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New Orleans Cotton Exchange

New Orleans Cotton Exchange Building
New Orleans Cotton Exchange is located in Louisiana
New Orleans Cotton Exchange
New Orleans Cotton Exchange is located in the US
New Orleans Cotton Exchange
Location 231 Carondelet Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
Coordinates 29°57′6.79″N 90°4′16.69″W / 29.9518861°N 90.0713028°W / 29.9518861; -90.0713028Coordinates: 29°57′6.79″N 90°4′16.69″W / 29.9518861°N 90.0713028°W / 29.9518861; -90.0713028
Built 1921
Architect Favrot & Livaudais Ltd.; Selden-Breck Construction Co.
Architectural style Chicago, Other
NRHP Reference # 77000675
Significant dates
Added to NRHP December 22, 1977
Designated NHL December 22, 1977

The New Orleans Cotton Exchange was established in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1871 as a centralized forum for the trade of cotton. It operated in New Orleans until closing in 1964. Occupying several buildings over its history, its final location, the New Orleans Cotton Exchange Building, is now a National Historic Landmark.

The New Orleans Cotton Exchange was conceived and financed by a group of cotton factors at a time when one-third of the entire production of cotton in the United States was sent through New Orleans. The Exchange sought to bring order to what was a highly speculative and often erratic cotton pricing system by providing a centralized trading office where people involved in the cotton business could obtain information about market conditions and prices. The Exchange also established standards for classification of cotton and facilitated payments between buyers and sellers.

The New York Cotton Exchange opened in 1870. Concerned that trading of cotton in New York would be more advantageous to buyers than sellers, and eager to modernize their operations, New Orleans merchants agreed to form their own exchange. Consequently, the New Orleans Cotton Exchange opened for business on February 20, 1871 at the corner of Gravier and Carondelet Streets, in an area already frequented by cotton merchants.

The Exchange was notable for developing advanced techniques for gathering information about various aspects of the cotton market. Led by Col. Henry G. Hester, for many years the secretary of the Exchange, reports were compiled and then transmitted by telegraph, a novel method at the time. Col. Hester also brought the practice of futures trading to the Exchange. These advanced business methods benefited the local cotton market greatly, so much so that it "enabled New Orleans to regain its position as the primary spot market of the world and to become a leading futures market, outranked only by Liverpool and New York."

Later years saw the decline of the Exchange as fluctuating market conditions, government regulations, price supports, the decline of cotton in the South, and various other factors conspired to shrink the Southern cotton market drastically. The Exchange closed in 1964. A handful of attempts were made in later years to restart a similar exchange, but none were successful.

The Exchange had its 1871 opening in a series of rented rooms in an existing building at Gravier and Carondelet streets. Although they moved several times, the Exchange did not leave this intersection until its closing in 1964. After constructing and then outgrowing a small building nearby on Gravier, the Exchange built a palatial Second Empire building in 1883, at the northern corner of Gravier and Carondelet. Noted for its lavish interiors, the building soon became a landmark in the city.


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