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History of the Main Line
Researched
by Willie Clark, from 02/2001 to present
A Main Line is the "main section or the members of the actual
club, that has the permit to parade. The parades consist of a larger element of fans and the curious following
that section of members .
Those fans, admirers and curious are the "second line"
or part two of this planned street parade. These parades have come
to be called and known by this fact.
Normally called, "Second Lines", the
sponsoring element is called the "Main Line" and is usually a
Social (Aide) & Pleasure Club of the neighborhood in which they are
parading. By state and city ordinances and law, very seldom
does these parades take up routes on heavily traffic laden thoroughfares
in the city. Most are held in the back areas, visiting the stops
that help the clubs to continue the tradition.
The
Social Aide & Pleasure Club tradition is a mixture of
African traditions that came together to form one of the most unique
forms of celebration in the united States. The tradition's history,
however, dates back to the tribes in western Africa.
The old saying that, "It takes a village to raise a child",
is rooted in ancient tribal tradition and fact. According to the
records of the some African tribes, the warriors of the
"felt", or prairie lands, sometimes waged war against
their neighbors and took hostages as slaves, spools of the conflict.
Most of these conquered tribes, valued a concept
of tribal society, that a productive member was a
valued part of the tribe. In times of need or death, his family was
taken care of, and if need be, their entire life by the tribe.
Why!!?? Because everything that tribal member did, was for the
care and benefit, not just for his family, but of the entire tribe.
If he killed an antelope, he would divide up the carcass so each
tribal member could share. He shared in the building of huts, or the
digging of shallow rock shelters, rituals, and the defense of the
tribe and more.
While he was healthy, he was socially required to do these tasks,
and if he was sick or injured from battle or accident, he was
assured of care from his family, while the village took care of all
other needs until he was able to resume his role. Pride, assured
that the member got back on his feet A.S.A.P.
When it was time to bury him, the entire tribe took care of the
entire process for the family, with the family in
"mourning", it was the tribe who buried him, with honors
in appreciation of his part in the society.
It is this concept,
that followed the captured slaves, whom were sold to the traders in
the late 1600's and very early 1700's when the slave trade was
booming thanks to mostly the French.
- In 1718, Jean-Baptise Le Moyne', Pierre's brother,
founded the port colony and river fort of Nouvelle Orle'ans,
(New Orleans). Indians slaves captured or traded for were among
the thieves, cut throats, prostitutes, and beggars that were the
first settlers.
- But the Indians were not highly prized as slaves,
because, their love of freedom was so fierce, that they would
run into the bayou and disappear into other camps which the
French and later the Spanish wouldn't dare venture into.
In response to the trouble the Indian slaves were giving the
settlers, a call went out to bring African Slaves to New Orleans. In
1719, a mere year later, the first 2 shiploads of African Slaves arrive at the port
of New Orleans, for sale in New Orleans.
Napoleon also used the port
for a respite for the slaves and crew after the trip from Africa to
give the crew a chance to clean and re-outfit the ships for the trip
to Haiti. Slaves are given their first chance to stretch out on dry
land. Some would be sold here. Most were held in the slave pens on
what is now Camp street.
Throughout the 146 years until the end of the civil war, the
concept of contribution of services to the collective, served to
form tight knit groups on the plantations and in the young city.
Much of African traditions survived the time of bondage in the delta
region of Louisiana, because to the live and let live approach to
slavery that the French took towards the practice.
That approach enabled enterprising slaves to come up with
ways to earn money and consequently earn enough to buy their
freedom. For the Africans that accomplished this, they struggled
to learned trades and elevated the trades into finely homed art.
Some were considered the finest skilled tradesman in their fields in
the entire south. In some cases, as a testament to how well they had
taken their craft, even their former masters and foremen (overseers)
came to call upon them, for their considerable skills.
In 1783,
the Treaty of Paris is signed by the victorious United States and
the defeated Great Britain, and it is the very skilled tradesmen who were
now former
slaves, in the colonies, that took the lead to train and integrate many into the
new emerging society they still had to serve. The concept which had guided the Africans
since birth was allowed
to once again come to
the surface and guide these men and women into service for their people.
In
March of that year, The Perseverance
Benevolent & Mutual Aid Association is formed as the
first of hundreds of such organizations. The Association became the
cornerstone of most of the African American Social clubs, Ball Only
clubs and Carnival Organizations. It is
based on the principles taught in Africa of coming together,
especially in times of need, for the collective good.
Several other smaller Mutual Aid
Associations were unofficially recorded, but were nothing near the
size of the original. The one
thing the P.B.M.A.A. could not do, was to bury as many as they
wished.
It was not until just after
the Civil War on April 9 1865 that the final aspect truthfully came into existence,
in any real sense. In the late
19th century the African American community was set free as a whole,
in New Orleans, by the emancipation proclamation. The U.S.
government ordered all those slaves to be integrated into society, and "educated".
The "southerners", fought this tooth and nail, fearing an,
"educated black population", would learn to plot and subrogate
them. The south was so slow that action was taken to remedy the
problem in black hands!
The
New Orleans Freedmen’s Aid Association, was founded 7
months after the Civil
War, in November 1865.
This organization’s goal was to provide loans,
assistance and legal
counsel, and a means of "education", to the newly freed
slaves. Reading, writing, and learning a trade were their chief
concerns.
Always, where there is life, eventually, there is death. This organization was also the first form of
"insurance", to ever exist in any African American
communities, and quite possibly, the first in America. They paid funeral costs, when possible, and arranged
for Jazz funerals. You could build up a good equity up in the club, and
if times got hard, you could even borrow against the value of the
policy. This function is where the clubs and groups that followed
derive their core name, "social aid".
After the Civil War, it was much easier to get musical instruments, so
newly freed African Americans, began to form marching bands that
consisted of only brass instruments with the lone exception of a
bass and tom tom drums. In the late 1890's and the early 1900's
these "Brass bands" began to be asked to perform at
Jazz funerals. Jazz funerals were at the heart of an early African
slave religious practice, of celebrating of the life of a deceased
person.
When the church's funeral
service was over, and the procession began the movement from the church to
the cemetery,
the band would play slow, sad, funeral hymns, known as a "dirge".
Led by a "Grand Marshal", the band and mourners would move
to the burial site, with the band playing a dirge to signal the
struggles, the hardships, the ups and downs of life.
On the way back, the music
became more joyful. The band played high-spirited tunes such as
"Didn't He
Ramble," and "Lil Liza Jane", amongst other tunes.
This was to signal the dismissal, and interment of the physical
body, and the joyous event of the release, of the soul, to heaven. Relatives,
friends, and acquaintances would become the second line and dance with wild abandon. The
second line, usually sporting umbrellas and handkerchiefs, became
traditional at these jazz funerals.
After the Association’s untimely demise,
more benevolent
organizations arose within neighborhoods to function as mutual aid
societies. These Social Aid Clubs of the early 20th Century provided
and (some still do,) aid to fellow African Americans and insure
that club members get a proper burial.
As stated before, the Clubs, and organizations, operated like a
loose social safety net.
A member paid dues to the club, and into his policy, each month,
with some collecting as much as $2 every week. With the weekly or bi
monthly policies, you built equity quickly.
Remember, back in those days a funeral costs were around
$200-300 dollars. 52 weeks at rates of $.50 cents to $2, netted you
a max of around $104 a yr. Once you reached your burial expense, the
equity started to build.
After enough time had elapsed you could build quite a nest
egg if you were frugal, and could even
borrow against it, with some clubs. If times were hard, they were
your social safety net. But unlike today’s welfare, that net had a
very real limit. It was important to get on your feet again as
quickly as possible.
The dues structure also enabled the "societies", to
purchase tombs and vaults for their members. Some of the older
Clubs, such as the Y.M.O., and the Zulu's, still hold sets of
vaults, located in only 2 cemeteries, namely Lafayette, and City
II.
Once the member’s burial expenses itself are paid, the balance
of the money is used to finance the funeral of the member in style,
sometimes, if desired, with a traditional New Orleans jazz funeral.
Usually, the club would host a jazz funeral, complete with a
brass band and horse drawn carriage bearing
the casket. Some of the clubs, even had their own Tombs, with one
designed to hold up to 25 bodies at a time. It no longer exist. It
was severely damaged when the I-10 high rise was put through
downtown New Orleans. Only seven such tombs are still in use, today
Since more enrolled members meant the organization would
continue to be solvent, these societies had to advertise, in a very
unique way, their style. Throughout the city of New Orleans, there were fraternal
organizations, groups and
burial societies, who often competed with each other to see which
group could send off a member in the greatest style.
Members would dress in matching suits, and outfits, with handmade decorative
chest banners, called "sashes" and they carried elaborately
decorated fans, umbrellas, and handkerchiefs. All embroidered,
engraved or imprinted with the organization's name. One member would
carry the club’s official banner. This gave the prospective
members a glance of what their "processional" would look
like.
Several S&P Clubs, that were founded before and shortly after the
turn of the century, are still around today. The Young Men Olympians,
was formed in 1884, the Zulu’s in 1909, and the Prince of Wales in
1928.
Over time, these organizations were phased out of
the "business of helping others", by
the influx, and more heavily advertised companies of the "Insurance Industry" into the metro
area. In 1978, there were only 6 to 10 clubs of this nature on the
books and parading in the neighborhood streets of New Orleans,
Louisiana.
The S&P Clubs are today, a mere shadow of
their former selves, and known not as the fore runners of the
insurance industry in Louisiana, but as the, "Keepers of the
Second Line Tradition." Grand Marshal's are now the
exception and no longer the rule. There are female and male only
clubs, as well as mixed organizations that even include white members, as
well.
Their role now delegated to serve, as "living
pieces of history", that also actively functions as the symbols
of a once proud culture, of self sufficiency, in the city of New
Orleans. Unfortunately as these societies started to disappear, so
did the tombs and vaults that they had routinely purchased. Once
there were hundreds of these vaults about the cemetaries that held
the remains of the members, some still do of "kings and
Queens" and these are protected as long as the organizations
last.
The noun second line (n), is also the name of a
"unique dance", performed to the beat
of New Orleans’ traditional jazz. The dance is an evolved version
of an old African dance known as the, "Bambula".
Each year, club members will choose a color scheme, then
set about to assemble or make
new suits and host their annual second
line parade. With names like the "Jolly Bunch",
"Money Wasters," "Lady Buck Jumpers", and the
"Golden Trumpets," the S&P Clubs played a vital role
in the community during the legalized segregation that created an
entertaining counterpart to Mardi Gras.
Until
segregation ended, African Americans enjoyed "Carnival
Day" all along the Claiborne Avenue neutral ground, from St.
Bernard Avenue to Orleans Avenue. The Black Indians (now called
Mardi Gras Indians), and brass bands would parade by, sparking
excitement, until the most famous and largest S&P Club arrived—The
Zulu Social Aide & Pleasure Club.
It is for this reason, that even today, the Zulu parade will past
from the main street of Canal, and turn right, down into the back
neighborhoods that saw the beginnings of the society.
From, just before the turn of the century, to the dawn of
the civil rights era in the mid-1950s, African Americans were
prohibited from enjoying the greatest free show on earth–"Mardi
Gras". African Americans, were even prohibited from entering the French
Quarter, congregating, or even parading on the main streets, until
the late 1960's. This is the principle reason that most outsiders,
and some city residents themselves know almost nothing about the
inner most secrets of the second line.
The police, indeed, enforced a prohibition on the presence of
African Americans in the French quarter up into the late 1960’s. So,
the Social Aide and Pleasure Clubs, a.k.a. second line clubs, celebrated
Fat Tuesday in their own unique ways. It was the S&P Clubs,
along with the "Black Indians" and "street
bands", now known as "Brass bands" which provided the Black culture all along Claiborne
with that alternate entertainment. The Zulu Social Aide &
Pleasure Club is the largest of the organizations in New Orleans. It
is also the only club to date, that is both a S.A.P.C. & a Mardi
Gras Krewe. Thus ushering in the clubs mergence into the fabric of
Mardi Gras or Carnival.
During the 1980's, more clubs began to be formed for the sole
purposes of "parading" and not for the "social
aid" aspect. A new wrinkle had been born in the culture. The
club's purpose was not to render aid for burial, but to be the
actual social fabric, the bonding agent as it were, of the members,
to the community.
These clubs of the new era, began to drop the "aide"
from their names and their missions. If you look closely at the
names of the latest clubs you will notice that the word,
"aid", is missing from some names and their missions.
While the mission of the Social Aide & Pleasure clubs put them
in the category of non-profit orgs, the category was still the same
as a Carnival Krewe. The Category is known by it's tax code,
Section 501 subsection C Chapter 3, or 501(C3).
These new clubs were now strictly for the pleasure of the
members, therefore the category that they would operate would also
change. They no longer rendered aid or benefit to themselves or
others. They were now under law, Fraternal Orders, or Brother and
Sisterhoods, that are bound by the rules of a different set of
codes. That Section is still 501, the subsection is still C, but the
chapter is now 7, or 501(C7).
Starting in the late 1990's, another page was turned in, what is
now known as the, "Main
Line culture", when Kings and Queens started to appear, on the parade
routes with the groups. Most of the royalty, are from other clubs or older members
that are honored by the club, but some have taken to honoring the
city's influential, and famous.
Another aspect of change in the modern Main Line, is the arrival of floats,
where a few years ago there were none to be found in the city's parades.
Where in years past, a Main Line processional may have only stretched for a block
or two, now, a Main Line could stretch for several blocks.
These now, mostly African American Clubs, do not, and can
not, by city ordinance, parade or celebrate 2 weeks prior to or on Mardi Gras
Day. They also can not parade during the annual Jazz Festival that
comes to the city each season. Most clubs will not heavily advertise before hand, that they will be marching.
They will spread the word in their respective neighborhood and
disseminate, route sheets. Some may even sport custom handkerchiefs
while others opt for just plain white ones. It is up to each club as
to how elaborate they want to be.
Each club has it's membership stop at set bars along the "parade route". This is not to drink alcohol, but rather to rest,
drink some water and take a restroom break, if needed. Also it more
importantly brings patrons into the bars to allow the owner to take
advantage of the opportunity to make a little profit from the Line.
It is a hold over from the days long ago when the bars actually
would sponsor each and every float in the Zulu
parade. Dixieland Jazz or brass bands frequently join in the roving
celebrations.
We'll be adding to this history as more detailed info becomes
available.
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