British Parliament 1925 Vintage Lithograph

The Shrine and Chapel of Saint Roch, New Orleans -- 1925 Page of History


The Shrine of St. Roch in New Orleans, Louisiana is a small building consisting of two rooms. The main room contains an altar with a statue of St. Roch, his little dog at his side.

Beginning in 1817, a wave of yellow fever struck the gulf coast, taking more than 40,000 lives in half a century just in New Orleans alone.

In 1867, during a desperate attempt to protect his parish members from the scourge, Reverend Peter Thevis decided to dedicate his prayers to Saint Roch, Patron Saint of Good Health.

Born circa 1348, Saint Roch ministered to plague victims, and was said to have saved many lives from the pestilence. His legend grew after he himself contracted the black death in Piacenza, Italy and was banished from the parish. He went into hiding in the nearby forest, where a dog that belonged to a local noble frequently visited him and took to bringing him bread to sustain him. According to the tale, the dog licked his wounds and healed him, after which the nobleman discovered him and became a disciple.

Reverend Thevis’ community miraculously suffered no losses during the yellow fever epidemic, and on September 6, 1875, St. Roch Cemetery No. 1 was dedicated and the cornerstone of the Gothic-style St. Roch Chapel was laid, in honor of Saint Roch’s intercession.

The locals continued to revere Saint Roch for graces of welfare and remission. For decades, believers have been leaving their polio braces, glass eyes, dental plates and other parts of their prosthetic selves (as well as a few less obviously meaningful objects like a can of corn, keys, and a small Ronald McDonald doll) when their health was recovered.

The resulting bric-a-brac of anatomical ex votos, vintage medical artifacts and religious iconography has made the Saint Roch Shrine one of the most unusual in America.

It may be showing its age; but this image of the past is fascinating

An original 1925 illustration created for one of many great World History volumes of the period after the turn of the century.  These illustrations are great pieces of art & history from period photographs and sketches or, in some cases, created especially for these volumes and frequently not seen anywhere else and may no longer exist

-- Images from the Past -- 

Full Page Size: Approximately 6" X 9.5"

Unrelated Text on Reverse

Condition: Excellent - Very Good - Good - Fair - Poor (but of historical interest)

Some handling wear & period age toning (slightly exaggerated in picture)

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History-On-Paper


Item #421-921WIP