NEW ORLEANS PUBLIC SERVICE INC. COLLECTION
(Mss
169)
Inventory
Earl K.
Long Library
July
1984
Contents
Summary
Historical
Note
Container
List
Index
Terms
Procedures
for Requesting Special Collections Materials
Summary
Size: 2 linear
feet
Geographic
locations: Chiefly
Inclusive dates: n.d.,
1837-ca. 1970s
Summary: Photographs of New Orleans Public Service transportation facilities (bus
trolleys, streetcars, buses), personnel, and related subjects. Chiefly relating to the company's
Related
collections New Orleans Public Service Inc. Collection, Addendum 1 (Mss
199)
Source: Gift and
Deposit, July 1984
Access: No restrictions
Copyright: Physical
rights are retained by the Earl K. Long Library,
Citation: New Orleans Public Service Inc. Collection, Earl
K. Long Library,
Historical Note
The
origin of NOPSI can be traced back some 170 years ago to the 1820s, when an
actor/entrepreneur named James Caldwell opened his American Theatre on
Less
than fifty years after gas lighting was introduced to the city, the era of
electricity began. The Southwestern
Brush Electric Light and Power Company was incorporated in
The
Edison Electric Illuminating Company was the first electric company in
The
decades that ushered in present-day NOPSI were chaotic. By 1900, more than 200 different gas,
electric, and streetcar companies had operated in
By
early 1921 a federal receiver appointed the city's professional and business
leaders as the "Citizen's Committee of Forty" to study the situation
and suggest a solution. They recommended
the formation of a single utility to provide electricity, gas, and transit.
In
April 1922, the New Orleans City Government passed the Settlement Ordinance
under which a new company could be created from the receivership. The ordinance set up controls to bring the
new company and the city into a partnership. Later in the year the entity was
born as New Orleans Public Service Inc.
On
At
first the new company was not really a single entity. Technically, six corporations with the name
“New Orleans Public Service Company Inc." succeeded each other in just
five years as the charter was redrawn to encompass the latest consolidations
and acquisitions of former companies.
The present NOPSI was chartered
The
creation of NOPSI finally ended a series of buyouts, bankruptcies, and
consolidations since 1835 that involved no fewer than six gas companies, thirty
transit and street railway systems, and 18 electric or consolidated electric,
gas, and street railway companies.
The
founding of NOPSI coincided with a leap in the consumption of electricity. In 1921, the year before the first NOPSI was
founded, there were 43,000 electric meters in all of
While
the city's demand for electricity grew at an enormous rate from NOPSI's
founding onward, the city's entire generating capacity continued to be housed
in the same
The
1970s were characterized by the energy crunch caused by the Arab oil
embargo. With the trend away from
natural gas and oil toward what was thought at the time to be more economical
coal and nuclear fuels, the company committed itself to participation in the
Grand Gulf Nuclear Plant along with MSU's other utility subsidiaries. With the growth in demand for electricity
disappearing as the plant was being constructed, the need for it was
continually questioned. This was one of
the major issues of the 1980s and resulted in the New Orleans City Council in
1983 appointing a Citizens Task Force to look into the feasibility of the city
municipalizing or taking over electric and gas operations in Orleans
Parish. Ultimately NOPSI remained in
private hands (except for the purchase of its transit operations in 1983 by the
Regional Transit Authority), but in 1985 voters in Orleans Parish chose to
return regulation to the New Orleans City Council from the LPSC.
Source: “New Orleans Public Service Inc.
(NOPSI) Company Profile,” http://dnr.louisiana.gov/sec/execdiv/techasmt/electricity/electric_vol1_1994/003e.htm.
Accessed
Container List
Maintenance operations. n.d.,
1929, 1945 - 1949, 1954, 1957, 1959, 1967.
(See also Identified Personnel.)
169-1=
169-31 Bus, bus trolleys,
garage and work crews. 36 prints.
169-32=
169-57 Streetcars, garages and
work crews. 28 prints.
169-58=
169-102 Machine
shop and machinery. 48 prints.
169-103=
169-107 Miscellany. n.d., 1914, 1931, 1950. Includes a scene of Mardi Gras, gathering of
people in streetcar barn on
Personnel. n.d., 1924, 1947, 1956,
1958.
169-108=
169-131 Awards
and social functions. 24 prints.
169-132=
169-151 Employee
training. 22 prints.
169-152=
169-192 Identified
personnel. 44 prints.
169-193=
169-204 Posed
groups. 12 prints.
169-205=
169-219 Transit routes and bus
stops. n.d., 1941, 1945, 1948, 1952,
1957. 15 prints.
Transit vehicles. n.d., ca. 1837-ca. 1970s.
Buses,
exterior views
169-220=
169-229 n.d.,
1937, 10 prints.
169-230=
169-279 ca.
1940s. 54 prints.
169-280=
169-295 ca.
1950s. 17 prints.
169-296=
169-301 ca.
1960s. 7 prints.
Buses,
interior views
169-302=
169-317 n.d.,
18 prints.
169-318=
169-335 n.d.,
1954, ca. 1970s. 19 prints.
169-336=
169-363 Bus trolley, n.d. 30 prints.
169-364=
169-383 Streetcars, exterior
views. n.d., 1837, 1897, 1938, 1943,
1946, 1957, 1964. 22 prints.
169-384=
169-389 Streetcars, interior
views. n.d., 1939, 1946. 6 prints.
Index Terms
Buses—
New Orleans Public Service Inc.
Street-railroads—