This
is one of the most impressive pieces of architecture
in a state brimming with great Old World-style buildings.
The Old State Capitol is a sparkling white castle
in the Gothic Revival style on a bluff over the Mississippi
River. That view has since been ruined by a flood-control
project. Renovated in 1995, it is a place of splendor
dominated by an enormous central spiral staircase.
Its marble steps are wide enough to accommodate four
people astride, and is illuminated from above by a
multicolored stained-glass ceiling that gives the
whole building a feel that could not be matched by
artificial light. The glasswork is supported by the
center staircase column which fans out into a parasol
or spider web shape. There is another huge stained
glass window in the front of the building, which once
faced the Mississippi River. The floors are all wood,
except in the reception hall where they are marble,
and detailed ironwork abounds. Inside is the original
assembly chamber, and exhibits on the functioning
of the state capitol. While little has been preserved
from the early days, the exhibits from the early and
mid-1900's are still interesting, including a desk
from the new state capitol building which was used
by reporters to broadcast the latest news about state
government. If you go, be sure you take an extra roll
of film. For a differing opinion, check with Mark
Twain and former Louisiana governor Huey P. Long.
Twain called it the ugliest building on the Mississippi
River. Long admonished, "Turn it over to some
collector of antiques." But that was posturing
in order to gain support for his grand new state capitol
detailed below. Strangely, when running for office
in 1924 Long chastised his opponent for backing the
demolition of historic buildings at Louisiana State
University.