Richard Campanella has written a unique and insightful geographic history New Orleans. Perhaps the defining characteristic of the city’s social, political, economic, racial, and geographic organization has been determined by one overriding dilemma: managing the water. Is there anywhere else in the world where runoff must be pumped up into drainage canals – that are higher in elevation than the surrounding neighborhoods – to be ejected into lakes and rivers that are also higher in elevation than the surrounding city? It’s almost madness to consider, yet this is how the people of New Orleans shaped (and were shaped by) their geography for 300+ years.
How did we possibly get here?
Campanella takes us on that journey through the history of the city as various “drainage kings” attempted to wrestle with the natural landscape – often working against it more than with it, leading to the infamous subsidence that defines the city to this day – in order to settle marshland that, quite frankly, should never have been settled. I learned surprising facts about the city and its landscape in every chapter. I even gained a more nuanced perspective on the oft-maligned NOLA Sewerage & Water Board. By the time I reached the section on Katrina, I had a greater understanding of events on a sweeping historical level and how certain fateful decisions in the 1890s, 1910s, and 1950s would directly impact my life in 2005.
Being a ninth-generation native of the New Orleans area (Poydras, to be exact), I can attest to the struggle of “keeping out the water,” as my great-grandparents (and grandfather, aged 5) lost their house when the levee was dynamited at Caernarvon in 1927; my grandfather (again), mother, and father (living in Plaquemines) all lost their homes in Hurricane Betsy; my mother (again), father (again), and I lost my childhood home in Katrina due to the flooding from the MR-GO; and my high school was destroyed when the Industrial Canal flooded the Ninth Ward, also during Katrina. Four generations having their homes wiped out in floodwater, in some cases multiple times. (My grandfather passed away two years before Katrina, sparing a third home lost for him.) It’s part of the reason why I no longer live in New Orleans: I don’t believe the city can possibly survive much longer. Nature will one day reclaim it.
Pardon that personal aside, but this is the kind of book that helps one ponder the "hows" and "whys" of geography, history, politics, and fateful decisions converging to shape our lives in very direct ways. Highly recommended for anyone wanting to understand both the history and the geography of New Orleans.