List of National Historic Landmarks in Mississippi

This is a List of National Historic Landmarks in Mississippi. It includes current National Historic Landmarks (NHLs), and also National Park Service areas in Mississippi that overlap.

National Historic Landmarks in Mississippi

There are 40 National Historic Landmarks in Mississippi. Five of these are also State Historic Sites. For consistency, the sites are named here as designated under the National Historic Landmark program. A cross-reference list of all seven State Historic Sites is provided further below, which uses different names for some sites. The NHLs are concentrated in 17 of Mississippi's 82 counties. Thirteen are in Adams County alone.

[1] Landmark name Image Date designated[2] Location County Description
1 Ammadelle
Ammadelle
May 30, 1974
(#74001064)
Oxford
34°22′21″N 89°31′06″W
Lafayette Italianate villa built in 1859, designed by Calvert Vaux.
2 Anna Site
Anna Site
September 14, 1993
(#93001606)
Natchez
31°41′43″N 91°20′59″W
Adams A Plaquemine culture archaeological site.
3 Arlington
Arlington
May 30, 1974
(#73000999)
Natchez
31°33′10″N 91°23′33″W
Adams Early historic home.
4 Auburn
Auburn
May 30, 1974
(#74001047)
Natchez
31°32′44″N 91°23′27″W
Adams Early historic home.
5 Beauvoir
Beauvoir
November 7, 1993
(#71000448)
Biloxi
30°23′33″N 88°51′46″W
Harrison Post-war home and library of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, restored by 2008.
6 Champion Hill Battlefield
Champion Hill Battlefield
May 5, 1977
(#71000450)
Bolton
32°19′12″N 90°32′33″W
Hinds A turning point of the American Civil War.
7 Commercial Bank and Banker's House
Commercial Bank and Banker's House
May 30, 1974
(#74002252)
Natchez
31°33′41″N 91°24′19″W
Adams Unusual dual-function building.
8 Siege and Battle of Corinth Sites
Siege and Battle of Corinth Sites
May 6, 1991
(#91001050)
Corinth, MS and Hardeman County, TN
34°56′02″N 88°31′19″W
Alcorn Corinth battlefield - Corinth and Hardeman County, TN
9 Dancing Rabbit Creek Treaty Site June 19, 1996
(#73001024)
Macon
33°00′36″N 88°45′15″W
Noxubee Gathering place of Choctaw Indians, site of 1830 treaty leading to their relocation west of the Mississippi River.
10 Dunleith
Dunleith
December 2, 1974
(#72000684)
Natchez
31°32′59″N 91°23′57″W
Adams A Natchez mansion built in 1855.
11 Emerald Mound Site
Emerald Mound Site
December 29, 1989
(#88002618)
Stanton
31°38′10″N 91°14′50″W
Adams A Plaquemine culture archaeological site.
12 Medgar Evers House
Medgar Evers House
February 16, 2017
(#100000791)
Jackson
32°20′27″N 90°12′45″W
Hinds Home of civil rights activist Medgar Evers.
13 William Faulkner House
William Faulkner House
May 23, 1968
(#68000028)
Oxford
34°21′35″N 89°31′29″W
Lafayette Well-preserved mansion where author William Faulkner lived and wrote.
14 Fort St. Pierre Site
Fort St. Pierre Site
July 19, 1964
(#00000263)
Vicksburg
32°29′44″N 90°47′55″W
Warren Site of French fort during 1719-1729, important for use in dating other archaeological sites due to its integrity and brief period of use.
15 Grand Village of the Natchez
Grand Village of the Natchez
July 19, 1964
(#66000408)
Natchez
31°31′31″N 91°22′54″W
Adams Village and archaeological site of the Plaquemine culture and their descendants the Natchez .
16 Hester Site January 3, 2001
(#75001051)
Amory
Monroe Archaeological site, a campsite used by Paleo-Indian and Archaic peoples in 9000-7000 BC.
17 Highland Park Dentzel Carousel
Highland Park Dentzel Carousel
February 27, 1987
(#87000863)
Meridian
32°22′28″N 88°43′05″W
Lauderdale German-American built carousel within Highland Park.
18 Holly Bluff Site
Holly Bluff Site
July 19, 1964
(#66000412)
Holly Bluff
32°48′51″N 90°40′59″W
Yazoo A Plaquemine Mississippian culture archaeological site.
19 House on Ellicott's Hill
House on Ellicott's Hill
May 30, 1974
(#74001050)
Natchez
31°33′48″N 91°24′14″W
Adams NRHP 74001050
20 Jaketown Site
Jaketown Site
December 14, 1990
(#73001017)
Belzoni
33°14′14″N 90°29′13″W
Humphreys An archaeological site.
21 Lucius Q. C. Lamar House
Lucius Q. C. Lamar House
May 15, 1975
(#75001048)
Oxford
34°22′17″N 89°30′58″W
Lafayette NRHP 75001048
22 Longwood
Longwood
December 16, 1969
(#69000079)
Natchez
31°32′12″N 91°24′17″W
Adams Unfinished antebellum house.
23 Lyceum-The Circle Historic District
Lyceum-The Circle Historic District
October 6, 2008
(#08001092)
Oxford
34°21′58″N 89°32′06″W
Lafayette District associated with events surrounding the historic court-ordered admission of James Meredith to the University of Mississippi in 1962
24 Charles McLaran House
Charles McLaran House
January 3, 2001
(#76001102)
Columbus
33°29′24″N 88°25′54″W
Lowndes Greek Revival mansion.
25 Melrose
Melrose
May 30, 1974
(#74002253)
Natchez
31°32′35″N 91°22′59″W
Adams Home within Natchez National Historical Park that achieves "perfection" in Greek Revival design.
26 Mississippi Governor's Mansion
Mississippi Governor's Mansion
April 24, 1975
(#69000085)
Jackson
32°18′00″N 90°11′00″W
Hinds Together with Old Mississippi State Capitol, designed by William Nichols.
27 Mississippi State Capitol
Mississippi State Capitol
October 31, 2016
(#69000086)
Jackson
32°17′58″N 90°10′49″W
Hinds Notable among state capitols for its unity of design and construction, having been built by a single general contracting firm within a single three-year construction program.[3]
28 Monmouth
Monmouth
June 7, 1988
(#73001001)
Natchez
31°33′17″N 91°23′09″W
Adams NRHP 73001001
29 I. T. Montgomery House
I. T. Montgomery House
May 11, 1976
(#76001092)
Mount Bayou
33°52′31″N 90°43′44″W
Bolivar Former slave Isaiah Montgomery founded successful all-black town here in 1887.
30 Oakland Memorial Chapel
Oakland Memorial Chapel
May 11, 1976
(#74001057)
Alcorn
31°52′33″N 91°08′23″W
Claiborne One of the oldest buildings on Alcorn University campus, the first land grant university for black Americans. It is located within Alcorn State University Historic District.
31 Old Mississippi State Capitol
Old Mississippi State Capitol
December 14, 1990
(#69000087)
Jackson
32°17′58″N 90°10′49″W
Hinds Greek Revival building.
32 Pemberton's Headquarters
Pemberton's Headquarters
December 8, 1976
(#70000319)
Vicksburg
32°20′55″N 90°52′42″W
Warren Confederate General Pemberton's HQ during 47-day siege of Vicksburg, where he decided to surrender the city on July 4, 1863.
33 Port Gibson Battle Site April 5, 2005
(#05000461)
Port Gibson
31°57′28″N 91°01′08″W
Claiborne American Civil War site of Battle of Port Gibson.
34 Rocket Propulsion Test Complex
Rocket Propulsion Test Complex
October 3, 1985
(#85002805)
Bay St. Louis
30°21′50″N 89°35′14″W
Hancock built in 1965, played an important role in the development of the Saturn V rocket.
35 Rosalie
Rosalie
January 19, 1989
(#77000781)
Natchez
31°33′34″N 91°24′30″W
Adams An 1823 Natchez mansion that influenced architecture throughout the Lower Mississippi Valley.
36 Stanton Hall
Stanton Hall
May 30, 1974
(#74002254)
Natchez
31°33′45″N 91°24′03″W
Adams
37 Warren County Courthouse
Warren County Courthouse
May 23, 1968
(#68000029)
Vicksburg
32°21′01″N 90°52′43″W
Warren NRHP 68000029
38 Waverley
Waverley
May 30, 1974
(#73001004)
West Point
33°34′09″N 88°30′13″W
Clay
39 Eudora Welty House
Eudora Welty House
August 18, 2004
(#02001388)
Jackson
32°19′08″N 90°10′13″W
Hinds Home of author Eudora Welty
40 Winterville Site
Winterville Site
September 14, 1993
(#73001031)
Greenville
33°29′09″N 91°03′40″W
Washington A Plaquemine culture archaeological site.

Former NHLs in Mississippi

There have been no de-designations of Mississippi NHLs,[4] but one NHL object has been moved out of the state and was subsequently delisted:

[1] Landmark name[5] Image Date designated[5] Date withdrawn[5] Locality[5] County[5] Description[6]
1 President (Steamboat) December 20, 1989 July 13, 2011 Vicksburg Warren This steamboat plied the Mississippi River watershed after her construction in 1924. In 2009 she was disassembled and transported overland to St. Elmo, Illinois. This loss of historical integrity prompted the National Park Service to withdraw her landmark designation.

National Park Service areas in Mississippi

National Historic Parks, National Battlefields, and certain other areas listed in the National Park system are historic landmarks of national importance that are highly protected already, often before the inauguration of the NHL program in 1960, and are then often not also named NHLs per se. There are five of these in Mississippi. The National Park Service lists these five together with the NHLs in the state.[7] They are:

Landmark name
Image Date established[8] Location County Description
1 Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site
2 Natchez National Historical Park
3 Shiloh National Military Park (shared with Tennessee)
4 Tupelo National Battlefield
5 Vicksburg National Military Park Includes Vicksburg National Cemetery; shared with Louisiana.

See also

References

  1. Numbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
  2. The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
  3. "Secretary Jewell, Director Jarvis Announce 10 New National Historic Landmarks Illustrating America's Diverse History, Culture". Department of the Interior. November 2, 2016. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  4. NHL de-designations
  5. National Park Service (June 2011). "National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-05. Retrieved 2011-07-04..
  6. National Park Service. "National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database". Archived from the original on 2004-06-06. Retrieved on various dates.
  7. These are listed on p.113 of "National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State," November 2007 version.
  8. Date of listing as National Historical Park or similar designation, from various sources in articles indexed.
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