|
February 17, 1885 - Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show comes to Mardi Gras
"The New Orleans 1885 Mardi Gras was extraordinary. On the streets were large numbers of international visitors connected
with the [World's Industrial and Cotton Centennial] Exposition, several Central American Indian groups, and some fifty to
sixty Plains Indians from the [Buffalo Bill] Wild West Show, including four chiefs, all of whom were likely on the street
in native dress. For [locals of African descent, particularly groups who took to masking as Indians,] Mardi Gras translated
nicely into a freedom celebration, a day to commemorate their own history and spirit, to be arrogant, to circumvent the hostile
authorities, to overturn the established order, and now and then to seek revenge."
Source: Mardi Gras Indians (Pelican
Publishing Company, 1994), by Michael P. Smith
|