Saturday, January 16, 2016

The Freeman Annabelle House, New Orleans, LA

The Freeman Annabelle House, New Orleans, LA. 1847
This home, at the opposite end of Esplanade (1014) is known as the Freeman Annabelle house, though little seems to be known about the original occupants. As I mentioned, this is a classic New Orleans Italianate/Greek Revival hybrid, and indeed is a basic vernacular type in the city. This type, which I'll call the Porch Facade type, consists of a typical side hall plan and has a two story Greek revival porch, usually with Corinthian or Ionic columns, a deep Greek Revival cornice with brackets, and Greek style window surrounds. This house is a good introduction to this type, featuring flat windows with eared, molded surrounds, a segmental arched door with pilasters, Corinthian double columned porches which cover both levels of the facade, and a tall Greek Revival entablature with pairs of long s and c scroll brackets interrupting runs of smaller brackets. The facade is plastered with brick painted the same color on the sides. An interesting feature on this house, as can be seen below, is the lacy rococo cresting on the left side that hangs down from the cornice forming a fringe on the roof and running around the large projecting bay with a second story ironwork porch. Incongruously, the ironwork on the front of the house is Gothic in form, showing the mixture of cast iron styles displayed on the same house. Often there will be classical, rococo, romantic (very vegetal), and gothic thrown together to form one eclectic composition. The house is now condos.


3 comments:

  1. Thanks for this entry. My name is Steve Teeter, and I own Unit 9 in the back part of this house. I was very interested by your comments, as I love New Orleans architecture. What I know about "Freeman Annabelle," or at least what I was told when I bought this, was the Freeman indicates a free person of color, a mixed race person who was not enslaved. Some of them in fact were quite wealthy. Furthermore, I was told that the Freeman Annabelle who originally built the house was a woman, not a man. Which is pretty extraordinary.

    I'd love to hear from you. If you'd like to email me, you can do so at: steeter212@gmail.com

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  2. Thank you for the details! I currently own unit No.1, which is the one you see on the top floor with the Corinthian columns.

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  3. Freeman Annabel was a white male towboat Captain, born in Barnstable, Mass., circa 1810. He died in New Orleans in 1850. Neither he nor his wife (also from Barnstable) nor his children (born in New Orleans) were free people of color. The family seems to have moved back to Massachusetts after his death. He is buried in New Orleans in Cypress Grove Cemetery.

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