Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, had …

Years: 1720 - 1720

Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, had written to the Directors of the Company of the Indies in 1717 that he had discovered a crescent bend in the Mississippi River which he felt was safe from tidal waves and hurricanes and proposed that the new capitol of the colony be build there.

Permission was granted, and Bienville set off in 1718 to start construction.

A sufficient number of huts and storage houses had been built by 1719 that Bienville began moving supplies and troops from Mobile.

Following disagreements with the chief engineer of the colony, Le Blond de la Tour, Bienville orders an assistant engineer, Adrien de Pauger, to draw up plans for the new city in 1720.

Pauger draws up the eleven-by-seven block rectangle now known as the French Quarter or the Vieux Carre.

After moving into his new home on the site of what is now the Custom House, Bienville names the new city "La Nouvelle-Orléans" in honor of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, the Prince Regent of France.

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