Take a walk with me down Toulouse Street in the 1860s and 1870s. We will start at the corner of Bourbon and Toulouse, the site of the Old French Opera House, and make our way down to Dauphine. The street reflected the diversity inherent in an older section of an urban port city. Within a one block radius, one could find a mansion, private residences, rental apartments, store fronts, the performers’ entrance to the French Opera House, a pawnbroker and loan office, a saloon, a coffeehouse, a leather and shoe shop, the Orleans Institute, a respectable girls’ school, a junk shop and second hand store, and a brothel. Crime was always present, and shady characters frequented the street. Even at such an important and heavily trafficked intersection as that of Bourbon and Toulouse in front of the French Opera House, the street was often rutted, full of mud, and in disrepair. Pickpockets and thieves took advantage of the crowds departing the Opera House in the evenings. Arson, intoxication, robbery, stabbings, shootings, assault, larceny, and disturbing the peace all took place only steps away from elegant mansions.