The
celebration of Mardi Gras came to North America from France where
it had been celebrated since the Middle Ages. In 1699, French
explorer Iberville and his men explored the Mississippi River
from the Gulf of Mexico. On a spot 60 miles south of the present
location of New Orleans, they set up camp on the river’s
West Bank. Knowing that the day, March 3, was being celebrated
as a major holiday in Paris, they christened the site Point
du Mardi Gras.
But Mardi
Gras’ roots predate the French. Many see a relationship
to the ancient tribal rituals of fertility that welcomed the arrival
of Spring. A possible ancestor of the celebration was the Lupercalia,
a circus-like orgy held in mid-February in Rome. The early Church
fathers, realizing that it was impossible to divorce their new
converts from their pagan customs, decided instead to direct them
into Christian channels. Thus Carnival was created
as a period of merriment that would serve as a prelude to the
penitential season of Lent.
In the late
1700s pre-Lenten balls and fetes were held in
New Orleans. Under French rule masked balls flourished, but were
later banned by the Spanish governors. The prohibition continued
when New Orleans became an American city in 1803, but by 1823,
the Creole populace prevailed upon the American governor, and
balls were again permitted. Four years later street masking
was officially made legal.
In
the early 19th Century, the public celebration of Mardi Gras consisted
mainly of maskers on foot, in carriages and on horseback. In 1837,
a costumed group of revelers walked in the first documented “parade,”
but the violent behavior of maskers during the next two decades
caused the press to call for an end to Mardi Gras. Fortunately,
six New Orleanians who were former members of the Cowbellians,
(a group that had presented New Year’s Eve parades in Mobile
since 1831), saved the New Orleans Mardi Gras by forming the Comus
organization in 1857. The men beautified the celebration and proved
that it could be enjoyed in a safe and festive manner. Comus coined
the word “krewe” and established
several Mardi Gras traditions by forming a secret Carnival society,
choosing a mythological namesake, presenting a themed parade with
floats and costumed maskers, and staging a tableau ball following
its parade.
After
the Civil War, Comus returned to the parade scene in 1866. Four
years later, the Twelfth Night Revelers debuted.
This unique group made Carnival history at its 1871 ball when
a young women was presented with a golden bean hidden inside a
giant cake, signifying her selection as Mardi Gras’ first
queen and starting the “king cake”
tradition. A visit by the Russian Grand Duke Alexis Romanoff was
the partial inspiration for the first appearance of Rex
in 1872. The King of Carnival immediately became the international
symbol of Mardi Gras. Rex presented Mardi Gras’ first organized
daytime parade, selected Carnival’s colors — purple,
gold and green, produced its flag, and introduced its anthem,
“If Ever I Cease To Love.” On New Year’s
Eve, 1872, the Knights of Momus also entered the Carnival scene.
Several Carnival parades in the 1870s ridiculed the government
in Washington D.C. and Carpetbagger Administration in Louisiana.
The popular
Krewe of Proteus debuted in 1882 with a glittering
parade that saluted Egyptian Mythology. The Jefferson
City Buzzards, the grandfather of all marching clubs,
was formed in 1890. The first black Mardi Gras organization, the
Original Illinois Club, was launched in 1894.
Two years later, Les Mysterieuses, Carnival’s
first female group, was founded and presented a spectacular Leap
Year ball.
The final
year of the Century saw snow in New Orleans on Fat Tuesday, which
fell on St. Valentine’s Day. Legend has it that Rex paraded
with a frozen mustache!
One
of the first and most beloved krewes to make its appearance in
the 20th Century was Zulu. Seven years before
its incorporation in 1916, this black organization poked fun at
Rex. The first Zulu King ruled with a banana stalk scepter and
a lard can crown. While Rex entered the city via a Mississippi
River steamboat, Zulu used an oyster lugger to plow up the New
Basin Canal.
The new Century
brought with it some difficult years. World War I canceled Carnival
in 1918-1919, but Mardi Gras survived this struggle, along with
the Prohibition of the Twenties and the Great Depression of the
Thirties.
In 1934 Carnival
festivities hit the West Bank of the Mississippi with the first
Alla parade. Random truck riders were organized
into the Elks Krewe of Orleanians in 1935. The
Krewe of Hermes and the Knights of Babylon
were organized in 1937 and 1939, respectively.
In the Forties
a new spirit of Mardi Gras was ushered in, pausing only for the
United States’ involvement overseas. Before World War II
canceled four Carnivals, the first women’s parade graced
the streets of New Orleans with the Krewe of Venus’
inaugural pageant in 1941. New Orleans’ favorite son, Louis
Armstrong, returned home to ride as King of the Zulu parade in
1949. In honor of the event, Satchmo’s likeness made the
cover of Time magazine.
The Fifties
provided international publicity and continued expansion of Mardi
Gras. Real royalty, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, honored the
make-believe Monarchs of Merriment as they bowed to Rex and Comus
at the 1950 Comus ball. The next year the Korean conflict canceled
much of Carnival, but several krewes combined to form the Krewe
of Patria, which paraded on Fat Tuesday. After nearly
a century of mule-drawn floats, tractors replaced the faithful
beasts. The decade also saw the formation of other krewes, including
Zeus, the first suburban club, which paraded
in Metairie.
The Sixties
were characterized by turbulence and change. The early years saw
the Greater New Orleans Tourist Commission try to convince the
hippies that the title “Greatest Free Show on Earth”
was not to be taken literally. The “Easy Rider” generation
had City Hall worried, and rumors that the infamous Hell’s
Angels were going to roll into town and crash Carnival had the
entire town uptight. Nothing negative happened, and Carnival continued
without incident.
Pete
Fountain started his Half-Fast Walking Club in
1961 and it quickly became a hit with Fat Tuesday crowds. Thinking
that the antics of the Krewe of Zulu were undignified, portions
of the black community put pressure on the group. Its king resigned
and the 1961 parade was almost canceled. Not only did Zulu survive,
however, but by 1969, its parade was also a main attraction on
Canal Street. Finally, just as the decade had begun with the historic
introduction of the Rex doubloon, so did the
period end with another landmark event — the start of the
Bacchus organization. The krewe’s founders,
feeling that the traditional Mardi Gras institutions had become
static, wanted to attract national attention and make Carnival
more accessible. In 1969, Bacchus shook the establishment by presenting
the largest floats in Carnival history, by having a Hollywood
celebrity ride as its king (Danny Kaye), and by presenting, in
place of the traditional ball, a supper dance to which tickets
could be purchased by both visitors and locals. These innovations
proved immensely popular and were to be copied by several future
carnival organizations in New Orleans.
Carnival’s
growth continued throughout the Seventies with the birth of 18
new parading krewes, and, ironically, the death of 18 others.
More than one dozen clubs featured celebrities in their parades.
Argus brought a Fat Tuesday parade to Metairie,
and Endymion exploded into a super-krewe in 1974.
A ban on parading through the French Quarter ended a 117-year
tradition, and a moratorium of new parade permits put a temporary
cap on expansion in Orleans Parish. The decade ended with a police
strike in New Orleans, causing the cancellation of 13 Mardi Gras
parades in Orleans Parish. Twelve parades rescheduled in the suburbs.
The decade
of the 1980s saw the dawn of 27 new parades and the demise of
19. The Mardi Gras parade calendar shrank drastically in St. Bernard
Parish, while in St. Tammany and Jefferson Parishes, Carnival
continued to grow. By 1989, more than 600,000 people annually
attended parades on the east and west banks of Jefferson Parish
on Fat Tuesday.
Feeling
the need for better safety measures and more coordination of Carnival
activities, the Mayor of New Orleans formed a Mardi Gras
Task Force to study all aspects of the celebration. In
1987, Rex resurrected “Lundi Gras,”
the customary Monday arrival on the Mississippi River which the
group had enjoyed from 1874 to 1917. The traditional tableau
ball, once an essential activity for all parading krewes,
lost its popularity, with only about 10 of the 60-plus clubs still
retaining a bal masque format by the decade’s end.
Doubloons
lost some of their luster as several krewes stopped minting them.
Krewe-emblemed throws of every imaginable variety gained popularity,
however, with imprinted cups leading the pack.
Perhaps the
greatest change in Mardi Gras in the 1980s was the tremendous
increase in tourism during the Carnival season. Conventions which
once had avoided New Orleans at Mardi Gras used the celebration
as a reason to assemble here. International media attention was
focused on Mardi Gras in the late 1980s, with camera crews from
Japan, Europe and Latin America showcasing the festivities. Mardi
Gras also became a year-round industry as more off-season conventions
experienced the joys of Carnival when they were treated to mini-parades
and repeat balls held in the city’s convention facilities.
Historians
may one day record the decade of the Nineties as a pivotal one
in Carnival history. While an in-depth economic impact study revealed
that Mardi Gras’ annual economic impact finally neared the
billion dollar mark, political intervention decreased the size
and scope of the celebration. Shortly before the 1992 season,
a New Orleans city ordinance was enacted that required all parading
krewes to open their private membership. Comus, Momus and Proteus
protested the government’s intrusion into their affairs
by canceling their parades, while Rex opened it membership to
blacks.
Eleven
new parades debuted in the 90s, while 15 folded. The Krewe of
Orpheus, led by Harry Connick Jr.,
was an instant hit and quickly assumed super-krewe status.
The birth
of Le Krewe d’Etat and the Ancient
Druids, plus the triumphant return of the Krewe
of Proteus in 2000, were highlights as Mardi Gras marched
on into the new millennium. The year was also the first when the
economic impact of Carnival crossed the one billion dollar mark.
The next year, the new female krewe of Muses
debuted to an excited parade crowd.
The horrific
events of September 11, 2001, impacted Mardi Gras by reducing
the number of visitors in subsequent years.
In 2002, some
15 parades were pushed back one week to avoid a conflict with
the rescheduled Super Bowl in New Orleans. In a hotly negotiated
settlement, Orleans Parish krewes whose parades were displaced
were reimbursed $20,000 each for their losses.
The first
decade of the 21st Century may be remembered as a time of consolidation
and improvement of the existing product rather than the addition
of more and more parades. Citing a dramatic rise in the demand
for city services — police, sanitation, emergency —
local govenments sought ways to raise revenue and reduce costs.
A moratorium on new parades in Orleans and Jefferson Parishes
has been issued.