The Morphy and Le Carpentier Families
These photographs show the main adults in the Morphy clan. No remaining photographs appear to survive of Paul's two sisters, Helena and Malvina. Charles Maurian remained his close friend and family associate for life.
Paul's heritage came from his Spanish ancestry on his father's side, bequeathing the name Morphy, and his mother's French name Le Carpentier. Paul's great-grandfather was Michael Murphy, an Irishman. The name Murphy was then changed to Morphy by his son, Paul's grandfather, Diego Morphy, in Malaga, Spain. The Le Carpentier name was made notorious by Paul's maternal grandfather Joseph Le Carpentier, who not only owned slaves in the French Creole tradition, but bought and sold them as an "auctioneer" as well as trading with sometime friend, sometime enemy of the French Quarter, the pirate Jean Lafitte. The Morphys are buried in a single above-ground tomb at St. Louis Cemetery No.1. The cemetery is located near the St. Louis Cathedral, a few blocks north of the French Quarter. It is a short walk from both the house where Paul was born (1113 Chartres) and where he died (89 Royal). You can visit his tomb - a block of nondescript white stone surrounded by cluttered tombs - to this day. This page was last modified by Matt Fullerty on October 09, 2006
Paul's heritage came from his Spanish ancestry on his father's side, bequeathing the name Morphy, and his mother's French name Le Carpentier. Paul's great-grandfather was Michael Murphy, an Irishman. The name Murphy was then changed to Morphy by his son, Paul's grandfather, Diego Morphy, in Malaga, Spain.
The Le Carpentier name was made notorious by Paul's maternal grandfather Joseph Le Carpentier, who not only owned slaves in the French Creole tradition, but bought and sold them as an "auctioneer" as well as trading with sometime friend, sometime enemy of the French Quarter, the pirate Jean Lafitte.
The Morphys are buried in a single above-ground tomb at St. Louis Cemetery No.1. The cemetery is located near the St. Louis Cathedral, a few blocks north of the French Quarter. It is a short walk from both the house where Paul was born (1113 Chartres) and where he died (89 Royal). You can visit his tomb - a block of nondescript white stone surrounded by cluttered tombs - to this day. This page was last modified by Matt Fullerty on October 09, 2006
The Morphys are buried in a single above-ground tomb at St. Louis Cemetery No.1. The cemetery is located near the St. Louis Cathedral, a few blocks north of the French Quarter. It is a short walk from both the house where Paul was born (1113 Chartres) and where he died (89 Royal). You can visit his tomb - a block of nondescript white stone surrounded by cluttered tombs - to this day.
This page was last modified by Matt Fullerty on October 09, 2006