Gainesville, Mississippi | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 30°21′04″N89°38′23″W / 30.35111°N 89.63972°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Mississippi |
County | Hancock |
Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) |
Gainesville is a ghost town located in Hancock County, Mississippi, near the border of Louisiana.
Formerly a thriving port on the Pearl River, the town underwent marked decline due to the emergence of railways in the mid-19th century. They shifted freight and travel away from rivers, resulting in the abandonment of some port towns.
The land was acquired by NASA in 1962. It was developed as the Stennis Space Center.
The land where Gainesville would be founded was part of the Piney Woods region. Native Americans used the timber from an abundance of longleaf pines to make wooden structures and canoes. They carved the latter with their tools.
Such tall standing and sturdy trees drew the attention of early European explorers to the area as a source for ship masts. [1]
The earliest recorded European settlement of the area was circa 1790. It developed as a port for cotton shipments headed downstream to New Orleans. This first settlement was known as "Cottonport." Documents indicate that, in later years, the settlement was also known as "English Bluff." [2] Later in the 19th century, timber was also shipped downriver from here.
In 1810, an official Spanish land grant of approximately 500 acres was acquired by Dr. Ambrose Gaines, who immodestly named the settlement "Gainesville." [3]
In 1813, during the War of 1812, General Andrew Jackson marched his forces through Gainesville [ citation needed ] shortly before the Battle of New Orleans.
The Pearl River Lumber company was founded in Gainesville in 1832, and became the largest lumber company in the South at the time. It helped to establish Gainesville as one of the most prosperous pre-Civil War settlements in Mississippi.
The town of Gainesville was officially incorporated in 1843, and served as the seat of Hancock County for nearly a decade, until the courthouse burned. [4] A post office operated under the name Gainesville from 1844 to 1918. [5]
The Gainesville Volunteers were organized in 1860 and made up Company G of the 3rd Mississippi Infantry of the Confederate States Army, serving at Vicksburg and Atlanta during the Civil War. [6]
In 1900, Gainesville had a population of 227 and was home to two churches and several stores. [7]
Gainesville began to suffer decline in the latter half of the 19th century, due largely to the emergence of railroads as a means for timber transportation. When a major rail-line bypassed the town by ten miles, residents began to leave the area in search of better jobs.
In 1961, NASA first began considering the area for a research and development center. This later was developed as the Stennis Space Center. Several of Gainesville's abandoned buildings were used by NASA in the early days after it acquired the area. [8]
The rise and fall of Gainesville is remembered as one of the more dramatic examples of post-Civil War/Industrial Revolution effects in Mississippi. The story of Gainesville's decline is one shared by many communities and towns at the time, which underwent rapid population shifts after a growing railroad industry bypassed once thriving settlements.
At its peak, Gainesville boasted a courthouse and numerous homes and other structures of historical significance. According to NASA's Cultural Resources Center, other elements of the town were described as:
"...a hotel called the Gainesville Exchange, a track for horse racing, one or more coffee houses, two barrooms, two drug stores, a Masonic Lodge, shops, stables, brick factories, a telegraph office, dry dock facilities, a steamboat landing, stores for distilling turpentine and other resinous products, and, of course, saw mills."
As late as 1962, many of these historic buildings remained. NASA used some of them for various purposes, including the Rouchon House, an old fishing lodge. NASA held the first flag-raising ceremony here. [9]
In the early 21st century, however, almost none of the town's original structures remains. (See below section for exceptions). A pictorial history of old photographs is maintained on NASA's website. [10] [11]
The followings is a list of documented residents and/or structures once located in Gainesville, as recorded by NASA Cultural Resources:
Following NASA's acquisition of the properties in 1961-1962, a total of 483 existing graves were reinterred to make way for new construction. Of these, 306 were relocated from the Baptist Church (white) Cemetery; 177 from the Colored Cemetery. A total of 224 graves were unmarked. A record of the names and reinterment is maintained by the Hancock County Historical Society. [19]
A 1963 article in the Picayune Item newspaper reported NASA's effort to protect a (at the time) "75-year-old Wistaria (sic) Vine" located near the Rouchon House. Protection efforts included the erection of a fence and plaque marking the significance of the vine. The article reported "some old timers believe {the vine} may be the largest in the world" and described it as "a foot thick and it has spread all over the ground and an adjacent cedar tree sixty of seventy feet tall." [20]
Hancock County is the southernmost county of the U.S. state of Mississippi and is named for Founding Father John Hancock. As of the 2020 census, the population was 46,053. Its county seat is Bay St. Louis.
Diamondhead is a city in southeastern Hancock County, Mississippi, United States. The city is located just over 50 miles (80 km) northeast of New Orleans, Louisiana. It is part of the Gulfport−Biloxi Metropolitan Statistical Area. In February 2012, Diamondhead was officially incorporated as a city. In the 2020 USA decennial census, the city population was 9,529.
Pearlington is a census-designated place (CDP) in Hancock County, Mississippi, United States, on U.S. Route 90, along the Pearl River, at the Louisiana state line. It is part of the Gulfport–Biloxi, Mississippi Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 1,684 at the 2000 census. On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina made landfall just south of Pearlington.
Decatur is the county seat of Wise County, Texas, United States. Its population was 6,538 in 2020.
Courtland is an incorporated town in Southampton County, Virginia, United States. It is the county seat of Southampton County.
The flag of Mississippi consists of a white magnolia blossom surrounded by 21 stars and the words 'In God We Trust' written below, all put over a blue Canadian pale with two vertical gold borders on a red field. The topmost star is composed of a pattern of five diamonds, an Indigenous symbol; the other 20 stars are white, as Mississippi was the 20th state to join the Union. The flag was adopted on January 11, 2021.
The John C. Stennis Space Center (SSC) is a NASA rocket testing facility in Hancock County, Mississippi, United States, on the banks of the Pearl River at the Mississippi–Louisiana border. As of 2012, it is NASA's largest rocket engine test facility. There are over 50 local, state, national, international, private, and public companies and agencies using SSC for their rocket testing facilities.
Wakefield is a village in the town of South Kingstown, Rhode Island, United States, and the commercial center of South Kingstown. Together with the village of Peace Dale, it is treated by the U.S. Census as a component of the census-designated place identified as Wakefield-Peacedale, Rhode Island. West Kingston, another South Kingstown village, was the traditional county seat of Washington County. Since 1991, the Washington County Courthouse has been in Wakefield. The Sheriff's Office which handles corrections is also in Wakefield.
Brentsville is a hamlet in Prince William County, Virginia, United States.
Samuel Sloan was a Philadelphia-based architect and best-selling author of architecture books in the mid-19th century. He specialized in Italianate villas and country houses, churches, and institutional buildings. His most famous building—the octagonal mansion "Longwood" in Natchez, Mississippi—is unfinished; construction was abandoned during the American Civil War.
Stennis International Airport is a public use airport in Hancock County, Mississippi, United States. Owned by the Hancock County Port and Harbor Commission, the airport is located eight nautical miles (15 km) northwest of the central business district of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. It is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2019–2023, which categorized it as a general aviation facility.
A Mississippi Landmark is a building officially nominated by the Mississippi Department of Archives and History and approved by each county's chancery clerk. The Mississippi Landmark designation is the highest form of recognition bestowed on properties by the state of Mississippi, and designated properties are protected from changes that may alter the property's historic character. Currently there are 890 designated landmarks in the state. Mississippi Landmarks are spread out between eighty-one of Mississippi's eighty-two counties; only Issaquena County has no such landmarks.
Halifax Historic District is a national historic district located at Halifax, Halifax County, North Carolina, US that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. It includes several buildings that are individually listed on the National Register. Halifax was the site of the signing of the Halifax Resolves on April 12, 1776, a set of resolutions of the North Carolina Provincial Congress which led to the United States Declaration of Independence gaining the support of North Carolina's delegates to the Second Continental Congress in that year.
Napoleon is an unincorporated community located on the Pearl River in Hancock County, Mississippi, United States.
Mississippi Highway 607 is a state highway in the Mississippi Gulf Coast region. The route starts at U.S. Route 90, and it travels westward to Interstate 10 (I-10). The route has a gap as the road travels through the Stennis Space Center, but resumes north of the center to end at I-59 and US 11 south of Picayune. The road was part of US 11 and US 90, before MS 43 was designated in 1948. MS 607 was created in 1967, after MS 43 was rerouted, and Stennis Space Center was built.
Elysian Fields is a ghost town in Amite County, Mississippi, United States.
Mount Carmel is a ghost town in Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi, United States.
Logtown, Mississippi is a ghost town located in Hancock County, Mississippi. It is one of several ghost towns situated within the 125,000 acre acoustic buffer zone of NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center. It stood along the banks of the Pearl River and had been the site of a very large sawmill and logging community.
Rockport is an unincorporated community in Copiah County, Mississippi.
Catahoula Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Mississippi. It rises in Pearl River County, flows through Hancock County for about 25 miles where it becomes the Jourdan River flowing into the Bay of St. Louis.