{"name":"Pitot House","city":"New Orleans, Orleans Parish","canonical_url":"https://gydeinfo.com/new-orleans/places/pitot-house/","markdown_url":"https://gydeinfo.com/new-orleans/places/pitot-house.md","updated_at":"2026-06-19T19:10:04.116900+00:00","facts":[{"claim":"James Pitot (often spelled Pitot, not Pito) was the first mayor of the incorporated city of New Orleans and served from 1804 to 1805.","citation":"https://www.lahistory.org/resources/dictionary-louisiana-biography/dictionary-louisiana-biography-b/","source_title":"The First Mayor's Retreat","source_type":"manual","allowed_use":"anecdote","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:39:16.311562+00:00"},{"claim":"The house now known as the Pitot House/Bosque House in New Orleans is identified as having been built in 1795 by Bartholome Bosque, a native of Palma, Majorca.","citation":"https://www.lahistory.org/resources/dictionary-louisiana-biography/dictionary-louisiana-biography-b/","source_title":"The First Mayor's Retreat","source_type":"manual","allowed_use":"anecdote","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:39:16.311562+00:00"},{"claim":"The Pitot House was originally used as a country retreat, matching the local story’s description of the property’s early function.","citation":"https://www.lahistory.org/resources/dictionary-louisiana-biography/dictionary-louisiana-biography-b/","source_title":"The First Mayor's Retreat","source_type":"manual","allowed_use":"anecdote","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:39:16.311562+00:00"},{"claim":"Bartholome Bosque is described as a wealthy merchant and ship owner who built the house later associated with the Pitot name.","citation":"https://www.lahistory.org/resources/dictionary-louisiana-biography/dictionary-louisiana-biography-b/","source_title":"The First Mayor's Retreat","source_type":"manual","allowed_use":"anecdote","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:39:16.311562+00:00"},{"claim":"Pitot House is located on the banks of Bayou St. John.","citation":"https://venue.pitothouse.org","source_title":"The Pitot House Venue","source_type":"official","allowed_use":"canonical_data","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:30:12.934919+00:00","fact_type":"location","as_of":"2026","confidence":0.96},{"claim":"The adjacent 10,000-square-foot yard has a maximum capacity of 250 people.","citation":"https://venue.pitothouse.org","source_title":"The Pitot House Venue","source_type":"official","allowed_use":"canonical_data","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:30:12.934919+00:00","fact_type":"capacity","as_of":"2026","confidence":0.95},{"claim":"The ground floor can accommodate up to 50 people depending on event type and setup.","citation":"https://venue.pitothouse.org","source_title":"The Pitot House Venue","source_type":"official","allowed_use":"canonical_data","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:30:12.934919+00:00","fact_type":"capacity","as_of":"2026","confidence":0.94},{"claim":"The grounds include a 19th-century parterre garden and meadow lined with magnolia and cypress trees.","citation":"https://venue.pitothouse.org","source_title":"The Pitot House Venue","source_type":"official","allowed_use":"canonical_data","retrieved_at":"2026-06-19T18:30:12.934919+00:00","fact_type":"architecture","as_of":"2026","confidence":0.86},{"claim":"Pitot House is one of the few colonial West Indies-style houses left in Louisiana and features a parterre garden reminiscent of the 19th century.","citation":"https://www.louisianalandmarks.org/pitot-house","source_title":"Pitot House - 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