Navarre, New Orleans: Difference between revisions
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==Boundaries== |
==Boundaries== |
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Navarre is part of the [[4th Ward of New Orleans]]. It is bounded by [[City Park |
Navarre is part of the [[4th Ward of New Orleans]]. It is bounded by [[City Park (New Orleans)|City Park]] to the east, [[Interstate 610 (Louisiana)|I-610]] across which is the [[Lakeview, New Orleans|Lakeview neighborhood]] to the north, [[Interstate 10 in Louisiana|I-10]] (formerly the route of the [[New Basin Canal]]) to the west, and City Park Avenue (formerly Bayou Metairie Road) to the south, across which is [[Mid City New Orleans]]. |
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==Features== |
==Features== |
Revision as of 04:26, 24 June 2008
Navarre is a neighborhood of the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
Boundaries
Navarre is part of the 4th Ward of New Orleans. It is bounded by City Park to the east, I-610 across which is the Lakeview neighborhood to the north, I-10 (formerly the route of the New Basin Canal) to the west, and City Park Avenue (formerly Bayou Metairie Road) to the south, across which is Mid City New Orleans.
Features
The neighborhood includes Delgado Community College, the local Public Broadcasting Service television station WYES-12 studios, and Greenwood, St. Patrick, and Holt cemeteries. Most of the rest of the neighborhood is residential, mostly white middle class and working class, with a smattering of neighborhood businesses.
The main streets in the neighborhood are Canal Boulevard running north to south and Navarre Avenue running east to west.
History
At the start of the 19th century what would become Navarre was mostly undeveloped swamp land a good distance from the developed parts of the young city along the Mississippi River. The narrow high ground alongside Bayou Metairie became a road, along the sides of which farmland was developed. The first of the area's important landmarks to be developed was Greenwood Cemetery, in 1852. The Canal Street, City Park, and Lake Pontchartrain Railway ran along one edge of the neighborhood on its way out alongside the Orleans Canal to Old Spanish Fort on Lake Pontchartrain. Otherwise, the land after a distance equivalent of a couple blocks back from Metairie Road was swamp.
The 1880s and 1890s saw the first work at reclaiming the swampland in the area for development, and by the early 20th century the area back to Florida Avenue was largely drained. There was substantial development, mostly as white middle class residential single family homes, in the 1920s. The area in the back section of Navarre was the site of the United Fruit Company radio facilities, until it was redeveloped residentially in the 1940s.
Navarre experienced serious flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Notable New Orleanians from Navarre include author/commentator Ronnie Virgets.