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NATCHEZ , a city and the county-seat ofSee also: Adams county,
See also: Mississippi, U.S.A., on the Mississippi See also: river, about See also: loo m
.
S.W. of See also: Jackson
.
Pop
.
(1890) 10,101, (1900) £2,210, of whom 7090were negroes, (1910 census.) 11,791
.
It is served by the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley, the St See also: Louis, Iron
See also: Mountain & See also: Southern, the New See also: Orleans &
See also: North-Western and the Mississippi Central See also: railways, and by steamboats on the Mississippi river
.
The city, which has an See also: area of 2.19 sq. in., is mostly on a See also: bluff that rises 200 ft. above the river, the wharfs and landings, and a few old buildings being the only reminders of what was before the See also: Civil War the See also: principal business section
.
Among the city's institutions are the Fisk Public Library, a charity hospital, two sanatoriums, three See also: orphan asylums, Stanton See also: College for girls (non-sectarian; opened in 1894 and lodged in the old Fisk mansion),' St See also: Joseph's College for girls, the Jefferson Military College (1802), 6 m. from the city, and Natchez College for negroes
.
The city has four public parks, three on the river front, and one, Memorial See also: Park, in honour of Confederate dead, in the See also: heart of the city
.
On a neighbouring bluff is a See also: national cemetery
.
Just outside the city limits, at Gloster, the former estate of See also: Winthrop See also: Sargent, first governor of the Territory of Mississippi, are the See also: graves of Sargent and S
.
S
.
Prentiss, who lived in Natchez for some years
.
In and near the city are many handsome old residences typical of ante-bellum Natchez, among them being: See also: Monmouth, General Quitman's estate; See also: Somerset and See also: Oakland, long in the Chotard See also: family; and The Briars, the home during girlhood of Varina See also: Howell, the wife of Jefferson See also: Davis
.
A See also: Roman Catholic See also: cathedral (1841), Trinity See also: Protestant Episcopal See also: Church (1825) and a Presbyterian church (1829) are the principal church buildings
.
The Prentiss and the
See also: Elk are the leading clubs
.
Mardi Gras is annually celebrated
.
The leading See also: industries are the shipment of See also: cotton (70,000 to 90,000 See also: bales are handled annually) and the manufacture of cottonseed oil and cake—the first cottonseed-oil See also: mill in the country was built here in 1834—cotton goods, rope and yarns,
See also: lumber, brick, drugs and ice
.
Natchez was the first city in the See also: state to own municipal See also: water-See also: works and sewage See also: system
.
The city was named from the Natchez See also: Indians who lived on its site when the country was first settled
.
In 1716 on the bluff Le Moyne de Bienville built Fort Rosalie for the See also: protection of some French warehouses, and later the French demanded a neighbouring See also: hill for another
See also: settlement
.
This offended the Natchez, and on the 28th of See also: November 1729 they massacred the French and destroyed the fort, which was immediately rebuilt, and in 1764 was handed over to the See also: English in accordance with the treaty of See also: Paris, and became Fort Panmure; in 1779 it was turned over to the See also: Spanish, who held it until 1798, when they withdrew and See also: United States troops occupied the place
.
Under Spanish See also: rule Natchez was the seat of See also: government of a large See also: district, and from 1798 to 1802 and from 1817 to 1821 it was the capital of Mississippi
.
It was chartered as a city in 1803
.
On the 7th of May 1840 a large See also: part of the city was destroyed by a tornado, but it was soon rebuilt, and at the outbreak of the Civil War was a place of considerable See also: wealth and culture
.
For several years it was the home of General See also: John Anthony Quitman (1799-1858)
.
Natchez surrendered to Union forces during the
See also: Vicksburg See also: campaigns, first on the 12th of May 1852, and again on the 13th of See also: July 1863
.
On the 2nd of See also: September 1862 the Union iron-clad " See also: Essex," commanded by See also: William
See also: David See also: Porter, bombarded the city and put an end to the commercial importance of the river front section
.
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