Your Guide to the World's Hidden Wonders
March 11 2014 9:11 AM
The Real Location of True Detective's Carcosa
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In the climactic scene of True Detective's season finale, Messrs.
Cohle and Hart storm Carcosa, a creeptastically dilapidated lair
perfectly suited for a serial killer.
In the realm of reality, Carcosa is better known as Fort Macomb,
a 19th-century brick fortress that once guarded the waters of Chef
Menteur Pass in New Orleans. Fort Macomb, originally known as Fort Chef
Menteur, then Fort Wood, was completed in 1822. (The Americans had just
fended off the British in the Battle of New Orleans and figured a few
extra forts around the place couldn't hurt.)
Fort Macomb saw some action during the Civil War — Confederate
soldiers camped there until the Union captured New Orleans and took the
fort for themselves. In 1871, Fort Macomb was decommissioned and has sat
idle ever since. Crumbling, overgrown, and battered by Hurricanes
Katrina, Rita, and Gustav, it is too hazardous for the public to visit.
But just hazardous enough for Matthew McConaughey.
If you squint and employ your imagination, you can get the Carcosa experience at nearby Fort Pike. Built to the same design as Fort Macomb, it's in much better condition and welcomes even non-celebrity visitors.
All sorts of forts:
View Fort Macomb State Historic Site in a larger map
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