Henry Louis Rey, Spiritualism, and Creoles of Color in Nineteenth-Century New OrleansPosted in Biography, Dissertations, History, Louisiana, Media Archive, United States on 2012-09-03 23:10Z by Steven |
Henry Louis Rey, Spiritualism, and Creoles of Color in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans
University of New Orleans
2009-12-20
72 pages
Melissa Daggett
A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of New Orleans in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History
This thesis is a biography of Henry Louis Rey (1831-1894), a member of one of New Orleans’ most prominent Creole of Color families. During the Civil War, Rey was a captain in both the Confederate and Union Native Guards. In postbellum years, he served as a member of the Louisiana House of Representative and in appointed city offices. Rey became heavily involved with spiritualism in the 1850s and established séance circles in New Orleans during the early 1870s. The voluminous transcripts of these séance circles have survived into the twenty-first century; however, scholarly use of these sources has been limited because most of the transcripts and all marginal annotations later written by René Grandjean are in French. The author’s translations of the spirit communications through their entire run reveal insight into the spiritual and material realms negotiated by New Orleans Black Creoles as they weathered declining political and economic fortunes.
Read the entire thesis here.