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In The Mid-19th Century, Vicious Animal Combat Drew Thousands To Algiers

'Bull and Bear Fight - New Orleans'
The Historic New Orleans Collection
'Bull and Bear Fight - New Orleans'

In The Mid-19th Century, Vicious Animal Combat Drew Thousands To Algiers

TriPod goes back to the days when Algiers was a stomping ground for bullfights and other forms of animal combat.

It’s a Sunday afternoon. The sun is out, you’ve already gone to church, and you’re not sure what to do next. Then you find out the ferry to cross the river to Algiers is running at half rate, on account of a sporting event. A fight. Between a bull. And a grizzly bear.

“They would go and drink and bet on these sorts of gruesome animal sports,” says JosephMakkos, owner of an impressive personal archive of New Orleans history. “It’s dark... it’s dark, in a certain way.”

Makkos is going through old newspaper ads from themid-19thcentury that plug all different kinds of fights between all different kinds of animals.

Things like dogfights and cockfights are illegal in all 50 states today, but still happen underground. So imaginepre-PETA, 150 years ago… things were way worse. An ad from the Daily Picayune, dated April26, 1840 reads:

 “Great Fight between Some French Dogs, a Bear, an Ass, and a Bull. Admittance, $1, Children, half-price.”

So these were family affairs. That’s the kind of detailMakkosnoticed when he saw these fights recurring as a theme in this era. Here’s a mention from a police blotter, shortly after that event:

We learned that a fellow went to witness the grand animal combat on Sunday last, when from his stupid appearance the dogs of the arena set upon him.”

“Sounds terrible doesn’t it?”Makkosremarks. “That some guy was just walking through the arena and the dogs attack him.”

An ad from the Daily Picayune for a fight between animals.
Credit Joseph Makkos
An ad from the Daily Picayune for a fight between animals.

This is just one of hundreds of detailsMakkoscan cite from his collection, meticulously organized in his letterpress studio on St. Claude Avenue. The space is packed with printing materials, machinery, drawing desks, files on files on files, and the smallest of supplies — from thumb tacks to salvaged letterpress type organized by font in countless compartments.

From his archives, Makkos pulls out an old card he found from a1950sbubble gum box. This is what turned him on to bullfighting in New Orleans.

The front of Makkos' 1953 Bowman Frontier Days Trading Card.
Credit J.S. Makkos / NolaDNA.com
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NolaDNA.com
The front of Makkos' 1953 Bowman Frontier Days Trading Card.

The back of Makkos' 1953 Bowman Frontier Days Trading Card.
Credit J.S. Makkos / NolaDNA.com
/
NolaDNA.com
The back of Makkos' 1953 Bowman Frontier Days Trading Card.

The bull and bear fights actually started with traditional bullfighting, matador and all, brought by Latin American immigrants. Sports were a good common ground for immigrants in this port city. And there was one head honcho behind many of these fights, with a name that was born to be el jefe: JosePepeLlula.

Pepeis this master swordsman, dueler, tradesman, bouncer,” Makkosexplains excitedly. “He was a cabin boy for a ship captain. He was born on the Canary Islands. And he ends up in New Orleans.”

Legend has it thatLlulasettled all his disputes via dueling, and never lost. Of his various business pursuits, he purchased St. Vincent de Paul Cemetery — the one that still exists in the9th Ward. People say that’s where he buried all of his dueling victims.

What really gotLlulacounting paper was turning traditional bull fighting into full-blown animal combat. His name appears all over the newspaper ads.

Newspaper ad from May 1844.
Newspaper ad from May 1844.

These clippings boast Algiers as headquarters for both traditional matador bullfights, as well as the bull-vs.-other animal battles. The flights were pushed across the river from other neighborhoods; animal fights used to take place in locations like Congo Square, and Washington Square between Frenchmen Street and Elysian Fields Avenue.

Hans Rasmussen is a librarian at LSU. He says the city had split opinions about these fights, and so the sport got punted out of the city center.

I think promoters were looking for a location that were, to put it kindly, kind of run down, that would tolerate animal fighting," Rasmussen says. "Algiers,Gretna, these were areas that weren’t particularly affluent. They also had a fairly good immigrant population. So these were areas that would tolerate these kinds of events, but also provide a customer base.”

So the seedy sport found its seedy home. And everyone came out, the rich, the poor, even families! And we know this because kids were half-price. Ironically, people felt the fights between animals were more humane than the Spanish-style bull baiting.

Anglo-Americans even to this day don’t quite understand bullfighting, because it doesn’t seem fair for a team of men with weapons to fight a bull,” saysRassmussen. “Whereas to Spaniards, they can’t comprehend this because it’s an art, it’s very much a ceremony and a ritual. So Americans preferred the bear and bull fights because it was two animals on equal footing, fighting each other with their natural weapons and no interference."

But where’d they get the bear?! Joseph says trapping and selling animals was popular during this time.

“You might go up to the Bayou St. John, where City Park is now, and that’s an untamed wilderness. So, I don’t know, somebody trapped it and then brought it into the city, and then they had the bizarre idea to fight it against the bull.”

He added that some of the bears were actually imported from California and Mexico. There were three documented fights between a bull and a bear.Llula’sspectacles were such big news that out of town papers covered them, including the New York outlet Illustrated News.Makkosreads the top of the article:

“Illustrated News, New York, Saturday April 23, 1853—bull and bear fight. A species of cruel Spanish amusement has been allowed to take place recently in New Orleans, which has received the well merited reprobation of the intelligent press throughout the United States.”

The front cover of Illustrated News, Saturday, April 23, 1853.
Credit J.S. Makkos / NolaDNA.com
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NolaDNA.com
The front cover of Illustrated News, Saturday, April 23, 1853.

The piece goes on to describe the scene: there are two iron cages in the center of the arena, each about 30 feet by 12 feet, caging the bull and bear respectively. Thousands of onlookers watch as the cages open. The bear enters the bull’s cell, and the door slides down again, with both animals now in the same cage.

They go at it — the bull takes a jab, the bear jabs back. They both get tired and take a break. Men poke them with poles to rile them up again, and they’re at each others’ throats once more.Makkosreturns to the Illustrated News story:

“’The bull extracted himself and at the bear he went until bruin sneaked into a corner, out of which he could neither be coaxed, flattered, nor driven.”

"So it kind of ended in a stalemate," says Makkos. "No one died, but you have two wounded animals. You have two gravely wounded animals.”

Remember the beginning of the article? It scornfully describes the South. The journalist expresses reluctance to even cover something like this, but at the same time, the nation couldn’t look away.

“There’s a deep criticism of this kind of blood sport and how barbaric and it is,” saysMakkos. “And basically like this New York thing, criticizing people in New Orleans and the lifestyle down here.”

InRassmussen’swords, the news ofPepeLlulla’sAlgiers bullfights up North provoked "howls of disgust from Yankee moralists." This put pressure on politicians to outlaw the sport, which they finally did in December of 1856.

For the first half of19thcentury there was conflict between new American settlers and French Creolesfor control of the city, and by the1840sit was evident that the Anglos were going to run things. So by the1850sthings like animal fighting and other traditional customs fell out of favor,” he says.

Bullfighting helped different ethnicities find community at a time when American cities weren'​t welcomingto newcomers. But a more Americanized New Orleans looked down on, and eventually squashed, this Latin-rooted sport.

Still, let it be known — bullfighting lived down here, thanks toJefePepe. And as JosephMakkossaid, it was a thing.

This story has been revised to reflect the following correction: The original text of this story reported that cockfights are illegal "in this country" today. Although all 50 states and the District of Columbia now ban cockfighting, the practice is still legal in Puerto Rico, and in other U.S. territories.

TriPod is a production of WWNO — New Orleans Public Radio, in collaboration with the Historic New Orleans Collection and the University of New Orleans Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies.Catch TriPod on the air Thursdays at 8:30 a.m. and Monday afternoons on All Things Considered, and subscribe to the podcast on iTunes to get all the latest episodes delivered to you on the go.

Copyright 2016 WWNO - New Orleans Public Radio

Laine Kaplan-Levenson
Laine Kaplan-Levenson is a producer and reporter for NPR's Throughline podcast. Before joining the Throughline team, they were the host and producer of WWNO's award-winning history podcast TriPod: New Orleans at 300, as well as WWNO/WRKF's award-winning political podcast Sticky Wicket. Before podcasting, they were a founding reporter for WWNO's Coastal Desk, and covered land loss, fisheries, water management, and all things Louisiana coast. Kaplan-Levenson has contributed to NPR, This American Life, Marketplace, Latino USA, Oxford American (print), Here and Now, The World, 70 Million, and Nancy, among other national outlets. They served as a host and producer of Last Call, a multiracial collective of queer artists and archivists, and freelanced as a storytelling and podcast consultant, workshop instructor, and facilitator of student-produced audio projects. Kaplan-Levenson is also the founder and host of the live storytelling series, Bring Your Own. They like to play music and occasionally DJ under the moniker DJ Swimteam.