Also trollingBack then yall were still probably missing fufu
Also trollingBack then yall were still probably missing fufu
I know. I know all the posters by heart.I was trolling
Only white men were allowed in her brothel
Lulu White and her Belle Epoque Mansion of Interracial Sex Work
In New Orleans, stories seem to seep out of the soggy ground. Something about the heady mix of influences– African, Caribbean, Native American and French – against a landscape of backwaters and bayous creates a culture of permissiveness where characters invent the most outlandish versions of themselwww.messynessychic.com
Lulu White and her Belle Epoque Mansion of Interracial Sex Work
In New Orleans, stories seem to seep out of the soggy ground. Something about the heady mix of influences– African, Caribbean, Native American and French – against a landscape of backwaters and bayous creates a culture of permissiveness where characters invent the most outlandish versions of themselwww.messynessychic.com
Yea that’s why her store is part of the “history you don’t know” list lolA few things I've noticed:
1) Her wikipedia page intentionally doesnt mention that her husband was white or that she didnt allow non white men into the brothel
2) Her wiki also doesnt mention her obsession with IR
3) Not a single black woman has created a video on here on youtube. Meanwhile the same black women got 1000 videos on youtube about how james brown was an abuser and how :old black blues singers were colorist".
Didn’t know about this when I visited New Orleans twice but imma look more into this when I go againYes I have. Her mansion used to be where the old Iberville projects were.
She's pretty obscure. Not a whole lot is known about her. I didn't learn who she was until I was an adult. You'd probably have to link up with some real historiansDidn’t know about this when I visited New Orleans twice but imma look more into this when I go again
By law.Only white men were allowed in her brothel.
Storyville’s brothels were legally restricted to serving only white men; they could employ white or Black prostitutes but houses were required to be segregated.
A nearby, unofficial district called Uptown Storyville or Black Storyville served Black men. The District included low-end establishments called cribs, crude and crowded one and two-story buildings where the women worked in shifts under abusive and impoverished conditions.
When I go to new Orleans I can usually feel it in the soul of the city. I love it.I'm mad they ain't got no more red light districts...it's all underground now.
I heard of her in passing...if you a degenerate New Orleans and Baltimore was the best places for deviancy...New Otleans was ming for it. Hell it wasn't even posed to be a city...a fukking vacation city for the King..til he found out how hot it was and the mosquitoes.
#legalizesexwork