The Longue Vue house you see today was the second home built for the Stern family on this site. The first house was moved (it still stands at the intersection of Garden Lane and Metairie Road, about 100 yards away) to make room for the current, starkly different home. A crew of donkeys spent several weeks pulling the house on logs, just a short way each day.

How this odd scene came about is as surprising as the move itself: Having built what they thought was their dream home in 1921, Edith and Edgar Stern later became convinced that this first house did not live up to the splendid gardens emerging around it, through the talents of landscape architecture visionary Ellen Biddle Shipman. While traveling through Europe and Africa in 1936 and 1937, the Sterns were struck by many house-and-garden sites they visited and came home eager to create their own, more integrated indoor-outdoor design.

Edith and Edgar first approached Shipman, at the time serving exclusively as their landscape architect, about designing the new house as well. Shipman had no experience in built architecture, however, and recommended architects William and Geoffrey Platt, the sons of her mentor. The Sterns agreed, especially once Shipman consented to do the interior design.

Edith began to collect Modern Art in the early 1960s with her first acquisition a Wassily Kandinsky painting she hung in the Blue Room. She soon sought the guidance of her friend, artist Lillian Florsheim, and son-in-law, Thomas B. Hess, a respected art scholar, to help develop her collection.

On an art excursions to Denise Rene’s Parisian gallery, Florsheim introduced Edith to artist Victor Vasarely. The Longue Vue collection contains many works by Vasarely, a testament to the friendship that he and Edith Stern enjoyed and an indication of the personal nature of this collection. Edith’s love of art and this collection is also about the act of creating more than who created. As can be seen in the room where the work of her grandchildren hangs beside the work of more known individuals.

Little known and even less seen are the archival holdings of Longue Vue House and Gardens. With approximately 40,000 items, the archives are open for research by appointment with the Curatorial Department. Contact Lenora Costa by email at lcosta@longuevue.com or by phone at (504) 293-4712 to request an appointment.

The holdings fall into three categories:

  • Personal photos, letters, and various ephemera of the family members who lived within the home during its occupancy.
  • Approximately 25,000-item collection relating to the physical site of Longue Vue, which provides a detailed record of the construction, landscaping, and furnishing of the estate with drawings by Ellen Biddle Shipman and the Platt brothers.
  • Documents pertaining to projects and civic engagements of the Sterns, which included civil rights and African American education, the reform of municipal government in New Orleans and Louisiana, the urban development of New Orleans through the public and commercial projects of the Sterns, the history of financiers and philanthropists in America, and numerous arts and music organization.

Longue Vue’s gardens are the masterwork of 20th-century landscape architect Ellen Biddle Shipman: a visionary designer, intrepid female entrepreneur, and dear friend to Longue Vue founders Edith and Edgar Stern. In 1968, Edith opened the gardens of Longue Vue to the public, so the entire community could experience them. Our job today is simple: Continue sharing Shipman’s design legacy with new audiences, from expert horticulturists to local families.

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January to February

Plants with a * are native to Southern Louisiana

Annuals: alyssum, calendula, dianthus, lobelia, pansy, petunia, snapdragon

Perennials: cuphea, flowering maple, jasmine species, salvia

Bulbs: daffodil, narcissus, zephranthes rain lily*

Vines: bleeding heart, clock vine, Dutchman’s pipevine, polyantha jasmine

Shrubs: camellia, citrus (blooms and fruit), native azalea, sasanqua, sweet olive

Trees: angel trumpet, citrus, Japanese magnolia, Mexican prunus

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March To April

Annuals: alyssum, columbine, delphinium, dianthus, foxglove, lobelia, pansy/viola, pentas, petunia, poppy, snapdragon, strawflower, tulip, verbena

Perennials: azalea, camellia, Louisiana iris*, milkweed, pitcher plants, plumbago, violets

Bulbs: amaryllis, byzantine gladiolus, easter lily, silver bells

Vines: Carolina jasmine, confederate jasmine, clock vine, Dutchman’s pipevine, passionflower, wisteria

Shrubs: camellia, plumbago, star anise*, viburnum; yesterday, today, and tomorrow

Trees: angel trumpet, Buckeye*, dogwood*, fringe tree (native/Chinese), plum, silver bells, star magnolia

Plants with a * are native to Southern Louisiana

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May to August

Annuals: African basil, alyssum, angelonia, canna lily, cat’s whiskers, celosia, cleome, coleus, cosmos, dahlia, gladiolas, goldenrod*, gomphrena, marigold, pentas, petunia, salvias, sunflower, toothache plant, torenia, vinca, zinnia

Perennials: African iris, Agapanthus, aster, beautyberry*, black-eyed Susan, buddlea, bush clover, caladium, celosia, coreopsis, crown of thorns, cuphea, echinacea, garden hydrangea, gaura*, gingers, hibiscus, hollyhock, indigofera, ironweed*, Japanese iris, Joe-Pye weed*, lantana, loropetalum, milkweed, oak leaf hydrangea, pentas, phlox, pitcher plants, plumbago, ratibida*, roses, rudbeckia*, sea oats*, swamp sunflower*, thryallis, violets

Bulbs: crocosmia, hymenocalis*, hurricane lily

Vines: butterfly vine, coral honeysuckle, cypress vine, Dutchman’s pipvine, evergreen wisteria, Passionflower, rose

Shrubs: banana shrub, hydrangea, gardenia, oleander, rose, thryalis

Trees: angel trumpet, crepe myrtle, magnolia grandiflora

Plants with a * are native to Southern Louisiana

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September to October

Annuals: angelonia, cosmos, dianthus, pansy/viola, zinnia

Perennials: birds of paradise, black-eyed Susan, chrysanthemum, crown of thorns, hibiscus, plumbago, rose, salvia, swamp sunflower*

Trees: holly, Japanese plum

Plants with a * are native to Southern Louisiana

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November to December

Plants with a * are native to Southern Louisiana

Annuals: alyssum, dianthus, pansy/viola

Perennials: cape honeysuckle, crown of thorns, rose, salvias, swamp lily*

Shrubs: camellia. fatsia, lycoris, sasanqua

Vines: clock vine, thunbergia

Trees: holly

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At Longue Vue, we are stewards of an invaluable living plant collection. The Bartlett Tree Service inventory system meets national guidelines and performance benchmarks for sustainable land development and maintenance laid out in the national Sustainable Sites Initiative. The creation of this site-wide tree inventory and management system positions Longue Vue as a local leader in the use of new technologies in tree conservation and maintenance.

The Inventory System:

  • Increases staff efficiency in that tree care can be prioritized without leaving the office.
  • Streamlines contractors’ access to tree statistics, conservation histories, and site maps
  • Creates a regularly-updated maintenance history of all trees for use by the staff, garden committee, granting organizations, and donors
  • Creates a digital archive of Longue Vue’s tree collection for use by researchers, horticulturalists, and the general public
  • Deepens Longue Vue’s connection with its visitors and stakeholders by providing remote access to tree images and data.

For decades, volunteers have worked alongside the garden staff on projects that are vital to Longue Vue’s survival! Whether you’re in need of service hours or just searching for ways to give back to the community, volunteering at Longue Vue is a relaxing, impactful way to roll up your sleeves and make a difference.

Please register to volunteer by date using the link below. For general questions and information, including “no stooping” or low impact volunteer opportunities like seed packet stuffing, please email Chenae Graves, Director of Outreach & Communications at cgraves@longuevue.com


Ask about the Longue Vue gardens, or for seasonal tips about your own garden:

Ask Integrated Plant Care Gardener and Longue Vue newsletter columnist Simeon Benjamin about all of your natural pest control needs:

Your House, Your Gardens