wheeler that offers day and night cruises along the Mississippi River. They offer jazz excursions, historical tours, and holiday events that are perfect for a girl’s trip. 

11. Wander Jackson Square and Bourbon Street During the Day

You can’t visit New Orleans without seeing Jackson Square and Bourbon Street. Though often crowded and loud, these places hold a distinct energy and are fun to see. Impromptu parades, street performers, and sidewalk artists bring these streets to life.

We recommend going during the day if you plan to simply wander around. You’ll feel safer and can better see the architecture and landscaping around Jackson Square, home of St. Louis Cathedral, and lots of entertainment. 

12. Get Scared on a Ghost Tour

New Orleans is widely considered the most haunted city in the United States. It seems like each building holds some kind of paranormal (or just creepy) story. Whether you want to learn a little about its haunted past or get your socks scared off by horrid stories, there’s a ghost tour for you. 

This is a great way to learn about the city’s voodoo culture, the above-ground cemeteries, and catastrophic horrors. 

13. Tour the Swamps on an Airboat

If you and your friends crave a little adventure, then an airboat tour will do the trick. Get out of the city and see the swamplands in an unforgettable excursion. Feed alligators or spot wildlife from afar on a thrilling tour through Louisiana’s bayou. 

14. Listen to Live Music 

New Orleans is home to some of the world’s best jazz and blues musicians. Even if you’re not typically a fan of this enthralling style of music, you should still check out the live music venues during your girls trip to New Orleans. Here are some of the best spots to find great sounds:

  • Preservation Hall: This French Quarter icon has been home to traditional New Orleans Jazz since 1961. Today, they present 45-minute shows every night, a great way to appreciate the music without committing an entire night to it.  Reserve your tickets online in advance . 
  • Blue Nile: This music club hosts a range of music styles, including classic jazz, funk, and rock. Its indoor detailing holds true to the colors and artistry of New Orleans. 
  • Maple Leaf Bar : This fun venue has nightly performances from great acts, including brass bands and talented soloists. Come back on Sunday for poetry nights.
  • House of Blues Restaurant & Bar: This multi-room event venue sees several big-name and local acts. There’s a full restaurant, bar, lounge, and nightclub, making this place a great spot to visit as part of a well-planned evening or a spontaneous outing. 

15. Take a City Bike Tour

New Orleans is a beautiful place to bike, plus it’s a great way to get in some casual exercise during your girls getaway. However, it can be tough knowing where to bike in a new city.

A guided New Orleans bike tour will allow you to pedal through the city without getting stuck in impossible intersections or tight corners. Guides can offer great insight into the incredible history and culture of the city while helping you navigate its unique streets. 

Best Restaurants for a Girls Trip to New Orleans

New Orleans is famous for its delicious food. Many people come from all over the world just to try some of the city’s best restaurants. For your girls trip, you need to plan on visiting some of these places that put New Orleans on the map for delicious, soul-nourishing food. 

Café du Monde

You will wait in a long line, and get powdered sugar in your hair, but you will eat one of the most delicious treats in the world. This is Cafe du Monde in New Orleans, a place on nearly every visitor’s bucket list. The warm fluffy donuts and fresh coffee are worth the wait, and the ambiance is unbeatable: a crowded French Market cafe that allows for the best people-watching and jazz-listening. 

If you want to avoid the lines, consider visiting one of  the ir other locations  outside of the French Quarter. Otherwise, enjoy the chance to slow down and take in the sights and sounds of this unique neighborhood. 

Going to Mother’s in New Orleans is a whole experience—a taste of true local flavor from an 85-year-old establishment. Food here is served from a fast-moving lunchline, and it’s almost always crowded. This is a great place for a po’ boy, Jambalaya, or glazed ham. Mother’s is open daily for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, with lines typically going out the door and around the corner. 

Central Grocery and Deli

Central Grocery is the French Quarter icon that’s home to the original Muffuletta sandwich. This Italian-style sandwich uses the freshest meats and house-made olive salad. This is where you’ll go before a girl’s trip picnic, as it’s just a quick lunch counter (often with a long line). The sandwiches are great and are another bucket-list meal for most visitors. 

For a fine dining experience, we recommend Brennan’s, a colorful yet classy establishment on Royal Street. Their history dates back to 1946, and today they offer an inventive menu full of creole flavor. Though it is an upscale restaurant, it’s still a really fun place – the perfect balance for a fancy dinner during your girls trip. 

Arnaud’s in New Orleans is super classy, with tuxedo-clad servers carrying artful plates of French dishes. Feeling adventurous? Opt for their chef’s tasting menu to get some of the most inventive and delicious options curated for the most discerning diners. 

Best New Orleans Hotels for a Girls Trip

New Orleans has many four and five-star hotels that are perfect for a girls trip. Most will be in the Central Business District, where there are high-rise buildings, lots of entertainment venues, and endless shopping. This area neighbors the French Quarter across Canal Street, less than a mile from Jackson Square.  

  • The Ritz-Carlton – The Ritz offers a decidedly posh ambiance while maintaining a strong sense of place. The building dates back to 1908, and the entire hotel honors over a century of New Orleans hospitality and rich culture. But the rooms are still incredibly comfortable and up-to-date. CHECK RATES HERE
  • Eliza Jane – Eliza Jane in New Orleans will be perfect if you love staying at boutique hotels during your girls’ trips. It’s convenient to both the business district and the French Quarter, though there’s more to this spot than its great location. Its 196 rooms are simple yet comfortable, and the lobby lounge is incredibly inviting. CHECK RATES HERE
  • Roosevelt – The New Orleans Roosevelt Hotel is under Hilton’s Waldorf Astoria Brand, a five-star line that promises luxury and comfort. It’s got spacious rooms, sleek interiors, and a rooftop pool. Plus, there are great restaurants and a spa onsite.  CHECK RATES HERE
  • Windsor Court  – Though New Orleans is famous for its French influences, the British-inspired Windsor Court still fits in as a historic, charming hotel. Anyone visiting for a girls trip will love its heated rooftop pool, oversized rooms, afternoon tea service, and perfect location near the French Quarter and the Mississippi River.  CHECK RATES HERE
  • VRBO – If you need more space and flexibility than a hotel room will provide, then a vacation rental could be a better fit for your girls trip. The Garden District is a quiet neighborhood to escape to, but there are also some good rentals in the French Quarter if you want to be near the hustle and bustle. CHECK RATES HERE

The post What Not to Miss on a Girls Trip to New Orleans appeared first on Groups Are A Trip .

New Orleans is a vibrant, exciting place brimming with history, music, and amazing food. From its quiet Garden District to bustling Jackson Square, there’s something for everyone in this Louisiana city. If you’re planning a girls trip to New Orleans, you’re in for a great time.

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Anne Hathaway and Gabrielle Union Pose on the Red Carpet, Plus Timothée Chalamet, King Charles and More

From Hollywood to New York and everywhere in between, see what your favorite stars are up to

Alexandra Schonfeld is a features writer at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since April 2022. Her work previously appeared in Newsweek .

tour new orleans garden district

Stars have been everywhere this week, from Anne Hathaway and Gabrielle Union celebrating the premiere of The Idea of You in New York City to Timothée Chalamet on set in New Jersey. In London, King Charles raises a bouquet of pink flowers after a visit to the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre.

Here, the best photos of celebs out and about this week. Come back tomorrow for more of the latest A-list outings!

Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

Gabrielle Union and Anne Hathaway celebrate the New York City premiere of The Idea of You on April 29 at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Lights, Camera

Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Timothée Chalamet is in character as Bob Dylan on the set of A Complete Unknown on April 29 in Newark, New Jersey. 

Spring Is Here

Karwai Tang/WireImage

King Charles holds on to a bouquet of pink flowers following a visit to the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre on April 30 in London.

Strike a Pose

Lexie Moreland/WWD via Getty

Jodie Turner-Smith rocks a wide-brimmed hat for the Ralph Lauren runway show on April 29 in New York City.

Good to Glow

Also at the star-studded show, Glenn Close and Jessica Chastain pose together with matching silver bags from their seats on April 29.

Personal Style

Christopher Peterson/SplashNews

Charli XCX sports an all-black look for an appearance on Watch What Happens Live in New York City on April 29.

Streaming Star

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty

Jennifer Connelly steps out for the premiere of Dark Matter at Hammer Museum in L.A. on April 29.

New York Nights

Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Cynthia Erivo and Chris Pine pose together at the 49th Chaplin Award Gala honoring Jeff Bridges at Lincoln Center in New York City on April 29.

Sweet Serenade

Arturo Holmes/Getty

Fantasia performs in a feathered ensemble during the New York Pops 41st Birthday Gala honoring Clive Davis on April 29 in New York City.

Man of the Hour

L. Busacca/Getty 

The night's honoree, Clive Davis , poses with Martha Stewart during the gala at Carnegie Hall in New York City on April 29.

London Look

Dave Benett/Getty

Rita Ora poses at the launch of Typebea at Sephora West on April 30 in London.

In Character

Christian Bale and Jessie Buckley are spotted on the set of The Bride in New York City on April 29.

Ready to Go

RB/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Emily Blunt looks chic as she stops by Jimmy Kimmel Live! in L.A. on April 29.

Date Night Smiles

Susan Bridges and honoree Jeff Bridges pose together at the 49th Chaplin Award Gala at Lincoln Center in New York City on April 29.

Sparkle and Shine

Ricky Vigil M/Justin E Palmer/GC Images

Rebel Wilson sports shimmering sleeves while out for dinner following her show in London on April 29.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty 

Robert De Niro addresses the crowd for a screening of Ezra at SVA Theater in New York City on April 29.

Todd Williamson/Amazon

Nicole Kidman and Lulu Wang attend the Expats Emmys FYC event at Prime Experience at NYA WEST in L.A. on April 28.

Signed, Sealed, Delivered

Sharon Stone signs some autographs during the 49th Chaplin Award Gala honoring Jeff Bridges at Lincoln Center in New York City on April 29.

Off to the Races

Steven Ferdman/Getty

Rauw Alejandro and Lewis Hamilton pose together at WhatsApp and Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1's Empire State Building viewing party on April 29 at Virgin Hotels in New York City.

Back to Work

Pedro Pascal is handsome in neutrals while on the set of The Materialists in New York City on April 29.

Feeling Pink

STARTHESTAR / SplashNews

Ice Spice rocks some hot pink fur on the set of a music video in New York City this week.

Fun & Flirty

Rita Ora flashes a wide smile at the Typebea launch event at The Old Sessions House in London on April 29.

Out and About

TheImageDirect.com

Steven Spielberg enjoys the warm weather in New York City during an outing on April 28.

Raymond Hall/GC Images

Anne Hathaway goes for an all-white look while out and about in New York City on April 29.

Star of the Screen

Jose Perez / SplashNews

Jude Law looks dapper on the set of The Black Rabbit in New York City on April 29.

New York Gal

Also on set on Monday, Dakota Johnson is spotted in a black tank and blue jeans as she films scenes for The Materialists in New York City. 

Shimmer and Shine

Stefanie Keenan/Getty

Sarah Michelle Gellar wears a glittering mini dress at the Daily Front Row's Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 28.

London Appearance

Neil Mockford/GC Images

Rebel Wilson steps out in London for "An Evening with Rebel Wilson" event at The London Palladium on April 29.

Lovely Ladies

Kris Jenner and Celeste Barber are draped in dresses by Lagos at the Daily Front Row's Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on Sunday.

Fashionable Pair

Also at the star-studded event, Doja Cat and Jennifer Garner sit side-by-side at the Beverly Hills Hotel for the Daily Front Row's Fashion Los Angeles Awards as Casamigos specialty cocktails flow throughout the party.

Festival Fierce

Erika Goldring/Getty

Karrueche Tran and Peyton List pose together at Expedia's Global Jam at Joy Theater during New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 26.

Jon Batiste shows off his winning smile as he attends Expedia's Global Jam at Joy Theater on April 26.

David Krieger/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Nicky Hilton steps out for the warm New York City weather on April 29.

Breakfast Best

Michael Simon

Ashley Tisdale fills her tote bag with Honey Bunches of Oats while grabbing groceries in L.A.

Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty

Leonardo DiCaprio looks out from under his black baseball cap at Crypto.com Arena as the Los Angeles Lakers take on the Denver Nuggets on April 27.

Courtside Date

Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty

Adele and Rich Paul are also on deck on April 27 to catch the Lakers game at Crypto.com Arena.

Leading Lady

Anne Hathaway chats with the crowd in New York City during a special screening of The Idea Of You at 92NY on April 28.

Sealed with a Kiss

Phillip Faraone/Getty

Cole Sprouse gets a kiss on the cheek from Ari Fournier at The Daily Front Row's 8th annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards on April 28 at The Beverly Hills Hotel.

Black Ties and All

Paul Morigi/NBC News/MSNBC via Getty

Colin Jost and Scarlett Johansson pose with second gentleman Doug Emhoff at the White House Correspondents' Dinner after party at the French Ambassador's residence in Washington D.C. on April 27.

Paras Griffin/Getty

Fantasia Barrino rocks an all-denim ensemble at the 2024 Hallmark Mahogany Honors Brunch held at InterContinental Buckhead Atlanta on April 28.

Across the Pond

Sheila Atim and Andrew Scott pose with a time capsule at The Old Vic Theatre ahead of its burial in the foundation of the new Backstage Building in London on April 29.

Having a Laugh

Adir Abergel and Jennifer Garner are all smiles at The Daily Front Row's Fashion Los Angeles Awards on April 28 at The Beverly Hills Hotel.

New York Minute

Gotham/GC Images

Gabrielle Union steps out in New York City for an appearance at 92NY on April 28.

River Callaway/Variety via Getty

Nicole Kidman attends an Emmy FYC event for Expats at the Prime Experience at NYA West on April 28 in Los Angeles.

Minty Fresh

JOCE/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Melissa McCarthy accessorizes her mint ensemble with a bedazzled 'M' brooch on April 28 in L.A.

Rockers On the Go

Kevin Mazur/Getty

Mick Jagger and The Rolling Stones rock on stage during their Hackney Diamonds Tour at NRG Stadium Houston on April 28.

Dynamic Duo

Michael Kovac/Getty

Michelle Pfeiffer and Meryl Streep smile together during the AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Nicole Kidman celebration at Dolby Theatre in L.A. on April 27.

Eric Charbonneau/Getty

Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Ewan McGregor attend an L.A. Times Envelope live screening of A Gentleman in Moscow on April 28 at Culver Theater in Culver City, California.

Father-Daughter Moment

Taylor Hill/Getty

Alexa Ray Joel joins her dad Billy Joel onstage during his show at Madison Square Garden on April 26 in New York City.

MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty

Doja Cat and Brett Alan Nelson step out for the Daily Front Row Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 28.

Pink & Poised

Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock

Chrishell Stause flashes a smile while stopping by Lorraine on April 29 in London.

Adrienne Longo/REAL SIMPLE

Today 's Sheinelle Jones gets cheering as host of the April 28 REAL SIMPLE Women's Half Marathon, with New York Road Runners, in New York City's Central Park,

Family Affair

Lisa Rinna , Henry Eikenberry , Amelia Gray, Harry Hamlin and Delilah Belle Hamlin step out for the Daily Front Row's Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 28.

Staying Cool

Christopher Victorio/Shutterstock

Audrina Patridge poses with a cold drink at the Malibu Desert Dream Escape Piña Colada Bar at Stagecoach Music Festival in Indio, California on April 27.

Festival Mode

Chad Salvador/Shutterstock

Brandi Cyrus poses in a cowboy hat during PrettyLittleThing's gifting suite experience during Stagecoach Music Festival on April 28.

Diplo celebrates with some Don Julio 1942 following his Stagecoach set at the Pizzaslime x Tequila Don Julio x Revolve after party on April 27.

A Good Cause

Phillip Faroane/Getty

Michael Bublé , Gateway for Cancer Research president and CEO Natalie Stewart, Dak Prescott, Gateway founder and chairman Richard J. Stephenson, Gateway vice chair Dr. Stacie J. Stephenson, Joey Fatone , Chris Kirkpatrick and Caroline Rhea pose together at the Gateway Celebrity Fight Night 30th Anniversary Emerald Ball in Scottsdale, Arizona on April 27.

Daniel Boczarski/Getty

Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes make some silly faces for cameras while at the C2E2 Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo at McCormick Place in Chicago on April 26.

Bleached Blonde Hair Is Back!

Vivien Killilea/Getty

Kim Kardashian attends the 2024 Lo Máximo Awards in Los Angeles on April 27.

Rick Kern/Getty

Bad Bunny performs at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, on April 27.

A Meditation Moment

Nicole Scherzinger meditates with gong in Los Angeles on April 26.

A Taste of Sugar

Colin Farrell at the FYC event for Sugar at the Linwood Dunn Theater in Los Angeles on April 28.

Taking the Stage

Morgan Freeman speaks at the 49th AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute To Nicole Kidman in Los Angeles on April 27.

Honoree of the Night

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Nicole Kidman shines in a gold sequined Balenciaga gown at the 49th AFI Life Achievement Awards where she was honored on April 27 in Hollywood, California.

Glamorous Affair

Paul Morigi/Getty

Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost make an elegant couple in complementary black tie looks at the 2024 White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington on April 27.

Celebratory Night

Cynthia Erivo, Zac Efron and Joey King pose for a photo at the 49th AFI Life Achievement Awards honoring Nicole Kidman in Los Angeles on April 27.

Man of the Moment

Scott Dudelson/Getty

Post Malone gets the crowd going during his performance on the second day of the 2024 Stagecoach festival on April 27 in Indio, California.

Show of Support

Kevin Winter/Getty 

Reese Witherspoon smiles on arrival at the 49th Annual AFI Life Achievement Awards in support of her friend and honoree Nicole Kidman on April 27 in Hollywood, California.

Playful Pose

Rosario Dawson kicks her leg in the air while posing on the red carpet at the 2024 White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington on April 27.

Musical Forces

Amy Sussman/Getty 

Country stars Miranda Lambert and Reba McEntire delight fans as they perform together at the Stagecoach festival on April 27 in Indio, California. 

Simply Divine

Michelle Pfeiffer brings understated glamor to the red carpet at the 49th AFI Life Achievement Awards celebrating Nicole Kidman on April 27 in Hollywood, California.

Helping Hand

Bryan Dozier/Variety via Getty

Chris Pine is offered help from Bill Nye in sprucing up his suit at the TIME And Amazon MGM Studios soiree after the White House Correspondents Dinner on April 27 in Washington.

On the Road

Marcus Ingram/Getty

Kane Brown pulls off another great show during his In The Air tour at the Toyota Center in Houston on April 27.

Not an Illusion

"Illusion" singer Dua Lipa and Callum Turner hang out in New York City on April 27.

A Wonder in White

Chris Pine attends the 2024 White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., on April 27. 

Let's Party!

Paul Morigi/Getty 

Rosario Dawson attends the CAA Kickoff Party for the 2024 White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., on April 26. 

The Thumbs-Up Guy

Jason Lowrie / BFA

Bill Nye attends the UTA pre-event soiree for the 2024 White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., on April 26. 

A Wall Street Walk

Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC 

Robert De Niro walks on Wall Street on the set of Zero Day in New York City on April 27.

Golden Goddess

Rihanna is glowing at the launch of Fenty Beauty's Soft'Lit Foundation on April 26 in Los Angeles.

Dazzling Performance

LUIS ROBAYO/AFP via Getty

Karol G shines onstage in a full embellished look at the Velez Sarsfield stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on April 26.

Return to Louisiana

Jon Batiste performs in his home state of Louisiana on the second day of the 2024 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage festival in New Orleans on April 26.

Crowd Pleaser

Amy Sussman/Getty

Jelly Roll is all-smiles onstage while performing at the 2024 Stagecoach festival at Empire Polo Club on April 26 in Indio, California.

Balenciaga Bold

HBDM77 / SplashNews.com

Kim Kardashian steps out to dinner in a head-to-toe Balenciaga look of a bright red oversized coat and black Pantaleggings on April 26 in Malibu, California.

Costar Catch-Up

Jude Law and Jason Bateman share a laugh on the set of their new film Black Rabbit in New York City on April 26.

Casual Cool

Emily Ratajkowski models a chic off-duty outfit in a white crop top with black sweatpants and bright green sneakers while out in New York City on April 26.

Country Era

Timothy Norris/Getty

Dixie D’Amelio is a natural onstage as she performs with the group Cheat Codes at the 2024 Stagecoach festival in Indio, California, on April 26.

Star Link-Up

T-Pain joins Jelly Roll onstage to perform together at the 2024 Stagecoach festival at Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, on April 26.

Center Stage

Eric Church performs with a choir onstage at the 2024 Stagecoach festival at Empire Polo Club on April 26, in Indio, California.

Happy Grins

Handout/Millie Pilkington/Buckingham Palace via Getty

King Charles and Queen Camilla flash sweet smiles in a new portrait released on April 26.

Out of this World

Instagram/@MickJagger

Mick Jagger has some fun at NASA's headquarters in Houston as he gears up to kick-off The Rolling Stones tour.

Hometown Hero

Jennifer Lopez throws on some oversized shades and gold hoop earrings for an outing in New York City on April 26.

Aaron Parfitt / SplashNews

Rebel Wilson opts for a red number as she departs a hotel in Manchester earlier this week.

Paul Zimmerman/Shutterstock

Steven Van Zandt flashes a smile while he and wife Maureen Van Zandt celebrate the unveiling of Van Zandt Way in Middletown Township, New Jersey on April 26.

Ladies in Miami

World Red Eye 

Isabela Grutman and Serena Williams pose together at the Isa Grutman store opening in Miami's Design District on April 25.

Side by Side

Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez step out hand-in-hand for a dinner party in New York City on April 25.

Milo Ventimiglia and Jarah Mariano enjoy some nature on April 25 while they step out for their four-legged friend for an outing in L.A.

Time to Chat

Mark Von Holden/January Images

Lulu Wang takes the mic during the Prime Experience Emmy FYC event's showrunner panel in L.A. on April 24.

Jonathan Bennett celebrates being named the godfather of Carnival Cruise Line's Carnival Firenze at a christening event on April 24.

Rommel Demano/BFA.com

Matt James shows off a can of Corona Premier as he is named the company's director of lifestyle.

It's Showtime

David Benthal/BFA.com

Jesper Vesterstrøm, Jon Bon Jovi and Jennifer Esposito pose together at a screening of hulu's Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story at the IPIC Theater & The Fulton by Jean-Georges in N.Y.C. on April 25.

Fierce Costars

Jenny Anderson/Getty Images

Josh O'Connor, Zendaya and Mike Faist pose together in New York City on April 24 days before Challengers hits theaters.

Seeing Double

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

Ava Phillippe and Reese Witherspoon are dashing in mirroring ensembles at Tiffany & Co.'s launch of Blue Book 2024: Tiffany Céleste in Beverly Hills on April 25.

Glitz & Glam

Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images

Also at the star-studded event, Gabrielle Union stunned in her own shiny accessories at the Tiffany & Co. celebration on April 25 in Beverly Hills.

Happy Couple

Rick Kern/Getty Images

Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves McConaughey share a laugh at the 12th annual Mack, Jack & McConaughey Gala at ACL Live in Austin on April 25.

The Hapa Blonde/GC Images

Dua Lipa sparkles on the day of the TIME 100 Gala in New York City on April 25.

Cindy Ord/Getty Images

Tracy Pollan , Alex Edelman, Michael J. Fox and Uma Thurman pose together from inside the TIME100 Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center in N.Y.C. on April 25.

AbacaPress / SplashNews

Drew Barrymore films a segment for The Drew Barrymore Show in Central Park along with a four-legged companion on April 25 in New York City.

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

JoJo Siwa wears a shirt from her own merch line at the premiere of Dance Moms: The Reunion on April 25 in New York City.

Triple Threat

L. Busacca/Getty Images

Kylie Minogue , Mark Consuelos and Kelly Ripa pose together at the TIME100 Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City on April 25.

Felipe Ramales / SplashNews

Following Thursday's gala, Dua Lipa and Callum Turner head to Zero Bond in New York City.

Country Strong

Jason Kempin/Getty Images

Tim McGraw shows off his muscular arms while performing at Bridgestone Arena on April 25 in Nashville, Tennessee.

Guitar Hero

As McGraw's guest on tour, Carly Pearce was also on deck at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville on April 25.

METROPOLIS/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Penn Badgley is spotted on the set of You in New York City on April 25.

Mom's Night Out

Suki Waterhouse opts for all-white for her appearance at the Tiffany & Co. celebration at The Beverly Estate on April 25 in Beverly Hills.

Take Your Seats

Also at Thursday's soirée, Quinta Brunson , Usher , and Olivia Wilde pose inside the The Beverly Estate as Tiffany & Co. celebrates the launch of Blue Book 2024: Tiffany Céleste.

Special Guest

Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images

Snoop Dogg flashes a smile courtside at Crypto.com Arena as the Los Angeles Lakers take on the Denver Nuggets on April 25 in Los Angeles.

Blonde Ambition

Bruce Glikas/WireImage

Patricia Arquette and Jessica Lange celebrate the opening night of Mother Play on at Bryant Park Grill in New York City on April 25.

Paul Archuleta/Getty Images

Taylor Armstrong , Phaedra Parks and Brandi Glanville pose together at the grand opening of Beverly Hills Rejuvenation Clinic West Hollywood on April 25.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Marc Anthony takes the stage at MGM Grand Garden Arena during the 2024 Latin American Music Awards on April 25 in Las Vegas.

In the Band

John Stamos performs in red and black with The Beach Boys during day one of the 2024 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on April 25.

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    Walking Tour Locatio n: New Orleans Garden District Cost: Free, Self-Guided (Optional costs listed below) Style: Do-It-Yourself Walking Tour (Self Guided) Starting Point: Third Street Street Car Stop End Of Tour: Washington Avenue Street Car Stop Walking Distance: Approximately 2.2 miles Time Required: 1.5 Hours of walking (+1 hour for the official cemetery tour)

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    Address: 1403 Washington Ave. Commander's Palace is one of the most iconic restaurants in New Orleans. It first welcomed guests in 1893 and has been a fixture in the Garden District ever since. Commander's Palace is known for its bright turquoise exterior, high-end Creole cuisine, and .25-cent lunch martinis.

  17. Garden District Walking Tour

    The best New Orleans has to offer! Celebrity homes, Movie locations, Lafayette Cemetery, beautiful architecture, majestic mansions, and so much more! Tour starting location is at Gracious Bakery. Please allow 15 minutes for pick-up. Tour begins at 2:00 pm. Tour is approximately 2 hours long. Adults: $29.99. Children under 6: free.

  18. New Orleans Garden District

    Address: 3127 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 is the Garden District's favorite eclectic vintage clothing store, offering vintage clothes, costumes, and funky accessories. Swap Boutique's. Address: 5530 Magazine St, New Orleans, LA 70115 the place to find modern designer brands in a consignment-style shop when you're on a budget ...

  19. GREAT Garden District Walking Tour New Orleans

    New Orleans Historic Tours. 0. Wear comfortable shoes, stay hydrated, bring a raincoat. We do many tours in the rain but reserve the right to cancel if there's lighting or if the rain is too loud to speak over. 504.947.2120. Send a message. BOOK YOUR TOUR. MEET OUR TOUR GUIDES.

  20. Guide to the Garden District

    Commander's Palace is the quintessential New Orleans dining experience. Nestled in the Garden District since 1893, it's hard to miss the iconic blue and white façade. Visit for dinner or brunch on the weekends and indulge in their award-winning cuisine, which includes Creole favorites such as turtle soup, Gulf seafood gumbo and pecan crusted Gulf redfish.

  21. New Orleans Garden Tours

    New Orleans Botanical Garden. Lushly green, brilliant with color, shaded by Live Oaks dripping Spanish moss and punctuated with art: gardens in New Orleans are an oasis of beauty in a city already extraordinary. Seeing behind the garden walls, touring hidden courtyards and landscaped swathes of year-round horticulture adds a verdant dimension ...

  22. Garden District Tour

    pricing. 2 hour tour $240 for your private tour for 1- 4 people. Each additional person $60, up to 12 people total, for your private tour. We can accommodate larger groups, please call or contact us for pricing. "….We could not give a higher recommendation - regardless of whether it is your first trip or your 16th to NOLA, Cassandra will ...

  23. A Tour of the New Orleans Garden District

    United States. Updated On: June 3, 2023. Located a short 20-minute streetcar ride from downtown, the New Orleans Garden District is a pleasant way to spend a quiet day in the city. The charming St. Charles Streetcar takes you from the hustle and bustle of downtown New Orleans to the majestic mansions and tree-lined streets of the Garden District.

  24. Historic Garden District Homes

    The wide swath of homes that are considered part of Uptown in New Orleans holds some of the most opulent and unique architecture in the city, and the homes in the Garden District are quintessential examples of both. However, within this 19-block stretch—running St. Charles Avenue to Magazine Street and Jackson Avenue to Toledano Street—more ...

  25. What Not to Miss on a Girls Trip to New Orleans

    New Orleans Sightseeing Tour with Viator; New Orleans Garden District Tour with Get Your Guide; The Ultimate Historical Plantation Day Tour - WithLocals; 10. Cruise on the Creole Queen Riverboat.

  26. 2801 St Charles Ave #103, New Orleans, LA 70115

    For Sale: 1 bed, 1 bath ∙ 564 sq. ft. ∙ 2801 St Charles Ave #103, New Orleans, LA 70115 ∙ $225,400 ∙ MLS# 2445354 ∙ Live on the Edge of Extraordinary - Ever dreamed of a place where you can wake up...

  27. Garden District

    Garden District. Wear comfortable shoes, stay hydrated, bring a raincoat. We do many tours in the rain but reserve the right to cancel if there's lighting or if the rain is too loud to speak over. 504.947.2120. Send a message. BOOK YOUR TOUR. MEET OUR TOUR GUIDES.

  28. PEOPLE Star Tracks: Photos of Anne Hathaway, Gabrielle Union and More

    Mick Jagger and The Rolling Stones rock on stage during their Hackney Diamonds Tour at NRG ... at Madison Square Garden on April 26 in New York ... day of the 2024 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage ...