Rodolphe Lucien Desdunes was born November 15, 1849, as one of at least five children of Pierre Jérémie Desdunes and Henriette Angélique (Sonty) Gaillard; siblings were Pierre Aristide, Joseph, Elmore, and Sarazin. Their father, Pierre, lived in New Orleans at least as early as 1840 and was probably born in the city. The Desdunes family were
Saint Dominican Creole refugees who fled from
Saint-Domingue (now Haiti) during the 1791
Haitian Revolution, at which time they gained asylum in New Orleans. Rodolphe's education was likely provided by family and family friends
Armand Lanusse and
Joanni Questy, as well as at the
Couvent School. Rodolphe's brother Pierre Aristide also became involved in civil rights as an adult. By profession, he was a poet, a cigar maker, a carpenter, and owner of a tobacco plantation. He fought in the American Civil War. He served on the board of directors of the Couvent School, which had been created by
Marie Couvent in 1848. In 1873 Aristide married Louise Mathilde Denebourg. Rodolphe married Mathilde Cheval, and they lived for some time with her mother, also named Mathilde. Before 1880, they had children
Daniel (born in about 1873), Agnes (about 1873), Louise (about 1874), Coritza (born in 1876), and Wendelle (born winter 1876-1877). The Chevals may have descended from early Cheval settlers of the
Tremé district, Pierre and Léandre. In 1879, Rodolphe started a relationship with Clementine Walker, born in 1860 and a daughter of John and Ophelia Walker. Rodolphe and Clementine had at least four children, Mary Celine (March 25, 1879), John Alexander (1881), Louise (1889), and Oscar Alphonse (1892). Clementine died on September 23, 1893. Mary Celine later became known as Mamie Desdunes and was a blues pianist. Clementine lived near
Jelly Roll Morton's godmother, and Jérémie and Henriette Desdunes were neighbors of Morton's mother. From this proximity, Morton learned the song he recorded as "Mamie's Blues" or "2:19 Blues" and attributed it to Mamie, singing, "Can’t give a dollar, give a lousy dime,/ I wanna feed that hungry man of mine." Other associates of Mamie included performer
Bunk Johnson and promoters
Hattie Rogers and
Lulu White. Mamie married George Degay in 1898, and died of tuberculosis on December 4, 1911. Oscar was also a musician. After his nephew Clarence's death in 1933, Oscar played with his band, the Joyland Revellers. Rodolphe had three other daughters, possibly by Clementine, named Edna, Lucille, and Jeanne (born about 1893). '', 1874. Clash between the (racially integrated) Police and the (segregationist)
White League on Canal Street
Militia In the early 1870s during Reconstruction, Desdunes was a member of the
New Orleans Police Department. In 1874, under the command of former Confederate General and then adjutant general of the Louisiana Militia
James Longstreet, Desdunes was among the injured in the
Battle of Liberty Place, fought between the pro-Republican city, state, and federal forces, and a pro-Democratic, largely ex-Confederate group called the
White League. ==Political and civil service==