
Drew Bevolo, third generation owner of Bevolo Gas and Electric Lights, is
unlike most business owners. Sure, he can give you the facts and figures of last
month’s sales, what designs the company is currently working on and how many
countries he has shipped to, but he can also hand-make a historical and beautiful
piece of lighting artwork out of simple sheets of copper, thanks to the lessons he
learned from the ground up and the advice from his uncle.
Bevolo Gas and Electric Lights
began in the French Quarter in
1945 when Andrew Bevolo, Sr.
revolutionized the production of
gas lamps. Utilizing a hand riveting
technique rather than making
brittle soldered joints, he created
sustainable gas lights. Bevolo Sr.
honed his skills while working for
historic manufacturing companies
including Ford, Sikorsky, and
Higgins. His master craftsmanship
and artistic style paired up with the
talents of renowned architect A.
Hays Town to create what would
become known as the French
Quarter Lamp. Try taking a step
through the old French Quarter
without catching a glimpse of
this now iconic copper lamp and
you’ll soon find that it simply
can’t be done.
Fast forward over six decades later
and you’ll see that this innovative company is still going strong, and still producing
each and every piece locally by hand. Perhaps this might have something to do with
third generation owner Drew Bevolo’s passion for the art form and his unique
business education at the hands of his uncle. “After a successful stock broker
career in Baton Rouge, I came down to New Orleans to help my uncle Jimmy, the
company’s second generation owner, with the family business,” says Bevolo. “The
company was in a natural state of transition, as most of the old world artisans
were becoming harder and harder to find in an increasingly high-tech world.”
In order to reinvigorate the
business, Bevolo soon found
that hard work and a unique
hands-on education was in
order. “My uncle brought me
on at $100 a week,” Bevolo
recalls.
“He insisted that I
start at the bottom. I did
everything from welding to
delivery. He was hard on me,
and it was the greatest gift
he could have given me.”
It did not take long for the
hard work to pay off, as the
company was rejuvenated
and Drew Bevolo slowly
took over the reigns.
“We now have over 40
employees, and, because
my uncle gave me the gift
of coppersmithing,
I know I can talk to my employees about
anything; any step of the process.”
What started out as a job in the family business soon grew into a passion
that Bevolo fully embraces today.
“Now I can’t help but look at every light I
see. I continue to study,” he says. “As the company grew, and as I grew with it, I
knew that our success would depend on continuing that high quality that people
expected from Bevolo Gas and Electric Lights. People recognize it. They know we
have the best product.”
Proof of that fact isn’t hard to find. Bevolo lanterns grace
not only New Orleans’ historic landmarks such as the Cabildo, Jackson Square,
and Brennan’s Restaurant, they have also been sold to customers in all 50 states
and 29 countries. This is one family business that has certainly branched out.
Where would one be without the other? A true original creation of the French
Quarter, Bevolo Gas and Electric Lights has embraced the romantic and artistic
flair that makes this destination like no other. “The French Quarter lantern is a
trademark of New Orleans,” says Bevolo. “This is a company that was born and
bred here, using local artists and craftspeople.” Perhaps fueled by the flavor of a
unique place, the flickering fantasy of the French Quarter lantern casts a romantic
glow on an art form that, thanks to the Bevolo family, will never be lost.