International Trade Mart

The International Trade Mart is an organization promoting international trade and the Port of New Orleans.

The old International Trade Mart building (since demolished), corner of Camp & Common Streets.
2 Canal Street World Trade Center New Orleans 2, Formerly known as the "ITM Building", i.e., the International Trade Mart[1]

After World War II, New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw returned to New Orleans where he became a founder of the International Trade Mart.[2] From 1947 to his retirement in 1965, Shaw ran the Trade Mart as a managing director.[2]

The World Trade Mart was chartered in 1945, first opened its doors in 1948, and in 1985, merged with International House to form the World Trade Center New Orleans, a private, non-profit organization with a membership of 2,000 corporations and individuals dedicated to improving trade with New Orleans, Louisiana.

Like its predecessor organizations, the WTC continues to sponsor trade missions to Latin American and Caribbean nations to conduct a variety of educational programs, conferences, seminars, and trade shows and to host dignitaries and other visitors from New Orleans' trade partner nations. The WTC's work is conducted from its 33-story headquarters at the foot of Canal Street.

Trade expansionists advanced their cause further by forming the International Trade Mart (ITM). They intended that IH [International House] and ITM would complement each other and together would form the international program's foundation. The mart satisfied a longstanding ambition for an institution that could exhibit commodities and could provide a setting where buyer and seller could meet easily in New Orleans.

Since the city lacked a manufacturing base, buyers from, say, Mexico might—absent a mart in New Orleans—travel to, say, Toledo to purchase steel or glass. The resulting trade might well bypass New Orleans. But the mart, thought trade expansionists, would maximize the port's chances of handling this trade.

References

  1. designed by Edward Durell Stone
  2. 1 2 Aynesworth, Hugh (February 3, 1969). "Odds Favor Conviction Of Jim Garrison's 'Patsy'". The Pittsburgh Press. 85 (220). p. 17. Retrieved October 23, 2015 via Newsweek Feature Service.
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