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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Monroe County, Mississippi

 
Clickable Map of Monroe 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 Monroe County, MS (30) Chickasaw County, MS (29) Clay County, MS (11) Itawamba County, MS (21) Lee County, MS (107) Lowndes County, MS (57) Lamar County, AL (6) Marion County, AL (13)  MonroeCounty(30) Monroe County (30)  ChickasawCounty(29) Chickasaw County (29)  ClayCounty(11) Clay County (11)  ItawambaCounty(21) Itawamba County (21)  LeeCounty(107) Lee County (107)  LowndesCounty(57) Lowndes County (57)  LamarCountyAlabama(6) Lamar County (6)  MarionCounty(13) Marion County (13)
Aberdeen is the county seat for Monroe County
Adjacent to Monroe County, Mississippi
      Chickasaw County (29)  
      Clay County (11)  
      Itawamba County (21)  
      Lee County (107)  
      Lowndes County (57)  
      Lamar County, Alabama (6)  
      Marion County, Alabama (13)  
 
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Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — Aberdeen
Formed 1834; chartered 1837; in 1849 it was made county seat of Monroe, the first county in the state north of Vicksburg. Cotton trade center and former port for Mobile trade.Map (db m102590) HM
2 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — 90 — Aberdeen Mississippi Blues
Front In 1940 singer-guitarist Booker “Bukka” White, who lived in Aberdeen during the 1920s and ‘30s, recorded the blues classic “Aberdeen Mississippi Blues.” Twenty-three years later the song’s title enabled . . . Map (db m102609) HM
3 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — Brigadier General John Gregg
A native of Alabama, John Gregg (1828-1864) moved to Texas where he served as a member of that state's secession convention and later in the Provisional Confederate Congress. Elected colonel of the 7th Texas Infantry, Gregg was promoted to Brigadier . . . Map (db m102606) HM
4 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — DeSoto Expedition — 1540 —
Hernando DeSoto & his expedition entered present Monroe Co. following an Indian trail from Buttahatchie River. They crossed the Tombigbee R. ¼ mi. E. Dec. 16, 1540 & marched up what is now this street.Map (db m102601) HM
5 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — Dr. W. A. Evans1865-1948
Physician, historian, author. Originated syndicated health column. Chicago health commissioner. Pioneered in pure water and milk laws. Founded Evans Memorial library.Map (db m102599) HM
6 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — Judge Eugene O. Sykes
Judge Sykes, 1876-1945, was Justice of the Miss. Supreme Court 1961-1925, and Chairman of Federal Radio Comm. until becoming first Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, serving until 1935.Map (db m102589) HM
7 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — Reuben Davis(1813 - 1890)
Home of noted politician, criminal lawyer, judge, legislator, congressman of U.S. & Confederacy, author of book, "Recollections of Mississippi & Mississippians."Map (db m102587) HM
8 Mississippi, Monroe County, Aberdeen — St. John's Episcopal Church
Parish organized May 10, 1848. Cornerstone laid Oct. 16, 1851. Dr. Joseph H. Ingraham, rector and architect. Building fund started by Jane Martin Dalton.Map (db m102595) HM
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9 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — 208 — Amory, Mississippi: Blues from a Railroad Town — Mississippi Blues Trail —
Just as Amory’s history is tied to the railroad, so is much of its musical legacy. Several generations of blues, soul and gospel performers came from the families of African-American workers employed here by the Frisco line. Others worked as . . . Map (db m174015) HM
10 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Amory's Tribute to the Heroes of 1861—1865
Front Amory's Tribute to the Heroes of 1861—1865 Right Side List of Members Stonewall Camp #427, Amory, Monroe County, MS Rear To the women of the Confederacy whose pious ministrations to our . . . Map (db m102891) WM
11 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Becker Post OfficeCirca 1920
Becker's first Post Office building operating from 1920 until early 1960s. Given to the Amory Regional Museum by Mr. Hershel Sandlin in memory of his wife Mrs. Kay Sandlin Map (db m102616) HM
12 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Bienville's Fort
On May 22, 1736, a military force commanded by Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, Governor of French Louisiana, landed nearby to attack the Chickasaw. A palisade of 600 log posts was built near here as a base of operations. Defeated in the Battle . . . Map (db m102615) HM
13 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Chickasaw Cession
Area E. of Tombigbee R., S. of Gaines' Trace ceded in Chickasaw Council House Treaty, 1816. Became part of Monroe Co., 1821. South portion severed, 1830, at formation of Lowndes Co.Map (db m102611) HM
14 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Cotton Gin Port
South one mile. Initially an Indian trading post at southern terminus of Gaines Trace. Named for the cotton gin built by U.S. Government for the Chickasaw ca. 1801, it grew into an important river town and cotton market with formation of Monroe . . . Map (db m102613) HM
15 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Gilmore Sanitarium
The Gilmore Sanitarium was built in 1916 by Ellie Davidson Gilmore and his wife, Virginia. This twenty-two bed facility included a laboratory and operating room. The sanitarium served as Amory's primary hospital until 1961, after which the building . . . Map (db m102610) HM
16 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — Mound Cemetery
Mound built circa 100 A.D. for the burial of high-status members of an unknown Indian tribal group. Cemetery established during the mid-1800s by the Nabers family and other early settlers of Monroe County.Map (db m102612) HM
17 Mississippi, Monroe County, Amory — New Hope Church1819
New Hope Primitive Baptist, the oldest church in N. Miss. was organized in 1819 4 mi. S.W. & moved here in 1833. Thomas Willingham was the first pastor. The 1819 Record Book lists white & black members.Map (db m244678) HM
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18 Mississippi, Monroe County, Athens — Athens
N. E. 4 mi. From date of incorporation in 1830 to 1836 it was Monroe Co. seat. S. J. Gholson, J. M. Tucker, & Reuben Davis lived here. River and railway traffic brought about its decline.Map (db m173889) HM
19 Mississippi, Monroe County, Athens — Howell Cemetery
Founded in 1826 by Abraham Howell (1792-1867) & Sarah Andrews Howell (1794-1879) Married in South Carolina October 6, 1811 Settled in Monroe County, Mississippi in 1817 Their children: (*buried here) Andrew* • John • Gilbert • Elisha* • . . . Map (db m244675) HM
20 Mississippi, Monroe County, Caledonia — Mormon Springs
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints was organized on April 6, 1830. Missionaries first arrived in northeastern Mississippi in 1839. Here at Mormon Springs many converts to the church were baptized. Using stones to dam the stream, they . . . Map (db m244673) HM
21 Mississippi, Monroe County, Greenwood Springs — Monroe County Created 1815 Reported missing
To protect the first white settlers on tributaries of the Buttahatachie River, Gov. David Holmes created Monroe County June 20, 1815 from land between the Tombigbee and Black Warrior Rivers.Map (db m173888) HM
22 Mississippi, Monroe County, Nettleton — Camargo 1847
2 mi. NW was the flourishing port of Camargo, named by veterans for their Mexican war camp. The town had a steamboat landing, schools, cemetery, and church. Confederates won a skirmish here, July 14, 1864Map (db m50325) HM
23 Mississippi, Monroe County, Prairie — Gulf Ordnance Plant
The Gulf Ordnance Plant was a military munitions plant where shells were packed for use during World War II. This plant was in operation from 1942 until the war ended in 1945. Managed by Procter and Gamble, the plant covered 6,720 acres of land, . . . Map (db m102585) HM
24 Mississippi, Monroe County, Prairie — The Lenoir Plantation
Built ca. 1847 as the homestead of William Thomas Lenoir, the plantation was continuously owned and farmed by the Lenoir family until its sale in August of 2000. The Lenoir home is the only Classical Revival style house in Mississippi. On February . . . Map (db m102583) HM
25 Mississippi, Monroe County, Sipsey Fork — Center Point Church — 1845 —
Free Will Baptists & Methodists joined in 1845 to build the only church in Sipsey Fork, the community between Splunge, Sipsey & Buttahatchie Rivers. The present church; built in 1963, is on the fourth site.Map (db m173885) HM
26 Mississippi, Monroe County, Smithville — Gaines Trace
S. 2 mi. from Smithville. Road surveyed in 1807 by E. P. Gaines. Ran from Cotton Gin Port to Tennessee R., providing short route to north from isolated settlements of lower Tombigbee Valley.Map (db m173893) HM
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27 Mississippi, Monroe County, Smithville — 19 — Rod Brasfield — Mississippi Country Music Trail —
Born in Smithville, Rod Brasfield was the Grand Ole Opry's top male comedian from 1947-1958, a beloved sad sack foil for Red Foley and Hank Williams and a comic sparring partner for Minnie Pearl and June Carter. He played dramatic and comic roles in . . . Map (db m173897) HM
28 Mississippi, Monroe County, Smithville — Town of Smithville
Smithville had its beginning on December 3, 1836, when Co Chubby, a Chickasaw Indian Co-signatory of the Treaty of Pontotoc, sold Section 6, Township 12S, Range 9E to James D. Couch. About 1840, William Smith purchased land at this site and . . . Map (db m173895) HM
29 Mississippi, Monroe County, Splunge — Splunge Free Will Baptist Church
Built in 1844 as New Pleasant Ridge and called "Grubtoe." this is the oldest Free Will Baptist Church in Mississippi and the oldest church building in Monroe County.Map (db m173887) HM
30 Mississippi, Monroe County, Wise Gap — Wise's Gap 1816
The first community in N. Miss., begun here by John Wise in 1816, had stores, a cemetery, a camp ground, a church called "Uncle Jimmy Wise's Meetinghouse," a blacksmith shop in which future Gov. Tucker worked.Map (db m123031) HM
 
 
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Apr. 23, 2024