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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A7S_environmental-archaeology_Jackson-MS.html
Picture yourself standing at this spot, centuries ago, long before cars and highways parking lots and interpretive trails. It is springtime. You stand in an Indian village dotted with clay-walled houses; there is smoke rising from numerous fir…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A6Y_landscape-modification-in-prehistoric-times_Jackson-MS.html
Borrow Pits At the Pocahontas site, dirt was dug in prehistoric times from some areas, referred to by archaeologists as borrow pits, for two uses. One was to fill in along the edges of a narrow ridge to make a larger flat area where house…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A6X_midden-sifting-through-the-trash_Jackson-MS.html
Midden Mounds A midden mound is another type of "mound" frequently found where American Indians once lived. Unlike ceremonial mounds, midden mounds were not purposely constructed for a specific use, but rather were created by the accumulati…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2A6W_the-evolution-of-the-pocahontas-site_Flora-MS.html
The time during which American Indians lived at the Pocahontas site can be split into two periods: the period before Mound A was built and the period after. Before Mound A was built there appears to have been a relatively large group of peop…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM29ZB_pocahontas-mounds_Jackson-MS.html
Front The Pocahontas site consists of two mounds and an associated village area. Mound A is a rectangular platform mound currently 20 feet tall, built between AD 750 and 1500. Excavations located structural features on the mound surface, …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM290D_belhaven-historic-district_Jackson-MS.html
The Belhaven neighborhood developed north of the city as Jackson's first suburb. Composed of more than 1,300 historic structures dating from as early as 1904, Belhaven is Mississippi's largest historic district. The neighborhood includes a wide va…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28QF_the-clinton-duel_Clinton-MS.html
On January 12, 1836, Isaac Caldwell, a former law partner of Senator George Poindexter, fought a duel with Samuel Gwin, a protégé of Andrew Jackson. The duel was the result of a lengthy political quarrel that began in 1830, when the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM268H_cofo-central-offices_Jackson-MS.html
Front From this building, COFO (Council of Federated Organizations) coordinated efforts of SNCC, NAACP, CORE, SCLC, and other activist groups from early 1963 through early 1965. Clarksdale's Aaron Henry was COFO president. Bob Moses, pr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM268G_medgar-evers-home_Jackson-MS.html
Front Medgar and Myrlie Evers moved into this home with their children - Darrell and Reena - in 1955 after Medgar became Mississippi's first NAACP Field Secretary. Son Van was born in 1960. Evers was an outspoken activist for voter regi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2680_clinton_Clinton-MS.html
Governor Walter Leake built his home, Mount Salus, in 1825. The Mount Salus post office was authorized that year and renamed Clinton in 1828 to honor Governor Dewitt Clinton of New York. In 1828-30 the state legislature considered relo…
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