For Sale: New Orleans’ Historic and Very Haunted Magnolia Mansion

Selling Real Estate in New Orleans is about 1,500 miles out of my wheelhouse but I would have loved to have listed this awesome property! With a backstory like this one that begins in 1857, the year of the first Mardi Gras, what buyer could resist?   ~Bill

In a city famous for its fabulous food, music and art, New Orleans also has some of the most colorful homes in the world – many with legends that are even more interesting than the homes themselves. Encompassing everything from French Quarter cast-iron balconies and colorful court yards such as the Gardette-LePretre Mansion where a Turkish sultan and his harem were murdered in the 1870s to the Creole cottage owned by Priestess Marie Laveau whose voodoo performances attracted thousands of followers, the city includes over 20 National Register historic districts. Now, one of the city’s prettiest homes with a long history of romance, tragedies and a few ghosts is for sale.

Magnolia Mansion, located in the historic Garden District, is one of the city’s most photographed homes. An important example of Antebellum architecture, the home, also known as the Harris-Maginnis House, was designed in 1857—the year of the city’s first Mardi Gras parade. The mansion was designed by James H. Calrow for Alexander Harris and his child bride Lizzie Thompson. It has been named several times by various publications as one of America’s most romantic inns and by USA Today as one of the Top 10 Great Places to Sleep with a Ghost.

Harris and his three brothers were wealthy cotton brokers but just eleven years after the home was built, Alexander and his brother Aaron died of yellow fever – only 24 hours apart. After her husband’s death, Lizzie sold the house to another cotton king, John Henry Maginnis, but on July 4, 1889 John was struck by lightning and died.  Some people said the lightning strike was payback for the poor working conditions in his cotton mill. John’s daughter Josephine founded the New Orleans Chapter of the American Red Cross and donated the home to the charity in 1939. It was the New Orleans headquarters for the Red Cross during World War II and the Korean War. In 2001, it was purchased by Tina Turner impersonator Hollie Diann Vest who turned the home into a bed & breakfast.

At 13,369 square feet, the Magnolia’s architecture is classic Southern Plantation with 11 white Corinthian columns that support a massive wrap-around veranda, 15 bedrooms, 17 bathrooms, a ground-floor banquet area and three courtyards. It is just a short walk from the city’s streetcar line, the French Quarter and many of the city’s best restaurants and shops.

The area is zoned for commercial use so it can continue to be operated as a bed & breakfast or it could be converted back to a beautiful Southern family estate.

Though it is said that the home, like many of New Orleans’ old mansions, might include a few ghosts, they do not convey in the sale price but would be considered under separate negotiation.

Listed for: $4.9 million

Photo Credit: TopTenRealEstateDeals.com

This post was originally published on RISMedia’s blog, Housecall. Check the blog daily for winning real estate tips and trends.

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2016. All rights reserved.

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