Madame Marie Delphine Macarty Lopez y Angulo Blanque LaLaurie
Madame Marie Delphine de Lopez y Angulo Blanque LaLaurie is one of the most rumoured about women in American history, and yet, what do we really know about the beautiful Creole Socialite?
Born into wealth and privilege in New Orleans society in the1800, there are still rampant rumors 200 years later that claim she was everything from a slaver owner to serial killer, but what is the truth? Is there enough historical documentation to prove or disprove the crimes supposedly committed?
The following is a compiled timeline, associated records, and historical proof about Madame LaLaurie. As always, we encourage the research of historical fact before we all pick up our pitchforks and torches…
We want to remind everyone that what is considered socially acceptable now has little to do with the historical past, and what we find morally offensive today would be a drop in the bucket to most past civilizations. The reason we do not let history slip through the sands of time is so that we can remember the past and make sure mistakes made are never repeated.
Historical Timeline
1732 Barthelemy Daniel de Macarty arrived in New Orleans with his elder brother Jean Jacques. He married Francois Helene Pellerin.
1768 Ramon de Lopez y Angulo is born.
1775 Marie Delphine Macarty, a noted beauty of the times, is born to prominent socialite parents Louis Barthelemy Chevalier de Macarty and Marie Jeanne Lovable or Vevue Lecomte (The Widow Lecomte) there is confusion as to if they are one in the same. She was one of 5 children.
1794 Francois Helene Pellerin and Louis Barthelemy Chevalier de Macarty acquire Macarty Plantation, with records supporting their ownership of hundreds of slaves, the majority of whom work the Sugar Plantation.
11 Jun 1800 Marie Delphine Macarty marries Ramon de Lopez y Angulo, high ranking officer of the Spanish army. She is his second wife, and they married without the consent of the King of Spain which disrupted his military and social placement in Louisiana and made it necessary for him to return to Spanish court. He was exiled to San Sebastian.
26 Mar 1804 Ramon de Lopez y Angulo is pardoned once Spain gives Louisiana to the United States of America and he is granted a position in New Orleans. On route via the American ship Ulysses, the ship runs aground and Ramon dies of heart failure before ever reaching his destination.
1804 Marie Delphine Borja Lopez y Angulo de Candelaria, also known as Borquita named after her paternal Grandmother, is born in Havana, Cuba to Marie Delphine Macarty and Ramon Lopez y Angulo.
1808 Marie Delphine Macarty de Lopez y Angulo marries her second husband, slave trader Jean Pierre Paulin Blanque. Jean Blanque has more than 350 records (That we have found) with his name on them as proof of his occupation in the Louisiana Slave Trading Records. As well, files were found in the same index of slaves being sold by the Creditors of Jean Blanque, assumed to be selling off his business assets after his death. These records had dates of May 1816, so it is suggested that Jean Blanque died before May of 1816, subsequently we have not found records for him dating 1817, and this supports our theory.
1815 Birth of daughter Marie Jeanne Blanque to Marie Delphine and Jean Blanque.
1816 The death of Jean Blanque, slave trader and husband of Marie Delphine Macarty de Lopez y Angulo.
12 Jan 1828 Marie Delphine Macarty (Widow de Lopez y Angulo, Blanque) and physician Dr. Leonard Louis Nicolas LaLaurie marry. They had one child, Jean Louis LaLaurie.
26 Jan 1828 Marie Delphine Macarty sells land to Martin Duralde.
1832 The LaLaurie family moves into 1140 Royal Street. They live comfortably with opulent decoration, wealth and prominence in the community, and influence among the French Creole. Rumours that the couple (Macarty and LaLaurie) were not getting along were popular topics of conversation among their neighbours.
10 April 1834 After a fire in the kitchen of the LaLaurie house, accusations of abuse against the family slaves are published in two newspapers of the time. [The New Orleans Bee: http://nobee.jefferson.lib.la.us/Vol-009/04_1834/1834_04_0034.pdf] This incites a riot and looting of their family residence at 1140 Royal Street. In the end only two walls of the building were said to be left standing, and over $40,000 dollars worth of damage done.
2007 ‘LaLaurie House’ as it has come to be known as is purchased by actor Nicholas Cage. It is reportedly on the market again for those interested in purchasing it.
The only found text documents recording Marie Delphine’s name in any variation at this point are written out below. Compiled from Ancestry.com, and the City Archives, New Orleans Public Library, Louisiana. Parish Court (Orleans Parish) – no original documents are available to us at this time, please use reference numbers if looking up the documents personally.
Afro-Louisiana History and Genealogy, 1719-1820 from Ancestry.com
(Assumed to coordinate and verify below listed record from New Orleans’ Public Library)
Document Date: 9/24/1819
Notary: M. de Armas
Document Number: 44
Location: Orleans (including Chapitoulas).
Master: Mrs. Delphine Macarty Ve. Blanque
Master’s Gender: 1
Name: Jean Louis
Gender: male
Race: black
Age: 50
Freed: by living mistress
The manumission did not involve cash payment.
Slave was freed.
no prices at all
Index to Slave Emancipation Petitions, 1814-1843
Owner | Slave | Year | Item |
Macarty, Delphine, wife of Louis Lalaurie | Devince | 1834 | 177E |
McCarty, Marie Delphine, Widow John Blanque | Jean Louis |
1819 |
89E |
Possible document matches for Dr. Louis LaLaurie.
Afro-Louisiana History and Genealogy, 1719-1820
Document Date: 5/5/1784
Notary: Rodriguez
Document Number: 343
Location: Orleans (including Chapitoulas).
Master: Luis Laloir
Master’s Gender: 2
Name: Juana
Gender: female
Race: black
Age: 58
Freed: under will
The manumission did not involve cash payment.
Slave was freed.
Name Type of Freer: Delery
Freer: Francisco
Freer Gender: male
Reasons: good services
no prices at all
Comments: Document also at LHC, dated 1782/03/27. Juana was freed with another Black female slave named Margarita, also in the same will found at LHC. Laloire will also at Orleans Notarial, Mazange 1782/03/21, so there were actually 3 emancipation records for this slave.
Louisiana. Parish Court (Orleans Parish)
Index to the Suit Records, 1813-1835
New Orleans Public Library Index matches for Marie Delphine Macarty
Plaintiff | Defendant | Number |
Blanque, John, syndics of the creditors of | Macarty, Delphine, widow Blanque, tutrix of her children | 990 |
Blanque, J. | Macarty, D. and widow Blanque | 1936 |
Macarty, Delphine [wife of L. Lalaurie] | Cahallin, Thomas | 5809 |
Macarty, Delphine [wife of Louis Lalaurie] | Grymes, John R. | 5673 |
Macarty, Delphine, wife of Ls. Lalaurie | Fisher, William | 6255 |
Possible other matches:
Blancque, John (widow and syndics & creditors of his estate) | Piernas, A. Lecomte | 1033 |
Blancque, John (widow and syndics & creditors of his estate) | Leclerc, Jean | 1031 |
Blancque, John (widow and syndics & creditors of his estate) | Blancque, Pierre | 1032 |
Blanque (Widow) | Blanque (her husband), syndic of creditors of | 1079 |
Blanque (Widow) | Blanque (her husband), syndic of creditors of | 1077 |
Blanque, J. | Beale, Ths. | 1934 |
Blanque, J. | Beale, Th./td> | 1935 |
Blanque, John | Fleury, Laurette | 833 |
Blanque, John | Fleury, Florence | 832 |
Blanque, Widow | Blanque (Syndics of) | 1145 |
Louisiana. First Judicial District Court (Orleans Parish).
Suit Records, 1813-1835.
New Orleans Public Library
Macarty, Delphine | LaLaurie, Louis | 10,237 |
Macarty, Delphine | Guillaume, Lucien | 9751 |
Historical Books and Related Articles
Links:
Information about Macarty Plantation, New Orleans circa 1700-1900 | |
New Orleans Public Library http://www.nutrias.org/ |
Akwaaba in the Bayou – Converted Plantation Luxury Rooms http://akwaaba.com/ |
New Orleans Notarial Archives http://www.notarialarchives.org |
Delphine LaLaurie according to Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphine_LaLaurie |
Information on Creol Customs | |
Plaçage http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plaçage |
The Truth Verses Fiction
We know that in her lifetime, Marie Delphine Macarty de Lopez y Angulo Blanque LaLaurie was a woman of exception beauty and was envied by her peers. There is rarely a written word about her that does not comment about her exceptional beauty.
We know that the Macarty family owned a Plantation and relied heavily on slaves to work their Sugar fields. However, we can also see from the records of the time that Delphine did not buy or trade slaves nearly as often as her contemporaries. Although her secon husband Jean Blanque was a slave trader.
We know that during her time in New Orleans, Delphine personally was responsible for freeing three slaves, Jean Louis, Helen, and Devince.
We know that Delphine married three times, and was widowed the first two times, leaving her with small children to provide for. We know she fought for the money owed to her and took several people to court over funds from her second husband’s estate. Socially, Marie Delphine was envied, and in surviving literature from the time there was vast speculation about her personal life.
We know that on April 10, 1834 there was a house fire at 1140 Royal Street, where household slaves were found incarcerated by being chained within their quarters. The slaves were removed from the house and kept in the local jailhouse. None of the slaves died from the fire or from their incarceration, the state of the slaves upon their removal is up for great debate, as even newspapers and reports are contradictory however it is agreed upon that they were mistreated and abused.
After a fire in the kitchen of the LaLaurie house, accusations of abuse against the family slaves were published in two newspapers of the time, one of which was the New Orleans Bee, which has been stated by a variety of scholarly sources as the first primary example of yellow journalism. These articles incited a riot and looting of the family residence at 1140 Royal Street. In the end only two walls of the building were said to be left standing, and over $40,000 dollars worth of damage done.
Delphine and her husband physician Dr. Leonard Louis Nicolas LaLaurie flee New Orleans, later split up according to letters exchanged between Dr. LaLaurie and Charles De Hault De Lassus. Although their relationship was often noted as tumultuous, the loss of their fortune played into their separation.
Family sources claimed Delphine returned to France and lived there with her children, who traveled between France and the US extensively.
In 1924 (Some sources quote a later date of in the 1940s) the sexton of St. Louis Cemetery #1 claimed to have found an old cracked copper memorial plate that read ‘Madame LaLaurie, née Marie Delphine Macarty, décédée à Paris, le 7 Décembre, 1842, à l’âge de 68 ans’. Several people agree this was a hoax, as Marie died in Paris, France on 7 Dec 1849.
Delphine has become somewhat of a New Orleans ghost haunting legend based upon the efforts of story tellers and tourist attractions. These efforts have created a profitable scheme in ghost tours and books, however they are misleading and completely historically inaccurate. Discovering any further truth of this ‘story’ will likely take the better part of our time just to get past the fictional accounts.
There are no images of Delphine except those recently made up by paid artists, and we are rather disappointed in the outrageous lack of historical validity in published works. Fictional accounts of torture chambers, tortured people, scientific and medical experiments, mass murder, and the death of slaves are all a part of marketing schemes and bids for media ratings. In mention a week after the original fire at 1140 Royal Street the New Orleans Bee clearly states that there had been no deaths as a result of the incident.