In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, many of New Orleans’ jazz musicians left the city to seek safety.
With their exodus came a fear that the city’s musical culture and traditions could be lost. But a group of prominent musicians and producers got together to ensure that they could come home.
Out of the destruction of the storm, the Musicians’ Village was born.
Branford Marsalis of New Orleans’ famed Marsalis family, Harry Connick Jr. and Ann Marie Wilkins, who manages both musicians, partnered with Habitat for Humanity to build a neighborhood of affordable housing — totaling 72 single-family homes and 10 duplex units — in New Orleans' 9th Ward for musicians and culture bearers.
The 9th Ward, which was heavily affected by flooding and storm damage, consisted mostly of low-income, Black households — an important factor for Musicians’ Village’s founder on where to build. Construction in the neighborhood began soon after Katrina in 2005, with the first houses ready for move-in a few years later.
Ellen Smith, one of those musicians, lost her home during Katrina and had to move temporarily out of the city. She sang alongside the late Bob French, a New Orleans drummer, and his band, ‘The Original Tuxedo Jazz Band’.
After couch surfing for a year, she was one of the first to move into the village in 2007, moving in on Mardi Gras Day.