Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
14 entries match your criteria.  

 
 

Mississippi Writers Trail Historical Markers

The Mississippi Writers Trail pays tribute to the state’s most acclaimed and influential writers through a series of historical markers that recognize the importance of place in an author’s life while educating the public about the history and legacy of Mississippi writers.
 
Richard Wright Marker image, Touch for more information
By Cajun Scrambler, February 27, 2022
Richard Wright Marker
1 Mississippi, Adams County, Natchez — Richard Wright — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On South Commerce Street south of State Street, on the left when traveling south.
Richard Nathaniel Wright was born in Roxie, near Natchez, in 1908. In his youth, he suffered poverty, racism, and being shuffled between an orphanage and the homes of relatives. In Jackson, he was valedictorian of his class at Smith Robertson . . . Map (db m193094) HM
2 Mississippi, Carroll County, Carrollton — Elizabeth Spencer — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Jackson Street east of Lexington Street (State Route 17), on the right when traveling east.
Born in Carrollton in 1921, Elizabeth Spencer aspired to be a writer early on. After receiving encouragement from writer Eudora Welty, whom she met while attending Belhaven College in Jackson, Spencer obtained a master's degree from Vanderbilt . . . Map (db m170313) HM
3 Mississippi, Coahoma County, Clarksdale — Richard Ford — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Delta Avenue north of East 2nd Street, on the right when traveling north.
Born in Jackson in 1944, Richard Ford won critical acclaim with his first two novels, A Piece of My Heart (1976), and The Ultimate Good Luck (1981). While he and his wife, Kristina Ford, lived in rural Coahoma County, Ford wrote The . . . Map (db m235140) HM
4 Mississippi, Coahoma County, Clarksdale — Tennessee WilliamsMississippi Writers Trail
On Clark Street at Yazoo Avenue, on the left when traveling east on Clark Street.
Williams famously remarked that "home is where you hang your childhood", and for the world renowned playwright, that place was the Mississippi Delta, specifically Clarksdale, where he set some of his greatest dramas, including Summer and . . . Map (db m154862) HM
5 Mississippi, Hinds County, Jackson, Belhaven — Eudora Welty — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Pinehurst Street east of Peachtree Street, on the right when traveling east.
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the French Legion of Honor, Eudora Welty typically drew upon her native state for the settings of her fiction. Mississippi's hill country, its Natchez Trace and Delta, Welty's . . . Map (db m133916) HM
6 Mississippi, Hinds County, Jackson, Washington Addition — Margaret Walker — Mississippi Writers Trail —
Near Ayer Hall (East Side).
Born July 7, 1915, in Birmingham, Alabama, Margaret Abigail Walker grew up in a sophisticated Black family in New Orleans. After attending Northwestern University, she joined the WPA in Depression- era Chicago, where she met some of the day's . . . Map (db m178376) HM
7 Mississippi, Lafayette County, Oxford — William Faulkner — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Old Taylor Road, 0.1 miles west of South 10th Street, on the right when traveling west.
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
8 Mississippi, Leflore County, Greenwood — Endesha Ida Mae Holland — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On West Johnson Street just west of Howard Street, on the right when traveling west.
Holland was born August 29, 1944, in Greenwood. Named Ida Mae after her mother, she later gave herself the name “Endesha,” a Swahili word meaning “to steer,” an ideal description for the driven social activist, educator and prize-winning . . . Map (db m229045) HM
Paid Advertisement
9 Mississippi, Marshall County, Holly Springs — Ida B. Wells — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Rust Avenue east of North Memphis Street (State Route 178), on the right when traveling east.
Born to slave parents in Holly Springs on July 16, 1862, Wells' life epitomized the freedom struggle for African Americans following the Civil War. When her parents and an infant brother died in the Yellow Fever outbreak of 1878, Wells raised her . . . Map (db m169992) HM
10 Mississippi, Panola County, Como — Stark Young — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On Main Street north of East Oak Street (State Route 310), on the left when traveling north.
Young was born October 11, 1881, in Como. In 1897, two years after his family moved to Oxford, Mississippi, he enrolled at the University of Mississippi. He would receive his B.A. there in 1901, and an M.A. degree from Columbia University in New . . . Map (db m235142) HM
11 Mississippi, Washington County, Greenville — Shelby Foote — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On South Main Street south of West Walker Street, on the right when traveling south.
Shelby Dade Foote Jr. was born November 17, 1916, in Greenville. A childhood friend of Mississippi novelist Walker Percy, he began his early career as an author publishing five works of fiction. Foote, however, will forever be remembered as a . . . Map (db m157703) HM
12 Mississippi, Washington County, Greenville — Walker Percy — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On South Main Street south of West Walker Street, on the right when traveling south.
Walker Percy was born in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1916, orphaned in late childhood, and adopted at age thirteen by kinsman William Alexander Percy, a poet and patron of the arts from Greenville, Mississippi. After acquiring an MD degree from . . . Map (db m157650) HM
13 Mississippi, Wilkinson County, Centreville — Anne Moody — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On West Park Street North north of West Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
A heroine of the Civil Rights Movement, Anne Moody was born in 1940 in Wilkinson County near Centreville. In her classic 1968 memoir, Coming of Age in Mississippi, she lucidly and eloquently articulates what it was like to grow up in . . . Map (db m193106) HM
14 Mississippi, Yazoo County, Yazoo City — Willie Morris — Mississippi Writers Trail —
On North Main Street, 0.1 miles East Powell Street, on the left when traveling south.
Born in Jackson in 1934, Willie Morris spent a magical Yazoo boyhood playing pranks and baseball with his dog and his friends or playing "Taps" on his trumpet for military funerals. His writing talent was evident early on in pieces he wrote for the . . . Map (db m213946) HM
 
 
CeraNet Cloud Computing sponsors the Historical Marker Database.
This website earns income from purchases you make after using our links to Amazon.com. We appreciate your support.
Paid Advertisement
May. 12, 2024