A treasure trove for researchers.

Natalie Vivian Scott

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This drawing by William Spratling shows the French Quarter at the time of the French Quarter Renaissance.

Perhaps alone, Natalie Scott proved instrumental in each of the key forces that revived and shaped the French Quarter Renaissance. With uncanny regularity, Natalie was the first to meet, greet and influence new arrivals, many gaining substantial significance:

  • She was there that first day when Sherwood Anderson came to the Double Dealer office

  • She was the first person Bill Spratling remembered meeting in the French Quarter, Natalie then integrating him into the Quarter’s social life

  • She immediately met Tulane anthropologist-Mayan explorer Frans Blom upon his arrival in New Orleans

  • She also met Oliver LaFarge when he came to the city in March, 1925, Natalie putting him on a Mardi Gras float, introducing him through the city.

  • She also introduced Elizabeth Anderson (Sherwood’s new wife) to New Orleans society.

Natalie promoted in her column the works of these individuals, the artists and authors laboring in the Quarter, preserving the humor of their parties, the plays, exhibits, the social life in the Vieux Carré. She became the landlady and companion of Faulkner, Spratling, Oliver LaFarge, among many others. She and Spratling wrote their book on Louisiana plantations, the first in its field; she wrote award winning plays and performed often on stage, published magazine articles and popular cookbooks on New Orleans cuisine. As she traveled across the world, her newspaper column kept her readers entertained, her activities abroad frequently the subject of front page newspaper stories. 

Her New Orleans States columns have become a treasure trove for researchers on Faulkner, Anderson, the Double Dealer, and the evolving development of the French Quarter Renaissance.

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updatedSunday, August 07, 2005
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