Back to High Society Rag: the First Venues for Jazz Tour

Elks Lodge No. 30

127 Elk Place
New Orleans LA 70112
Location Status: Same structure, different use
Curated by
e/Prime Media & Randy Fertel

Opening in 1917, this four-story Beaux-Arts building was once Lodge No. 30 for the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. It hosted many musical events including an Armistice Celebration Dance in 1920 featuring a large Mexican band that included musicians who had played in New Orleans for the 1884 Worlds Cotton Exposition. The building featured a large ballroom on the third and fourth floors. The Lodge had its own marching band, and often held dances and parades.

Lodge members were generally successful white New Orleanians, including music publishers Philip Werlein and William Grunewald, former mayor John Fitzpatrick, educator Isidore Newman, the saloon owner and “Mayor of Storyville” Thomas Anderson, and H.C. Ramos, the owner of the Stag Café on Gravier Street and the inventor of the Ramos Gin Fizz.

The building went on to serve as the headquarters for Gulf Oil, and, after a renovation in 2014, it now houses Tulane University’s School of Social Work.

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