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"Natchez is situated on the east side of the Mississippi - a small part of the town immediately on the bank and under the hill - the houses here are small - being little else but hucksters' shops - The main body of the town lies an half mile from the river after rising an elevated bluff of 100 or 150 feet by a serpentine road winding obliquely up the hill.
Mistletoe (Natchez, Mississippi) Mitchell – Foster – Young House; Montaigne (Natchez, Mississippi) Montgomery House (Madison, Mississippi) Montrose (Holly Springs, Mississippi) Joseph Henry Morris House; Mosely-Woods House; Mount Holly (Foote, Mississippi) Mount Olive (Natchez, Mississippi) Mount Repose (Natchez, Mississippi) Murphey ...
It includes National Historic Landmark-designated sites: [2]. House on Ellicott's Hill; Stanton Hall; Rosalie; Commercial Bank and Banker's House (c. 1837), consisting of the Commercial Bank Building, a "one-story three-bay stuccoed brick with stone facade commercial building of two-story height with Ionic portico," and the connected Greek Revival style.
Clifton Heights Historic District is located at an elevation more than 200 feet above the Mississippi River.The district is split up from the river by steep bluffs, the jagged edges of which the historic district's western boundary of the western side is formed, and by the low-lying lands underneath the bluffs from which the river bank is formed.
Natchez National Historical Park commemorates the history of Natchez, Mississippi, and is managed by the National Park Service. The park consists of four separate sites: Fort Rosalie is the site of a former fortification from the 18th century, built by the French .
A notice in Green's Impartial Observer [Natchez], February 21, 1801, indicates that James Moore, by that date, is living on the property. An 1805 city tax roll documents the house as having a tax valuation of $8,000, second in value only to Texada, which was built ca. 1798, documented as the city's first brick house, and valued at $12,000.
The site is located on the west bank of Second Creek, a tributary of the Homochitto River and consisted of three platform mounds and a central plaza.It was occupied during both the Coles Creek period (700–1000 CE) and the later Plaquemine Mississippian period (1000–1680 CE), when it was recorded in historic times as the White Apple village of the Natchez.
Location of Adams County in Mississippi. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Adams County, Mississippi.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Adams County, Mississippi, United States.