Pull up an ice chest or a cotton bale, peel yourself a crawfish, make yourself comfortable and have some fun at the coolest little shack in town.
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Monday, May 26, 2025
Saturday, May 17, 2025
Retired Archeologist and Local Historian, Mr. Smokye Joe Frank to discuss the history of the locomotive, “The Mississippi,” built in England in 1834 at the May 27, 2025 meeting of the Natchez Historical Society.
“Tracking the Tracks: The Natchez & Hamburg Railroad and the Locomotive Mississippi”
Mr. Frank’s presentation will be given at the Historic Natchez Foundation, 108 Commerce Street, on May 27, 2025, beginning with a social at 5:30p.m.
The locomotive, The Mississippi, was built in England in 1834. It was shipped to New York City and assembled. From there it was shipped to New Orleans and up the Mississippi River to Natchez. It was pulled up the Natchez bluff by Yoke of Oxen. The Mississippi Railroad ran from 1836 to 1844 in southwest Mississippi. It went bankrupt in 1844. At that time, it was sold to the Grand Gulf to Port Gibson rail line. In 1863, the locomotive was used during the Civil War by both North and South. It was recovered from the river at Vicksburg in 1880 and shipped to Brookhaven, Mississippi, where it was used to haul gravel and lumber. It was acquired by Illinois Central and in 1893 it was overhauled at the McComb, Mississippi, rail yard and, under its own steam, made it to be on display at the Chicago World’s Fair. It remained in Chicago until 2015 and was sold to a company in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is presently for sale.
Joseph ‘Smokye Joe’ Frank is a retired Regional Manager with the State of Louisiana Rehabilitation Services. He has undergraduate and graduate degrees in Social Studies from Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. He has taught Anthropology and Social Studies at two of Northwestern’s extension programs in DeQuincy and Jonesville,
The program is free to the public. It is part of a lecture series that is funded by a grant from the Mississippi Humanities Council through funding by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
For more information, call 601-431-7737 or send email to info@natchezhistoricalsociety.org.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
Dr. Christian Pinnen to discuss Race and Slavery in Colonial Natchez on April 22
Dr. Christian Pinnen, professor in the Department of History at Mississippi College, is coming to Natchez to talk about the colonial Natchez District in an attempt to resurrect the stories of the enslaved and the role Atlantic Africans played in shaping the region. Dr. Pinnen will present his lecture, "Race and Slavery in Colonial Natchez” at the Tuesday, April 22 meeting of the Natchez Historical Society at 108 S. Commerce St. The program is free to the public. It will begin with a social at 5:30 p.m. and the presentation at 6 p.m.
As European settlers began to explore the lower Mississippi Valley and displace Native American people to build settlements, the Europeans knew that they needed to generate profits to make it a worth while enterprise. Most, specifically in Natchez, believed that the key to success was rooted in the ability of settlers to purchase enslaved Africans and utilize their forced labor in their endeavor to build wealth. While the labor practice of racial slavery was well established in European colonial efforts, local settlers had to make sense of the African people among them in social and legal settings. Using Natchez as a lens, this talk explores how legal concepts around slavery create racial categories in Natchez.
Dr. Pinnen’s research focuses on the American borderlands and the legal landscapes that gave rise to definitions of blackness and whiteness in the face of maturing slave societies. He specifically investigates the colonial Natchez District in an attempt to resurrect the stories of the enslaved and the role Atlantic Africans played in shaping the region.
He has published two books: Complexion of Empire in Natchez and Colonial Mississippi. While Colonial Mississippi provides an exhaustive overview of Mississippi’s colonial past, Complexions of Empire in Natchez specifically investigates how the various definitions of race in Europe and the Americas influenced the way that slavery and the law developed in Natchez and, by extension, the colonial southern borderlands.
Dr. Pinnen has won national and international research fellowships from the German Historical Institute, the LSU and University of Texas Libraries, and has presented his research in Europe and the US. He was selected as the Mississippi Humanities Teacher of the Year in 2019, and Complexion of Empire in Natchez won the 2021 Book of the Year Award from the Mississippi Historical Society. In 2024, he was named the Humanities Scholar of the Year by the Mississippi Humanities Council and Distinguished Professor of the Year at Mississippi College.
The April 22 program is funded in part by a grant from the Mississippi Humanities Council, through funding by the National Endowment for the Humanities. For more information, visit natchezhistoricalsociety.org or call 601-431-7737. Emails may be sent to info@natchezhistoricalsociety.org
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Friday, March 7, 2025
Monday, March 3, 2025
Elodie: A cozy Christmas cottage
Elodie: A cozy, Christmas cottage. My house is going to be on tour this spring. Click the link to see a preview.