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Law Office of Michael G. Calogero
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Law Office of Michael G. Calogero
Law Office of Michael G. Calogero
3500 N Hullen StMetairie Louisiana 70002United States
(504) 456-8683
Business Description
Family First Estate Planning Attorney. Guiding you through creating a plan to put your family first and generate lasting financial success.
The Law Office of Michael G. Calogero is a client-focused Estate Planning Law Firm based in Metairie, Louisiana and serves the entire state of Louisiana, including the New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Shreveport and Monroe areas.
Our legal expertise includes Estate Planning, Last Wills and Testaments, Trusts, Successions, and Power of Attorney Documents.
Attorney Michael Calogero provides each of his clients with personal attention; working through legal matters collaboratively for the best results.
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About Metairie
Metairie ( MET-ər-ee) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, United States, and is part of the New Orleans metropolitan area. With a population of 143,507 in 2020, Metairie is the largest community in Jefferson Parish and was (as of 2010) the fifth-largest CDP in the United States. It is an unincorporated area that (as of 2020) would have been Louisiana's fourth-largest city behind Shreveport if incorporated. == Etymology == Métairie (French: [metɛʁi]) is the French term for a small tenant farm which paid the landlord with a share of the produce, a practice also known as sharecropping (in French, métayage). In the 1760s many of the original French farmers were tenants; after the Civil War, the majority of the community's inhabitants were sharecroppers until urbanization started in the 1910s. == History == In the 1720s French settlers became the first Europeans to settle Metairie in the area known then as Tchoupitoulas and now as Metairie Ridge, a natural levee formed by an ancient branch of the Mississippi River, Bayou Metairie, which flowed through modern-day River Ridge, Metairie, Gentilly, and New Orleans East. It emptied into Mississippi Sound. The Acolapissa Native Americans used this ridge as a road; it is the oldest road in the New Orleans area. Paved in the 1920s, it is called Metairie Road. An electric streetcar was installed running along Metairie Road in the late 1910s, opening the area to greater development.