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Hook and Ladder Cemetery | A bit of Gretna LA History

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Crescent City Living LLC Licensed LA RE Commission

It’s funny what you get used to when you grow up here.  It’s not until we have visitors that I’m reminded not everyone buries their dead above ground.  The vaults in the Hook and Ladder Cemetery take up an entire block, bounded by Newton, Tenth, Eleventh and Lafayette Streets in the City of Gretna

Hook and Ladder 1

From the City of Gretna Website:

The Hook and Ladder Cemetery was established around 1859 and contains monuments of interest, including the those of John Ehret, the first mayor of Gretna and Louis Oscar Fried, the first casualty of the skirmish between the United States and Mexico.

Tombs in the cemetery range from very modest to much more ornate sites finished with granite or marble.  Catholic families in the New Orleans area usually spend some time at the cemetery the last week of October, cleaning, repainting and polishing up in preparation of laying fresh flowers on All Saint’s Day (November 1st).  Catholicism is so ingrained in the city’s culture that even non-Catholics follow many of the traditions, so the grounds and vaults usually look their best at that time.

If you decide to visit one of the local cemeteries, please be respectful and remember that this is the final resting place for someone's loved one.


For information about living on the West Bank of New Orleans, feel free to contact the West Bank Living Team. We live, work and play here and would love to welcome you to our community.

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Tim Lorenz
TIM LORENZ - Elite Home Sales Team - Mission Viejo, CA
949 874-2247

Very well done photo.  The picture is framed very well.

Jan 06, 2010 12:37 AM
Frank Rubi
Frank Rubi Real Estate, LLC - Metairie, LA
FrankRubiRealEstate.com

Lisa, it is amazing how different we do things here in New Orleans.

Jan 06, 2010 01:26 AM
Melody Botting
Broker Associate PenFed Realty - San Antonio, TX
You Deserve The Best

I agree with Tim, this is an impressive photo.  You have skills!  I didn't know you buried above ground but it makes sense.  Natives of your state are very unique in thinking and creative.  I will have to check it out on my next trip.

Jan 06, 2010 01:27 AM
Miriam Bernstei
Rochester, NY

This is so interesting and so different than the custom here in New York.  Nice picture.

Jan 06, 2010 01:28 AM
Lisa Heindel
Crescent City Living LLC - New Orleans, LA
New Orleans Real Estate Broker

Tim, thank you!

Frank, I know...and I like it :)

Melody, there are companies that offer tours of the historic cemeteries in the city.  This is just a small, neighborhood site, which I like because it seems more personal.

Miriam, it all started because of the water tables and the fact that most of our area is below sea level.  Also, it was the custom in some areas of France and Spain and was carried over by some of the original settlers in the area.

Jan 06, 2010 03:08 AM
Susan Brown
Keller Williams NE, Kingwood Texas (Humble & Atascocita too) - Kingwood, TX

Lisa - I think the cemeteries in and around New Orleans are beautiful.  It seems very respectful too.  Great photo.

Jan 06, 2010 03:43 AM
John Walters
Frank Rubi Real Estate - Slidell, LA
Licensed in Louisiana

Lisa do you remember the public service bus that had on it's destination cemetery?  Can you imagine people waiting in line to get on the bus.

Jan 06, 2010 05:35 AM
Lisa Heindel
Crescent City Living LLC - New Orleans, LA
New Orleans Real Estate Broker

Thanks, Susan.

John, I forgot about that?  Yep...can you just see the looks on visitors faces?  That's priceless!!

Jan 06, 2010 08:49 AM
Jane Cross
Homes By Cross serving Charlotte NC Real Estate Needs - Charlotte, NC

Lisa, That's a gorgeous photo...I always thought that was a fun little fact about New Orleans...don't they put a little hole in them to keep them aired out or something? And how did they all do during Katrina???

Jan 06, 2010 09:27 AM
Susan Mangigian
RE/MAX Preferred - West Chester, PA
Chester & Delaware County Homes, Delaware and Ches

Do you know where they got the name for the cemetary.  I immediately thought of a fire department.  Great photo and background.

Jan 06, 2010 10:16 AM
Lane Bailey
Century 21 Results Realty - Suwanee, GA
Realtor & Car Guy

Cemetaries can be amazing places to study history... 

Jan 06, 2010 02:14 PM
Lisa Heindel
Crescent City Living LLC - New Orleans, LA
New Orleans Real Estate Broker

Jane, that's what they used to do to the ones buried underground - they also would add stones and sand to the caskets to weight them down.

Susan, it's right around the corner from the fire station, and if I remember correctly, initially it was only for firemen....but I could be wrong about that detail.

Jan 06, 2010 02:16 PM
Lisa Heindel
Crescent City Living LLC - New Orleans, LA
New Orleans Real Estate Broker

Lane, unfortunately the city doesn't have much written history on this particular cemetery.  Some of the more famous ones in New Orleans have a ton of written records.

Jan 06, 2010 02:21 PM
Marchel Peterson
Results Realty - Spring, TX
Spring TX Real Estate E-Pro

Our daughter loves to take pictures of cemeteries.  She would have a great time taking pictures here.  We are low here but I don't know of any cemeteries where the dead are buried above ground.

Jan 06, 2010 02:32 PM
Lane Bailey
Century 21 Results Realty - Suwanee, GA
Realtor & Car Guy

Lisa - My dad was doing a little genealogical work and went to a cemetary in MS.  He knew a lot about who was married to whom and even some of who begat whom... 

Jan 07, 2010 02:03 PM
Gayle Rich-Boxman Fishhawk Lake Real Estate
John L Scott Market Center - Birkenfeld, OR
"Your Local Expert!" 503-739-3843

Lisa, you are *FEATURED* in today's Tuesday Travelogue!

                                               Travellers in the Rain

                                

Oct 04, 2016 01:39 AM
Lisa Heindel
Crescent City Living LLC - New Orleans, LA
New Orleans Real Estate Broker

Well, thank you so much :) 

Oct 04, 2016 01:42 AM