Top of the Morning column published in The Natchez
Democrat (Wednesday, February 18, 2026, page 4A)
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Top of the Morning
How Prospect Hill owner helped shape Alcorn State
University
By Roscoe Barnes III
The story of Prospect Hill Plantation is a piece of
history that reads like a novel. It is a dramatic story with many twists and
turns. It’s a story about slavery and freedom, but it’s also a story about
education with ties to Alcorn State University.
It begins with Captain Isaac Ross (1760 – 1836), a
planter and a veteran of the American Revolutionary War of South Carolina. When
he came to the Mississippi Territory in 1808, he brought with him over 100
enslaved people as well as the freed Blacks who had fought with him in the
military. A man of wealth, he bought thousands of acres of land in Jefferson
County near Port Gibson and developed what became Prospect Hill Plantation.
Ross, according to some historical accounts, allowed some
of the enslaved people to learn to read and write, even though such practice
was unusual and illegal in Mississippi at the time.
Given his interest in educating those he enslaved, it is
not surprising that he would invest in a college. In 1830, he used his wealth –
becoming a major donor -- to support the founding of Oakland College, a
private, white men’s-only school near Rodney that was affiliated with the
Presbyterian denomination. Its mission, initially, was to prepare men for
ministry.
Ross and other contributors were joined by the Rev.
Jeremiah Chamberlain (1794 – 1851), who served as the school’s president from
1830 to 1851. Chamberlain was murdered in 1851 in front of his home at the
college. He was killed by George Briscoe, a local planter, who beat him and
stabbed him in his chest. Briscoe killed him reportedly because Chamberlain
opposed slavery and did not support southern rights, according to historical
accounts. Other accounts suggest he and the faculty had expelled a student for
giving a pro-states' rights or pro-secession speech on campus.
When the Civil War broke out in 1861, the school began to
struggle as its students and faculty joined the military to fight in the war.
In 1862, the school closed, with the Union Army occupying its campus during the
war.
In 1871, the state of Mississippi purchased the campus
for the purpose of establishing a new educational institution. This marked the
formal end of Oakland College as an entity.
The state reopened the school as Alcorn University. It
was founded specifically to educate the descendants of formerly enslaved
African Americans, making it the first Black land‑grant college in the United
States. The school was named in honor of Mississippi State Governor James Lusk
Alcorn (1816-1894).
In 1871, Hiram Rhodes Revels became the first president
of the school. He took the position after becoming the first African American
to serve in the U.S. Congress. Revels served as president until 1873. He was
reappointed in 1876 and remained in the position until 1882.
In 1878, the school was named Alcorn Agricultural and
Mechanical College, which reflected its new mission as a federally recognized
land‑grant college. Alcorn A&M College remained the name until 1974, when
Mississippi officially granted the institution university status and renamed it
Alcorn State University. This change reflected its growth in academic
offerings, infrastructure, and statewide significance.
When we talk about Prospect Hill and its connection to
Alcorn, it’s important to confront the full picture. Slavery remains a dark and
indelible chapter in Mississippi's history. The story of Isaac Ross and
the Prospect Hill Plantation delivers hard facts and painful truths about that
era.
The wealth extracted through the forced labor of enslaved
people at Prospect Hill helped fund Oakland College, which, over time, became
the site of a historically Black land-grant university.
That transformation, however, does not soften or erase
the cruelty of slavery or the profound suffering endured at Prospect Hill. That
reality remains painful and unchangeable.
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ROSCOE BARNES III, Ph.D., is the cultural heritage
tourism manager at Visit Natchez.