Special Event

Event

French Quarter Talk - Drummer Boy of New Orleans: Jordan Bankston Noble (1800-1890) by Gene A. Smith

Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve

Fee:

Free. Free and open to the public

Location: LAT/LONG: 29.954800, -90.064754


National Park Service French Quarter visitor center - 419 Decatur St, New Orleans, LA 70130. (Near the statue of Bienville.)

Dates & Times

Date:

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Time:

12:00 PM

Duration:

1 hour

Type of Event

Talk

12:00 noon to 1:00 pm Central Time


Description

 "Drummer Boy of New Orleans: Jordan Bankston Noble" 

Saturday at 12:00 noon 

At the National Park Service French Quarter Visitor Center 

419 Decatur St, New Orleans 

This program is free and open to the public.

Join us for this special history presentation as part of the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park & Preserve’s commemoration of the Battle of New Orleans.

Gene A. Smith, Professor, Department of History, Texas Christian University, discusses the Drummer Boy of New Orleans: Jordan Bankston Noble (1800-1890).

Ninety-year-old Jordan Bankston Noble died quietly at his children’s New Orleans’ home during the early morning hours of Friday, June 20, 1890. The following day, the New Orleans Daily Picayune sadly reported the “death of ‘the Drummer Boy of Chalmette,’” ran a woodcut picture of the “Colored Veteran of Four Wars,” and encouraged family and friends to attend his Saturday-afternoon funeral and to look on the white hair and “familiar face of ‘Old Jordan’” once last time.

The announcement stressed his patriotic service as Noble had fought in four wars—two as a slave (War of 1812 and Seminole War), and two as a free man (Mexican American War and the Civil War). Yet after his fighting days had passed, Noble contributed to the civic life of the New Orleans’ community, winning respect from members of both the black and white communities.

While his playing music provided Noble an entree into respectability and permitted him to hold tightly onto his military legacy as the drummer boy of the Battle of New Orleans, his intense patriotism to Louisiana and his country allowed Noble to navigate the perils associated with pre- and post-Civil War race relations. Ultimately, when discrimination and persecution came his way, Noble simply took out his drum and beat it away.


More information

Reservation or Registration: No

Reservations are NOT required.