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French Market

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The French Market ( French : Marché français ) is a market and series of commercial buildings spanning six blocks in the French Quarter of New Orleans , Louisiana . Founded as a Native American trading post predating European colonization, the market is the oldest of its kind in the United States. It began where Café du Monde currently stands and has been rebuilt and renovated a number of times.

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6-480: The market is included on the Louisiana African American Heritage Trail . Individual vendors purveyed many different fresh foods, including raw seafood, through the mid-20th century. The cafés and bars offer New Orleans crawfish and other seafood , Cajun food, Creole cooking, desserts, fruits, vegetables, and more. The French Market is also known for hosting some annual events including

12-480: Is a cultural heritage trail with 38 sites designated by the state of Louisiana , from New Orleans along the Mississippi River to Baton Rouge and Shreveport , with sites in small towns and plantations also included. In New Orleans several sites are within a walking area. Auto travel is required to reach sites outside the city. A variety of African-American museums devoted to art, history and culture are on

18-659: The French Quarter Festival and the French Market Creole Tomato Festival . The flea market is especially busy on weekends. Free musical events are often given in the French Market. The New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park office and visitor center is in the French Market. Part of the space has been dedicated as a market since 1791 in the colonial period, but the oldest extant structures date to about 1813. Major renovations were done by

24-627: The Works Progress Administration in the 1930s. Rebuilding and renovations have continued into the 21st century. Much of the area formerly housing arcades of roofed but wall-less merchant stands now houses shops and restaurants separated by doors and walls, catering to the tourism industry. The original market, called "the Meat Shops" or "Meat Market," was the only place within the French Quarter that could sell meat. Only after meat

30-547: The "trail", as is the Cane River Creole National Historical Park , and the first two churches founded by and for free people of color . The trail includes two extensive plantation complexes , with surviving slave quarters used by people who lived and worked at the plantations — until 1930 in one case, and into the 1960s at the other. Two historically black universities are also on the trail. Mitch Landrieu , as Lieutenant Governor, supported

36-707: Was being sold elsewhere did the name change to the "French Market." The French Market stretches just inland from the Mississippi River in the section of the French Quarter downriver from Jackson Square , from the Café du Monde at the upriver end, to the flea market stalls across from the New Orleans Mint building. 29°57′32″N 90°03′37″W  /  29.9590°N 90.0603°W  / 29.9590; -90.0603 Louisiana African American Heritage Trail Louisiana African American Heritage Trail ( French : Sentier de l'héritage afro-américain de la Louisiane )

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