• Vanishing Black Bars & Lounges
  • War on the Benighted
  • A Blackness Continuum
  • Dreams Do Come True
  • Selected Works
  • Shop
  • Dawoud Bey & L. Kasimu Harris in Conversation
  • About/Contact
  • Published Works
  • CV
  • Press
  • Menu

L. Kasimu Harris

  • Vanishing Black Bars & Lounges
  • War on the Benighted
  • A Blackness Continuum
  • Dreams Do Come True
  • Selected Works
  • Shop
  • Dawoud Bey & L. Kasimu Harris in Conversation
  • About/Contact
  • Published Works
  • CV
  • Press
Steven Elloie, third generation owner of Sportsman’s Corner bar in New Orleans.

Steven Elloie, third generation owner of Sportsman’s Corner bar in New Orleans.

New Orleans thought Katrina was its worst nightmare - until COVID

August 26, 2020

Published for The Thomson Reuters News Foundation

For decades, New Orleans has had more than its share of hurricanes, economic slumps, and gentrifying neighborhoods, and Sportsman’s Corner, a Black-owned bar, has endured it all.

But Steven Elloie, the third generation owner, wonders if the bar will survive the global pandemic, after his mother, 63-year-old Theresa Elloie, fell victim to COVID-19.

“It just kind of killed my spirit," said Elloie, 41, sitting in one of the bar's red vinyl-covered chairs, tears in his eyes.

“It took a big toll on me, and I didn’t feel the same about going on to operate. I was just that hurt about the whole situation.”

His mother was known in the community for her activism and for making detailed ribbon corsages for various occasions, but she also moonlighted as an Uber driver.

This is how Elloie thinks she contracted the virus in March.

She was hospitalized for two weeks before her death. He didn’t get the chance to see or talk to her again.

READ MORE

Prev / Next

Published Works by
L. Kasimu Harris

Selected writings about food, New Orleans & photography


Latest Posts


Tweets