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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Oxford, Mississippi

 
Clickable Map of Lafayette County, Mississippi and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Lafayette County, MS (63) Calhoun County, MS (4) Marshall County, MS (29) Panola County, MS (16) Pontotoc County, MS (30) Tate County, MS (7) Union County, MS (12) Yalobusha County, MS (10)  LafayetteCounty(63) Lafayette County (63)  CalhounCounty(4) Calhoun County (4)  MarshallCounty(29) Marshall County (29)  PanolaCounty(16) Panola County (16)  PontotocCounty(30) Pontotoc County (30)  TateCounty(7) Tate County (7)  UnionCounty(12) Union County (12)  YalobushaCounty(10) Yalobusha County (10)
Oxford is the county seat for Lafayette County
Oxford is in Lafayette County
      Lafayette County (63)  
ADJACENT TO LAFAYETTE COUNTY
      Calhoun County (4)  
      Marshall County (29)  
      Panola County (16)  
      Pontotoc County (30)  
      Tate County (7)  
      Union County (12)  
      Yalobusha County (10)  
 
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1 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — 2008 Presidential Debate
The first presidential debate of 2008 between Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain was held at this site on September 26, 2008. National and international media coverage of the event brought the world to Ole Miss and Oxford. . . . Map (db m219879) HM
2 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Buckner-Craig-Isom Cemetery
Buried here between 1837 and 1865 are early settlers of Lafayette Co. Among these is the grave of John J. Craig, purchaser of the Indian lands that are now Lafayette Co. and donor of the site of Oxford.Map (db m102979) HM
3 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Buckner's Trestle
Buckner's Trestle was a wooden bridge built by the Mississippi Central Railroad in the late 1850s. This trestle was the site of two train wrecks. On February 25, 1870, the 3pm mail carrier left Oxford heading south toward Water Valley. The . . . Map (db m219834) HM
4 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Burns "Belfry" Church
Site of Oxford's first African American church, organized by former slaves in 1869-70. First called Sewell Chapel. In 1900, the church was renamed Burns Methodist Episcopal Church. The original wooden building was replaced in 1910 by the present . . . Map (db m102880) HM
5 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Cedar Oaks
Cedar Oaks was built ca. 1857 by architect and builder William Turner. After surviving the Union occupation of Oxford during the Civil War, the house was moved to this site in 1963 by local clubwomen after the house was threatened by . . . Map (db m219924) HM
6 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Delta Gamma Fraternity
Delta Gamma, a national collegiate women's fraternity, was organized during the 1873 Christmas season at the Lewis School, located here. Its founders were three students, Eva Webb, Mary Comfort and Anna Boyd, who were unable to go home to . . . Map (db m219875) HM
7 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Dr. Thomas Isom's Drug Store and Medical Office
Site of the drug store and medical office of Dr. Thomas Dudley Isom Considered to be the first white settler of this region Building circa 1889 – restored 1988 The Oxford Courthouse Square Historic District National Register . . . Map (db m219916) HM
8 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Falkner House
Built in 1931 as the home of Murry and Maud Falkner, the parents of Nobel Prize winning author William Faulkner. The house stands on land purchased in 1898 by J.W.T. Falkner, William Faulkner's grandfather.Map (db m219909) HM
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9 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — First Baptist Church
Organized on May 8, 1842, by the first pastor, William Hosea Holcombe. On June 11, 1843, Charles G. Butler and William H. Caruthers were ordained the first deacons.Map (db m219921) HM
10 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Freedmen Town
After the Civil War, many freedmen from Lafayette County moved into Oxford; settled in the area bounded by Jackson Avenue, Price Street, the railroad and 9th Street; bought land, built houses, schools and churches; and exercised the rights and . . . Map (db m102881) HM
11 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Jacob Thompson's "Home Place"
The mansion ca. 1853 located on this site was burned by Union troops in 1864. Two original outbuildings are included in the present house, built in 1869. Jacob Thompson (1810-1885), a native of North Carolina, moved to Pontotoc, Mississippi, in . . . Map (db m102991) HM
12 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — L. Q. C. Lamar House
Home of Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar from 1868 to 1888. Lamar was an educator at the University of Mississippi; a colonel, 19th Miss. Inf., CSA; a U.S. congressman; senator; Secretary of the Interior; and an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme . . . Map (db m102883) HM
13 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Lafayette County Confederate Monument
Front In Memory of The Patriotism of the Confederate Soldiers Of Lafayette County, Mississippi. ______ They Gave Their Lives In A Just and Holy Cause. Erected 1907 Left side (West) A . . . Map (db m102994) WM
14 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Lafayette County Courthouse
The original courthouse was burned in August 1864 by Union Troops led by Gen. A. J. Smith. Judge R. A. Hill secured Federal funds to construct the present courthouse which was completed and occupied in January 1872.Map (db m102877) HM
15 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Lynching in America / Lynching in Lafayette CountyCommunity Remembrance Project
Lynching in America Thousands of African Americans were victims of racial terror lynching in the United States between 1877 and 1950. During this era, racial terror lynching emerged as a stunning form of violent resistance to emancipation and . . . Map (db m219912) HM
16 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Lynching in America / The Lynching of Elwood HigginbottomCommunity Remembrance Project
Lynching in America Thousands of black people were the victims of racial terror lynching in the United States between 1877 and 1950. The lynching of African Americans during this era was a form of racial terrorism intended to intimidate black . . . Map (db m219923) HM
17 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Mississippi Central R.R. Campaign
On December 2, 1862, as the Confederates fell back to the Yalobusha River, Union Gen. U.S. Grant moved his headquarters from Waterford to Abbeville. On the 4th, he moved to Oxford, while his advance crossed the Yocona River. W.T. . . . Map (db m102879) HM
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18 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Mississippi Central R.R. Campaign
As Gen. Pemberton's Confederates fell back from the Tallahatchie River on December 1-7, 1862, they fought a rear guard action at Oxford on December 2. To prevent the destruction of bridges over the Yocona River, Union cavalry under Col. T. . . . Map (db m219831) HM
19 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Oxford
Chartered in 1836 on Chickasaw cession land, Oxford was named for the university town in England and became home to the University of Mississippi in 1848. During the Civil War, Generals Grant and Sherman met in Oxford (1862), and the Square and many . . . Map (db m102878) HM
20 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — 143 — Oxford & Lafayette County Blues
Lafayette County’s blues history has encompassed a wide range of activity by scholars, promoters, record companies, and musicians. The nightlife of Oxford has welcomed both local performers and national touring acts. The most famous musician . . . Map (db m102876) HM
21 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Oxford Cemetery
E. 3 blocks. Here are buried L. Q. C. Lamar, statesman; A.B. Longstreet, author, educator; Wm. Delay, veteran of 3 wars; Sarah McG. Isom, first southern university faculty woman; & I.D. Isom; first white settler in county.Map (db m102682) HM
22 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Oxford-University United Methodist Church
Founded 1836 as Oxford Methodist Episcopal Church with circuit rider Wm. Craig as first pastor. Earliest presence of Methodism in community. Church home of many bishops, pastors and other church leaders, as well as chancellors of the . . . Map (db m219878) HM
23 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Porter L. Fortune, Jr. Cultural CenterThe University of Mississippi
Porter L. Fortune, Jr. served as Chancellor of the University of Mississippi from February 1969 through March 1984. With colleagues he conceived the idea of the cultural center at Ole Miss and worked throughout his administration to make the . . . Map (db m219874) HM
24 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Rosenwald School
On this site was a five-teacher, wood frame school building, ca. 1922-1936, used for rural African American education. It was one of more than 5,300 built in the South with matching funds contributed by the Julius Rosenwald Fund, black and . . . Map (db m219919) HM
25 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Rowan Oak
Built c. 1848. From 1930 to 1962 home of novelist William Faulkner, who named it for the rowan tree, symbol of security and peace. Now maintained as a literary landmark by the University of Mississippi.Map (db m102988) HM
26 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — St. Peter's (1851), Episcopal
First Cathedral in Diocese. Distinguished members: F.A.P. Barnard, Rector, Chancellor of University of Miss., President of Columbia; Jacob Thompson, Secretary of Interior: William Faulkner, Nobel Prize winner.Map (db m219920) HM
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27 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — The Oxford-University Depot
Built in 1872 by the Mississippi Central R.R. (later part of the Illinois Central line), this depot replaced an earlier structure burned during the Civil War. For many years, the depot was a hub of activity for the town and the University of . . . Map (db m102679) HM
28 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — Theora Hamblett House
An example of Carpenter Gothic architecture, this house was designed and built ca. 1872 by Swedish immigrant G.M. Torgerson, who designed numerous buildings in Oxford. In 1939, the house was purchased by Theora Hamblett (1895-1977), a . . . Map (db m219922) HM
29 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — University High School1930-1963
University High School, established in 1930, was a cooperative enterprise between the University of Mississippi and the City of Oxford to establish a model Demonstration High School and a Teacher Training Program. This was one of the first . . . Map (db m219899) HM
30 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — William Faulkner
The creator of Yoknapatawpha County, whose stories about his people won him the Nobel Prize, is buried twenty steps east of this marker.Map (db m102882) HM
31 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — William Faulkner — Mississippi Writers Trail —
Winner of the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature, William Cuthbert Faulkner was born in New Albany on September 25, 1897, and moved with his family to Oxford as a child. He made an indelible mark on American letters by bringing a modernist literary . . . Map (db m219907) HM
32 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford, College Hill — College Church
Organized by Presbyterian settlers in 1836. Church building erected 1844-46 on land bought from N. Miss. College. Church and vicinity occupied by some 30,000 Union troops Dec., 1862. Wm. Faulkner married here, 1929.Map (db m219926) HM
33 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford, College Hill — College Hill Settlers
. . . Map (db m219948) HM
34 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford, College Hill — Lafayette Agricultural High School
In the early 20th century, the former Male and Female Academy, which had been operated by the College Presbyterian Church, was acquired by the county and renamed the Lafayette Agricultural High School. A brick school was constructed in 1931. In . . . Map (db m219951) HM
35 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford, Community Green — University Faculty Houses
Twenty-one houses in Community Green were originally located on the University of Mississippi campus. Seventeen were built as early as 1939 using Public Works Administration funds. The first African American sorority on campus, the Theta Psi . . . Map (db m219918) HM
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Apr. 28, 2024