A historical marker honoring Prince Abdul Rahman
Ibrahima, enslaved for 40 years near Natchez, will be dedicated on Oct. 24 at
Historic Jefferson College, commemorating his remarkable legacy.
Roscoe Barnes III
Special to The Democrat
Published October 17, 2025
A historical marker honoring Prince Ibrahima will be
dedicated Oct. 24 in Natchez. COURTESY PHOTO (Click on image to enlarge.) |
NATCHEZ, Miss. – Prince Abdul Rahman Ibrahima (1762-1829),
who was enslaved for 40 years on Thomas Foster’s plantation near Natchez, will
be honored with a historical marker on Friday, October 24, near Historic
Jefferson College.
The marker will be the first in the Natchez-Adams County area that pays tribute to Ibrahima. It was acquired through the Mississippi Department of Archives and History.
Michael Morris, director of The Two Museums — Museum of
Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, Jackson, will be the
guest speaker at the ceremony.
Morris is a graduate of Jackson State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in history and master’s degree in political science. While attending university, he worked at the Margaret Walker Center and Fannie Lou Hamer Institute on Citizenship and Democracy.
Morris is a graduate of Jackson State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in history and master’s degree in political science. While attending university, he worked at the Margaret Walker Center and Fannie Lou Hamer Institute on Citizenship and Democracy.
A recognized historian, Morris served on the commission
tasked with commemorating the City of Jackson’s bicentennial in 2022. He has
also written markers for the Mississippi Freedom Trail.
Morris was the Mississippi archivist for the “Our Story,
Our Terms” civil rights project at Duke University. He now serves on the
advisory board of the Mississippi Book Festival.
The dedication ceremony will feature remarks by Warren
Gaines, District 5 Supervisor of Adams County; Dr. Artemus Gaye, seventh
generation descendant of Prince Ibrahima; David Dreyer, local historian and
genealogist; and Dr. Roscoe Barnes III, cultural heritage tourism manager at
Visit Natchez and president of the Mississippi Historical Society.
Cheri Young Burkhalter, the 4th great-granddaughter of
Dr. John Coates Cox, will share remarks about her family history and Ibrahima’s
meeting with Cox in 1807 at the marketplace that was near Jefferson College.
Hill will serve as the master of ceremonies. Rev. Clifton
Marvel, pastor of Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church, will give the
invocation, and Rev. LeRoy White, pastor of Rose Hill Missionary Baptist
Church, will give the benediction.
For more information, call 601-492-3004 or send email to
Roscoe@visitnatchez.org.
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