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During the summer and fall of 2024, Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team based in Tallahassee, Florida, conducted excavations in New Orleans’s French Quarter on behalf of The Historic New Orleans Collection (HNOC). The project was completed ahead of a planned adaptive reuse project in the courtyard of the 533 Royal Street Campus, which, throughout time has functioned as a French military barracks, the home of merchant Jean Francois Merieult, a banking house, and a boarding house, among other things. The Southeast team drew upon specialists across Chronicle Heritage to elevate its work, bringing in experts in urban area excavations, historical archaeology and materials, and digital modeling to interpret the exciting contexts uncovered. The project resulted in the identification of an original cobblestone drainage feature associated with the late eighteenth-century occupation of the property, as well as a brick wall and builders’ trench attributed to a later nineteenth-century kitchen area. Numerous artifacts related to the property’s centuries of occupation were recovered, including eighteenth-century French faience and pearlware, kaolin pipes, and even a ca. 1792 silver spoon engraved with the initials of Jean Francois Merieult! Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team thanks the HNOC for its partnership in the successful completion of this project and was honored to contribute to the story of the 533 Royal Street Campus. City of New Orleans French Quarter Business Association New Orleans & Company #visitneworleans #NOLA #FrenchQuarter #MardiGras

  • During the summer and fall of 2024, Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team based in Tallahassee, Florida, conducted excavations in New Orleans’s French Quarter on behalf of The Historic New Orleans Collection (HNOC). The project was completed ahead of a planned adaptive reuse project in the courtyard of the 533 Royal Street Campus, which, throughout time has functioned as a French military barracks, the home of merchant Jean Francois Merieult, a banking house, and a boarding house, among other things.

The Southeast team drew upon specialists across Chronicle Heritage to elevate its work, bringing in experts in urban area excavations, historical archaeology and materials, and digital modeling to interpret the exciting contexts uncovered. The project resulted in the identification of an original cobblestone drainage feature associated with the late eighteenth-century occupation of the property, as well as a brick wall and builders’ trench attributed to a later nineteenth-century kitchen
  • During the summer and fall of 2024, Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team based in Tallahassee, Florida, conducted excavations in New Orleans’s French Quarter on behalf of The Historic New Orleans Collection (HNOC). The project was completed ahead of a planned adaptive reuse project in the courtyard of the 533 Royal Street Campus, which, throughout time has functioned as a French military barracks, the home of merchant Jean Francois Merieult, a banking house, and a boarding house, among other things.

The Southeast team drew upon specialists across Chronicle Heritage to elevate its work, bringing in experts in urban area excavations, historical archaeology and materials, and digital modeling to interpret the exciting contexts uncovered. The project resulted in the identification of an original cobblestone drainage feature associated with the late eighteenth-century occupation of the property, as well as a brick wall and builders’ trench attributed to a later nineteenth-century kitchen
  • During the summer and fall of 2024, Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team based in Tallahassee, Florida, conducted excavations in New Orleans’s French Quarter on behalf of The Historic New Orleans Collection (HNOC). The project was completed ahead of a planned adaptive reuse project in the courtyard of the 533 Royal Street Campus, which, throughout time has functioned as a French military barracks, the home of merchant Jean Francois Merieult, a banking house, and a boarding house, among other things.

The Southeast team drew upon specialists across Chronicle Heritage to elevate its work, bringing in experts in urban area excavations, historical archaeology and materials, and digital modeling to interpret the exciting contexts uncovered. The project resulted in the identification of an original cobblestone drainage feature associated with the late eighteenth-century occupation of the property, as well as a brick wall and builders’ trench attributed to a later nineteenth-century kitchen
  • During the summer and fall of 2024, Chronicle Heritage’s Southeast team based in Tallahassee, Florida, conducted excavations in New Orleans’s French Quarter on behalf of The Historic New Orleans Collection (HNOC). The project was completed ahead of a planned adaptive reuse project in the courtyard of the 533 Royal Street Campus, which, throughout time has functioned as a French military barracks, the home of merchant Jean Francois Merieult, a banking house, and a boarding house, among other things.

The Southeast team drew upon specialists across Chronicle Heritage to elevate its work, bringing in experts in urban area excavations, historical archaeology and materials, and digital modeling to interpret the exciting contexts uncovered. The project resulted in the identification of an original cobblestone drainage feature associated with the late eighteenth-century occupation of the property, as well as a brick wall and builders’ trench attributed to a later nineteenth-century kitchen
William M. Hunter

SE Regional Historian, Interior Region 2, South Atlantic-Gulf

2 天前

HNOC is an incredible place - good work!

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