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The Cottage on Tchoupitoulas is written by Richard Campanella and published by . It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 097731653X (ISBN 10) and 9780977316533 (ISBN 13).
The story of the Cottage on Tchoupitoulas is a microcosm of the human experience in New Orleans - in all its manifestations, triumphant and tragic, good and bad, exceptional and quotidian - and its relationship to this subtropical deltaic environment. This book tells the history of the site and environs of this historical house - that is, the historical geography of how this space and this structure came into its current form. Placing the story of this building within the history of New Orleans entails some nuance, because the structure does not have one clear, documented construction date. It was built in at least three increments and moved at least three times. The exterior wings, galleries and ornamental façade date to the 1850s; the structural core, floor, roof, and chimneys date mostly to the early 1830s; and parts of the timber wall frames and other "bones" of the building date to the late 1700s, hewn from cypress trees probably already growing when Pierre Le Moyne, sieur d'Iberville, who was responsible for establishing a French colony in Louisiana, sailed by. To visit the Cottage on Tchoupitoulas is to connect materially with a silent witness of centuries of history in what is now Uptown New Orleans, where it stands as the sole remaining structural landmark of the area's plantation era, and the oldest building in the vicinity.