Touring New Orleans Cemeteries
The Fabacher family tomb in a shady section of Metairie Cemetery
A Word on Safety
Our cemeteries are literally small stone cities. These little
cities make great places for thieves and robbers to hide. Additionally,
the neighborhoods in which some cemeteries are located have deteriorated
to a point that they make travel to and from a cemetery quite
unsafe. Unfortunately, we have had visitors to the city become
crime statistics because they ventured into the wrong place at
the wrong time. Some tips to make your visit to our cemeteries
safer:
Travel with
a tour group.
There's more to the saying "safety in numbers" than
just words. Not only will your journey through our cemeteries
be safe, it will be informative as well. Several tour companies
offer both bus and walking tours of our cemeteries.
Take a driving
tour.
This is the safest thing you can do short of joining a tour group.
With the exception of the oldest cemeteries, most are easily accessible
by car. You can drive through, get an understanding for what the
whole New Orleans cemetery thing is about, and get out again without
putting yourself into a threatening situation.
Visit cemeteries
during the middle of the day.
Sunset, twilight, and full moons may be the best time for magickal
workings and voudoun rites, but they're potentially dangerous
times for entering a cemetery that is located next to a housing
project or other high-risk area. As it is, several New Orleans
cemeteries are in neighborhoods so bad that they're not safe during
the day. Most tour groups hit the cemeteries between the hours
of 11:00am and 1:00pm. Even if you would prefer visiting a cemetery
on your own, go when the tours are wandering around. It goes without
saying that your chances of becoming a victim of street crime
are greater at night than during the day.
Stick to the
foot of Canal Street
Unless you have specific reasons for going to other cemeteries,
the ones in and around the foot of Canal Street will give you
what you're looking for. The neighborhood is a lot better than
the cemeteries on the fringe of the Quarter, for example. This
doesn't mean you should forget all of the other safety tips, but
it's definitely a better neighborhood overall. Not to mention
the fact that there are tons of interesting and historical things
in these cemeteries as well.
Ask locals
and others for advice on where to go.
Don't just wander off into any old part of town. You wouldn't
do that at home, would you? Check with people you know who live
here or have visited here in the past. Check with folks here on
the 'net. Ask your hotel doorman or concierge about areas to avoid.
Knowledge is power; use it and you help stay safe.
Use Common
Sense!
Just because you're a tourist doesn't mean you should let down
your guard and lose your "street sense." Anyone who
lives in a large urban area has developed a sense of where it
is and is not safe to walk, drive, visit, etc. You know the sections
of your town you should avoid if you don't want to be a target
of street crime. Exercise that same common sense and avoid bad
parts of New Orleans. You don't know where to avoid? Ask!
New Orleans Cemetery History
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