As helicopters rush off with the most desperately ill, throngs trapped for nearly a week in New Orleans climb aboard busses at the intersection of I-10 and Causeway Blvd.in Metairie, La., a suburb of New Orleans.
Photograph by Eliot Kamenitz/The Times-Picayune

Hurricane Katrina Then and Now: Lifting the Fog of Memory

ByKurt Mutchler
August 27, 2014
12 min read

Faded memories can eat at you. You may try to remember, but only a fog remains. The true power of photography records the present to help us remember the past. In today’s digital age, memories are captured frequently only to get lost in our digital vaults, but when we do go looking for them again, they can fire the billions of neurons that string together the pieces and lift the fog.

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The intersection of Causeway Blvd. and I-10 in Metairie, La. in 2005, at the top of the page, and in 2014, above. Photograph by Ted Jackson/Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

So it was for Ted Jackson, a staff photographer for Nola.com/The Times-Picayune, who not only opened their photographic archive to revisit the staff’s coverage of Katrina’s destruction nine years ago after it made landfall near New Orleans on August 29, 2005, but he returned to the exact spot using the same focal length lens where each selected photograph was taken.

“It’s been fun, and challenging, like a mystery puzzle trying to find that spot,” Jackson said. And in one case, his memory of nine years ago caught him by surprise.

Encouraged by Photography and Video Manager G. Andrew Boyd, who proposed the project, Jackson scoured each area with an architect’s precision: “The right distance and the right height, everything has to be exact for it to work,” he said. “The closer the elements are in the photo the harder it is and the more elements you’re trying to match make it more difficult. I’ll shoot a picture and go to my car, upload it and layer it, and see where I’m off and go back and reshoot it.”

“The most important part of everything is there has to be one thing that will stay exactly the same,” Jackson said. “There has to be a landmark that you can recognize or I don’t think the reader is going to buy the premise. So, that limits what kind of pictures you can choose. It’s not necessarily your best pictures, but the ones that show something interesting before and after.”

According to the National Hurricane Center, Hurricane Katrina was the deadliest storm since 1928 responsible for 1,200 deaths. It was the costliest U.S. hurricane on record with $75 billion in damages to the Gulf Coast. This is a storm worth remembering.

The hurricane has passed and the flooding has begun Monday afternoon as three men, John Rainey, John Rainey Jr. and Courtney Davis help Terry Fox tug a tub full of children toward an overpass on South Broad Street.
  Photograph by John McCusker, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
South Broad Street.
  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

A few of the situations stood out for Jackson: “Four guys are hauling an old tub through the water and the tub is filled with children. That happened right over the Broad Street overpass from the old newspaper office. I found the spot and there are so many telephone poles and street signs that you had to find the exact, exact spot, and of course the exact spot is right in the middle of Broad Street and traffic is coming from my back. And I think I’m most proud of that one because it was so hard to get,” Jackson laughs.

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  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
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  Photograph by Ted Jackson/Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
Ted Jackson climbs to the second rung from the top of the ladder where he made the after picture of the scene above.
Ted Jackson climbs to the second rung from the top of the ladder where he made the after picture of the scene above. Photograph by G. Andrew Boyd, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

When Jackson returned to the site of one of his first pictures he made right after the storm, he was stunned to learn of the actual height of the water. He was in a boat and photographed a woman in a vest floating down the middle of the street. “I found the spot, it was very disguised now, but I found it and I had always thought she was tiptoeing down the street just because of the way it looked to me,” Jackson said. What he thought was maybe 4-5 feet of water was actually closer to 10 feet. “I just couldn’t believe that the water was that deep. I took a six-foot ladder to get up to the height that the boat would be and I was nowhere near the level I needed to be,” he said. Jackson ended up going back with a 12-foot ladder and stood on the second rung from the top. His fog had lifted.

Scroll down to see more before and after scenes from around New Orleans.

The site of the levee breach where the barge crashed through the levee wall flooding the Lower Ninth Ward.
  Photograph by Ellis Lucia, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
Lower 9th Ward, at the breach of the Industrial Canal, 2014. At right, new homes built by Make It Right, founded by Brad Pitt in 2007 to help rebuild the community.
  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

The Lower Ninth Ward at the breach of the Industrial Canal, where a barge crashed through the levee wall flooding the area. Now, new homes built by Make It Right, founded by Brad Pitt in 2007 to help rebuild the community, line the street.

A security worker walks past destroyed houses in Lakeview near the break in the 17th Street Canal.
  Photograph by John McCusker, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
Neighborhood rebuilt after breach in 17th Street Canal.
  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

A security worker walks past destroyed houses in Lakeview near the break in the 17th Street Canal. The neighborhood has now been rebuilt.

A family of women and children cling to posts on their front porch as rising floodwater force them to evacuate their home on St. Claude Ave in the Lower 9th Ward. They had tried to get into their attic space to no avail. Floodwater raging down St. Claude Avenue prevented rescuers from reaching them during the storm. They were planning to swim to safety using the log in the lower right, as spectators pleaded with them to stay where they were until help could arrive. They said they had been clinging to the posts since 8 a.m. It was now after 12 p.m.
  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
Front porch at St. Claude Ave. at Industrial Canal, photographed from bridge, 2014. “The one thing I speculated, but I didn’t really know, was the fact that the women were so high up on that porch and I knew they couldn’t be standing on the porch because their heads were above the door top. And in the after picture you can see the rail they were standing on. I thought that was very interesting,” Jackson said.
  Photograph by Ted Jackson, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

A family of women and children cling to posts on their front porch as rising floodwater force them to evacuate their home on St. Claude Avenue at Industrial Canal in the Lower Ninth Ward. Upon returning, Jackson said, “The one thing I speculated, but I didn’t really know, was the fact that the women were so high up on that porch and I knew they couldn’t be standing on the porch because their heads were above the door top. And in the after picture you can see the rail they were standing on. I thought that was very interesting.”

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    Photograph by Jennifer Zdon, Nola.com/The Times-Picayune
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  Photograph by Ted Jackson/Nola.com/The Times-Picayune

A woman walks by a growing pile of debris being dumped at the sanctioned Katrina dump site on the neutral ground between West End Blvd.and Pontchartrain Blvd, compared to how the site looks today.

For more before and after images by Ted Jackson and the Nola.com/Times-Picayune staff, visit their website.

Prior to joining National Geographic in 1994, Kurt Mutchler was a staff photographer, and then at the photo and graphics editor, at the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

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