Freetown-Port Rico Historic District

The Good Hope Hall


Over the years

The Good Hope Hall was also very much known as a dance venue where popular bands would perform. The argument has been made that benevolent organizations did not merely provide venues for jazz, but were indeed greatly responsible for the growth of this influential African American art.15 Such halls were also typically sites of Civil Rights organizing and activities in Louisiana. 

1912

The 1912 Sanborn map shows this as a two-story establishment offering gambling and a saloon on the first floor with a dance hall on the second floor. By 1921, billiards and pool occupied the first floor with the hall and stage on the second. From 1928 after, it was identified simply as “Lodge Hall (Colored)”. The building may have been replaced between 1940 and 1949. 

Île Copal

Formerly part of the “Île Copal” plantation belonging to Jean Mouton, the subdivision registered as the Mouton Addition became known as Freetown, and had a heterogeneous mixture of lower- and middle-class Free Men of Color and Caucasians before the Civil War and the 1860’s.

This building housed the True Friends Society which was formed after the Civil War to band against the terror of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the Riders of the White Camellia. Later the Society was no longer needed for safety of the local population and the group shifted from a goal of mutual defense to one of public welfare, attending to the sick, planning celebrations and tending to the social agendas of the African-American community. The True Friends Society built the Good Hope Hall as a Community center for their neighborhood.

1920s

In the 1920s and during the Great Depression of the 30s, the Good Hope Hall became one of the great jazz halls of America where outstanding but mostly unknown traveling musicians of the time would play: Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Ethel Waters, and many others.  Week after week, they graced the stage of the hall week after week to entertain the thriving community.

1950s

After World War II, the building sat dormant for a time before being used as a Catholic Church in the 50’s, a barber shop  and it became a wedding hall then was purchased and resold many times to area businessmen before becoming the law office of Glenn Armentor in 1981.


Maison Creole de Freetown African American history museum

https://maisonfreetown.org/

Mission: To document and preserve the history of Freetown and to educate others on the historical, cultural and linguistic contributions of African Americans and people of color in this neighborhood and beyond. To continue to provide opportunities for community engagement that support future neighborhood growth and to unite others through cultural education. We work tirelessly to preserve our past in order to cultivate  a better tomorrow.

Our Goal: OUR GOAL...TO BE TRUE FRIENDS!

True Friends Society of Lafayette was established on the foundation of the historical organization, True Friends Society circa 1880 in Freetown Lafayette.  This neighborhood group protected citizens from vigilante groups, thwarted violent attacks against Black residents, provided civic support and acted as a pillar of hope to their neighbors. With the reinstatement of this association, True Friends of Lafayette, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, aims to once again support the community and  be of service to one another. 

We promote Black history education. We also encourage creative endeavors in our handmade maker gift shop, art gallery, and exhibition spaces. 


An important nexus for the African American Community

The intersection of Stewart and Gordon Streets where Good Hope Hall is located served as an important nexus for the African American Community of the Freetown-Port Rico Historic District. It was surrounded by African American businesses and the homes of prominent African American residents and was a public venue for gathering.


Jefferson Street (Oak Street) 1900

Jefferson Street in 1900's - la rue Jefferson vers 1900 (Courtoisie de Lafayette Clerk of Court).


OAKS OF ILE COPAL PLANTATION - MARKER

The Historic Marker of Ile Copal Oaks on former Plantation


Good Hope Chapel


Acadian Superette

Acadian Superette 

Mid-Century Modern Circa 1950

Freetown Port-Rico Historic Districthttps://acadiansuperette.com/


Borden's Ice Cream Parlor


Keller's Bakery Downtown

St. Patrick's Catholic Church

Extract of
Lafayette History Tour

Lafayette History Tour image circuit

Presented by : Preservation Alliance of Lafayette

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