
audiobook
by Eliza Ripley
SOCIAL LIFE IN
FOREWORD
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
II NEW ORLEANS SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS IN THE FORTIES
III BOARDING SCHOOL IN THE FORTIES
IV PICAYUNE DAYS
V DOMESTIC SCIENCE SEVENTY YEARS AGO
VI A FASHIONABLE FUNCTION IN 1842
VII NEW YEAR’S OF OLD
VIII NEW ORLEANS SHOPS AND SHOPPING IN THE FORTIES
A bright‑tasting portrait of a vanished world, this memoir drifts through the streets, salons and schoolrooms of mid‑nineteenth‑century New Orleans. The narrator recalls childhood games, handmade gowns, and the first “one‑price” shop that bewildered the city’s merchants, while vivid sketches of market doorways and the French Opera House bring the scene to life. Through tales of picayune negotiations and quiet evenings in candlelit courtyards, listeners sense the rhythm of a society that balanced French elegance with emerging American hustle.
Interwoven with anecdotes about teachers, boarding schools, and the seasonal fairs, the book offers a gentle lesson in the customs that shaped families and friends before the war reshaped the South. From festive balls at the Mint to humble steamboat rides on the Mississippi, each chapter feels like a fireside conversation, inviting the audience to imagine the scents of magnolia, the clatter of horse‑drawn carriages, and the soft murmur of Creole voices that once filled the city’s avenues.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (379K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1912.
Credits
Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-12-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1912
A Southern memoirist with a sharp eye for place and character, this writer preserved vivid memories of plantation life, the Civil War, and old New Orleans. Her books remain valuable for the detail they offer about a world transformed by conflict and change.
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