Road Trip — Natchez Trace Parkway - Clinton to Tupelo Mississippi
(Click photo for all 116 photos)
After spending the night in Clinton, Mississippi, a suburb of Jackson, I got back on the Natchez Trace Parkway and resumed at mile marker 93.
- Mile 93 - Cowles Mead Cemetery - A small family plot of the Mead family, whose home was burned down during the Civil War. As acting governor of Mississippi, Cowles Mead ordered the arrest of former Vice President Aaron Burr on treason charges that he was acquitted of.
- Mile 95 - Osburn Stand - The site of an inn operated by Noble Osburn in the early 1800s.
- Mile 100 - Choctaw Agency - The site where Silas Dinsmore’s performed the difficult duties of being the Choctaw Indian agent.
- Mile 102.4 - Mississippi Crafts Center - Last year the Crafts Center moved off the Trace and into a new building in town. I found it and spend some time marveling at all the wonderful craftsmanship of the artisans. The old building where the Crafts Center was still stands on the Trace, but it is closed.
- Mile 104.5 - Old Trace - Sections of the old Trace, walked by the pioneers, can still be accessed and walked along.
- Mile 105.6 - Ross Barnett Reservoir Overlook - The reservoir is named for Ross Barnett, the 52nd Governor of Mississippi.
- Mile 106.9 - Boyd Site - Six small Indian burial mounds, circa 800-1100.
- Mile 107.9 - West Florida Boundary - The new boundary as determined by the Treaty of Paris at the end of the French and Indian War in 1764.
- Mile 122 - Cypress Swamp (Trace Top 20 Site) - Absolutely gorgeous! A wooden bridge leads you over the swamp waters into an emerald green environment of water and trees. No one else was around, so I enjoyed a quiet walk around the swamp. I kept waiting for some animal to pop it’s head from the water and surprise me, but none did. As pretty as it is, I just can’t even begin to imagine having to walk through that water… ewww.
- Mile 135.5 - Robinson Road - A marker to commemorate the “Old Robinson Road”, named for the man who built it.
- Mile 140 - Red Dog Road - A marker to commemorate the road named to honor the Choctaw leader “Minko” Ofahoma (Red Dog).
- Mile 164.3 - Hurricane Creek - A trail (that I didn’t take) will lead you down to the creek banks.
- Mile 176.3 - Bethel Mission - A marker for the old Bethal “House of God” Mission, one of 13, that was founded to bring Christianity to the Choctaw Indians.
- Mile 180.7 - French Camp - The afternoon thundershower pours down on me as I pull over to look at the memorial marker for French Camp, a still active boarding school for children from broken homes. It stared as a stand (inn) in 1912, and became a school in 1822.
- Mile 193.1 - Jeff Busby Park - Jeff Busby was instrumental in passing legislation to make the Natchez Trace part of the National Park System. This used to be the only place where you could get gas, but they closed it this year.
- Mile 198.6 - Old Trace - Another section of the old Trace that can be accessed and walked along.
- Mile 203.5 - Pigeon Roost - Millions of passenger pigeons used to roost here before they became virtually extinct.
- Mile 213.3 - Line Creek - The boundary between the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian Nations.
- Mile 221.4 - Old Trace - More old Trace that can be accessed and walked along.
- Mile 232.4 - Bynum Mounds - Six burial mounds about 2000 years old. In the late 1940s, the Park Service excavated the mounds and found that the remains of people buried with valued possessions.
- Mile 233.2 - Witch Dance - Legend has it that the witches dance here and the grass doesn’t grow where their feet touch the ground.
- Mile 243.3 - Hernando de Soto - The Spanish explorer spent the winter of 1540-41 near here and story has it (depicted on a Pontotoc post office mural) that it was in this camp that the first Christian marriage in America was held here between a Spaniard and a Seminole princess that was being held captive.
- Mile 245.6 - Monroe Mission - The first religious building in northern Mississippi, established in 1827.
- Mile 251.1 - Chickasaw Council House - This was the capital of the Chickasaw Indian Nation in 1820. Chiefs met here to make laws and policies.
- Mile 251.9 - Black Belt Overlook - “Black Belt” refers, not to karate, but to the excellent fertile black soil that is in the area and extends east all the way through most of Alabama; it’s this soil that allowed the area to become a cotton-rich region.
And off the Trace I go, into Tupelo to find dinner and a motel room.





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