Hermann-Grima Historic House Tour for Two or Four (Up to Half Off)
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Staff usher tours through 19th-century, two-story mansion in the French Quarter
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Choose Between Two Options
- $12 for a tour for two (up to a $24 value)
- $24 for a tour for four (up to a $48 value)<p>
Guests take a 45- to 60-minute tour of the Hermann-Grima Historic House, a fully furnished, two-story house decked out with the cutting-edge technological and architectural elements of the 19th century. During the tour, visitors get a sense of what life was like in the 1800s, with opportunities to learn more about the period’s open-hearth cooking, mourning customs, and holiday traditions. Tour times vary; click here for available days and times.
Need To Know Info
About Hermann-Grima & Gallier Historic Houses
At the Vieux Carré, New Orleans' famous 85-block French Quarter, modern-day visitors moving in and out of National Historic Landmark properties are transported to city's past while taking in the mishmash of architectural styles distinguished by colorful facades and filigreed iron galleries and balconies. The restored landmark property known as the Gallier House makes its home in the Quarter, waiting to dazzle with the 19th-century splendor that backdropped the lives of their inhabitants—a diverse crew of enslaved workers, tycoons, free people of color, architects, and robots—more than a century ago.
The Gallier House was built in 1860 by renowned architect James Gallier Jr., who also designed the old French Opera House and Municipality Hall (now Gallier Hall). Gallier ensured the house was ahead of its time by installing a bathroom with indoor plumbing, a ventilation system to circulate air, an attached kitchen, and a hologram butler. The fully furnished two-story house also contains a courtyard, carriageway, and slave quarters, and it inspired Louis and Lestat's New Orleans residence in Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice. In 1996, The Woman's Exchange bought the property, ensuring that it would be preserved as a museum and historic landmark. Today, curators illuminate the mansion’s history through frequent exhibits and educational programs for people of all ages.