Side-by-side image showing a black-and-white portrait of author Melissa Daggett smiling with her arms crossed, next to the illustrated book cover for Eugène and Eulalie: A Family Saga of Love, Race, and Property in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans by Melissa Daggett, featuring a 19th-century New Orleans street scene with a horse-drawn carriage.

Second Thursday Lecture Series
Eugène and Eulalie: A Family Saga of Love, Race, and Poverty in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans with Melissa Daggett

Thu, Apr 09, 2026
6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Central
Virtual Events

Join us for a virtual evening with Melissa Daggett as she discusses her new book Eugène and Eulalie: A Family Saga of Love, Race, and Poverty in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans (LSU Press, April 2026). This program is sponsored by the Friends of the Cabildo as part of the Second Thursday Lecture Series. It is free and open to the public, but registration is required. The program will take place on Zoom. Please register here and a link will be emailed to you on the day of the lecture.

About the Book
Melissa Daggett’s Eugène and Eulalie is an epic story of love, race, prosperity, and legal maneuvering. It chronicles for the first time in a comprehensive way the largely forgotten lives of Eulalie Mandeville, a free woman of color, and her white partner, Eugène Macarty. Mandeville and Macarty, both descendants of elite colonial families, began an interracial relationship in the 1790s that endured for more than half a century and produced five children. It also led to Mandeville’s phenomenal rise to the pinnacle of wealth and success within the unique tripartite racial structure of nineteenth-century New Orleans.

Daggett uses the voluminous Nicolas Théodore Macarty et al. vs. Eulalie Mandeville f.w.c. (1848) court case to examine how an interracial relationship continued for more than fifty years despite onerous laws during the Spanish regime and the antebellum era that complicated such partnerships. She examines the origins of the Macarty and Mandeville families, revealing how they paralleled each other in Louisiana history and often intersected on social, military, economic, and political levels. Daggett also analyzes the struggles of the free people of color in both colonial Louisiana and early America and explores the ways slavery, manumission, and inheritance laws connected the two families. Above all, her work recovers the unique story of Eugène Macarty and Eulalie Mandeville, which has languished in the shadows of historical obscurity for generations.

About the Author
Melissa Daggett is a former professor of history at San Jacinto College and the author of Spiritualism in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans: The Life and Times of Henry Louis Rey.

 

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