New
interpretive room to feature period furnishings and artifacts
by Mississippi Monitor | Jun 26,
2026 | Capital/River
By Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., Visit Natchez
By Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., Visit Natchez
NATCHEZ, Miss. – The Pilgrimage Garden Club is
transforming a first-floor room in the historic quarters at Longwood, where
enslaved people once lived, into an interpretive space exploring the lives of
enslaved families. The room is being refurbished with period furniture and
artifacts to reflect its 19th-century setting.
“We are presenting a room that we think would have been
appropriate at that time,” said Dr. Terrel Williams, president of the Pilgrimage
Garden Club. He said the ultimate goal is to recognize the enslaved families
who lived and worked on the Longwood property by bringing their history to life
in this space.
“We’re presenting this exhibit so we can have a better
discussion and understand the fact that there were enslaved people living at
Longwood who helped build this great monument and played an important role in
the lives of the Nutt family,” Williams said.
The exhibit will open to the public on Saturday,
September 26, when the Pilgrimage Garden Club holds its symposium on cotton and
the dependency (historic quarters) at Longwood. The symposium will be held at the
Carriage House.
Little is known about the enslaved families who lived on
the property. Club members hope the new interpretive space will help broaden
public understanding of the lives of the enslaved people whose labor was
central to the Longwood estate.
Mimi Miller, executive director emerita of Historic
Natchez Foundation, described the quarters as a two-story brick building with
gable roof and full-width, double-tiered gallery. She said it is one of the
largest known structures in the Natchez District used to house enslaved people.
The brick structure, which dates to about 1830 or
earlier, is located about 100 feet northwest of the Longwood mansion. It was
likely enhanced or expanded between 1860 and 1861, according to the National
Park Service.
The quarters are one of several historic outbuildings on
the property. The others include a frame carriage house, a dilapidated
one-story frame building north of the quarters and a deteriorated frame kitchen
building.
Longwood is located at 140 Lower Woodville Road. It is a
well-known historic site in Natchez that is recognized as the largest octagonal
home in the United States. It was owned by Haller Nutt, a Unionist, and his
wife, Julia. Philadelphia architect Samuel Sloan designed the building to have
32 rooms.
Longwood sits on 86 acres of property purchased by Haller
Nutt in 1850.
Haller Nutt was one of the wealthiest cotton planters in
the Antebellum South. Over his lifetime, according to Williams and historian D.
Clayton James, he owned 800 enslaved people and 42,947 acres on 21 plantations
stretching from Adams County, Mississippi, to Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana.
Longwood’s construction began in 1860. During this time, Haller
Nutt and his family lived in the quarters temporarily while Longwood was under
construction, sharing the building with enslaved families until the basement
level of the mansion was completed, according to Williams.
When the Civil War broke out in April 1861, it halted
construction. The northern artisans and craftsmen dropped their tools and
returned to the North. They left the upper floors of the house an empty shell,
according to some reports. Many enslaved people remained on the property and
continued labor on the construction, according to the National Park Service.
Only the outside of the building and nine rooms in the
basement area were completed. The Nutt family moved into the completed area on
the basement level of the mansion in 1862.
On June 15, 1864, Haller Nutt died of pneumonia at the
age of 48. His family continued living in the house even though its
construction was never finished.
“It never became what it was supposed to become,” said
Miller.
In 1866, thousands of newly freed African Americans
visited Longwood for a Fourth of July celebration and picnic.
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