So two weeks later we’re at it again! We return to Natchez
to start the Parkway at mile-marker 0. This time the sun is shining, the skies
are blue, and the oppressive fall heat we have been experiencing has been
broken with 70° temperatures and breathable humidity.
|
Here we go! |
The Parkway stretches 444
miles through three states. It was established as a unit of the National Park
System in 1938, officially completed in 2005, and it commemorates the most
significant highway of the Old Southwest.
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Our first stop |
A natural travel corridor, the Trace
dates back many centuries and contributed greatly to the westward expansion of
the United States in the late 1700’s and early 1800’s.
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Sunken Trace |
Before entering the Trace, we had lunch at a Mexican
restaurant then took the road to mile-marker (MM) 41.5 where we experience the
Sunken Trace, a preserved section of the original route where one can imagine
what it was like to follow this path. Just viewing this relic one can imagine
hardships and dangers its itinerants endured.
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Rocky Springs church |
Next we rode to MM 54.8, the
ghost town of Rocky Springs. Established in the late 1700s as a popular
watering place for travelers along the old Natchez Trace, the community of
Rocky Springs reached a maximum population of 2,616 inhabitants, plus
approximately 2,000 slaves, all living in a 25-square-mile area.
|
Bathroom break is over! |
The community
of Rocky Springs began to decline during the Civil War. In 1878 the remaining
inhabitants of Rocky Springs faced an outbreak of yellow fever and in 1930, the
last store closed, and the natural spring, from which the town took its name,
dried up. We viewed a Methodist church and cemetery adjacent to Rocky Springs. We
pressed on to Ridgeland, MS, and the Mississippi Craft Center featuring
hand-made crafts from craftsmen from all over the state.
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Ready to climb "Little Mountain" |
After perusing the
center’s offerings, we found a motel to spend the night, had dinner and turned
in really tired from the day’s activities.
Day 2: After breakfast, we left
the Jackson suburb of Ridgeland and rejoined the Parkway. The route took us
along the western shore of the Ross R. Barnett Reservoir which is huge. We rode
on, adhering to the parkway’s 50 mph speed limit, and passed by the tupelo-cypress
swamp site, but didn’t stop because it looked a lot like home.
|
"Elvis, I'm here!" |
Stopping at the
Jeff Busby Park at MM 193.1, we climbed to the top of “Little Mountain,”
Mississippi’s highest point—a whopping 603 feet, and where a clear day one can
see about 20 miles. Jeff Busby was a Mississippi congressman who proposed that
Congress authorize a survey of the Natchez Trace in 1934. We next stopped at a
section of the Old Trace at MM 198.6. Again, it was awesome to imagine
travelers using this route.
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The house the "King" was born in |
While Indian tribes generally didn’t recognize boundaries,
the Line Creek site at MM 213.3 was the historic boundary between Chickasaw and
Choctaw lands. Stopping at the Chickasaw Council House at MM 251.1, we learned
that this site witnessed the signing of several treaties between the federal
government and the Chickasaw Nation.
|
Jane with young Elvis |
At MM 259.7 we exited the Parkway
and rode into beautiful Tupelo, MS. It was lunchtime so we found a local
restaurant and had some of the best chicken gumbo and roast beef sandwiches we’ve
ever tasted. One doesn’t come to Tupelo and not visit the tiny, two-room home
that was the birthplace of “The King,” Elvis Presley. Around the home is the
"Walk of Life” which highlights events in the Presley family’s life. We
walked the grounds and took our photos and then headed back to the Parkway. At MM
266.0, we stopped at the Parkway’s Visitor’s Center and Headquarters. Here, we viewed
exhibits detailing the groups of people who utilized the pathway. We spotted the
Pharr Mounds at MM 286.7, a collection of eight mounds that were built
1,800-2,000 years ago. We finished this section of the Trace at the Colbert
Ferry, MM 327.3, where George Colbert operated a ferry across the Tennessee
River from 1800 to 1819. His stand, or inn, offered travelers a warm meal and
shelter during their journey on the Old Trace. Colbert looked after his own
well being and once charged Andrew Jackson $75,000 to ferry his Tennessee Army
across the river.
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Colbert's Ferry on Tennessee River |
It was a remarkable stop for us as we saw several bridges
across the Tennessee River that we boated under when we did the Great Loop! We
took the parkway bridge across the river and veered off on a road we thought
would take us to Sheffield, AL, but somehow we ended up in Florence, AL—a place
where we spent many days at the marina while we were on the Great Loop. It was
good to revisit our past.
The next morning we headed back
to the Parkway and proceeded to another Sunken Trace site at MM 350.5 and then
moved on to Dogwood Mudhole at MM 367.3. At this site on the Old Trace was a
mudhole that was impassable to wagons after heavy rain. Wagon travelers would
have to wait until the section dried and hope that more rain wouldn’t further
delay them.
|
Lewis's grave site and monument |
At MM 375.8 we experienced one of the major highlights of the trip,
Old Trace Drive. Here we got to drive on a one-way, 2.5-mile section of the Old
Trace and get a feel of what it was like to travel the trace. We hit another
major highlight of at Trace at MM 385.9, the Meriwether Lewis Gravesite and Monument.
Lewis led a very interesting, but shortened, life.
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Lewis Museum |
He was an explorer, soldier,
politician, and public administrator, and best known for his role as the leader
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition which explored the newly acquired Louisiana
Territory. While traveling the Trace, Lewis came to Grinder’s Stand to spend
the night on October 10, 1809. In the predawn hours of October 11, gunshots
were heard and Lewis later died of gunshot wounds to the head and gut. Multiple
accounts, and probable embellishment by the newspapers, added to the mysterious
circumstances surrounding Lewis’s death.
|
At Jackson Falls |
After viewing the exhibits detailing
his death, we concluded that Lewis’s death was a suicide. Outside the museum a volunteer
described the wealth of discovery that the Lewis and Clark Expedition produced for
this country and the impact it had on settling the west. Back on the Parkway,
we somehow missed the Tobacco Farm at MM 401.4, bud we did find Jackson Falls
at MM 404.7. The falls were small and not very impressive, but we figured it
did serve as a watering hole for the travelers.
|
The Gordon House |
The historic Gordon House at MM
407.7 is the only remaining, intact structure on the Old Trace. In the early
1800’s, this site was a trading post, inn, and ferry for the travelers. The Gordon
family home was built in 1818. We exited the Parkway around MM 415 and set a course
that would take us home. We spent the night in Livingston, AL, and left the
next morning to finish our trip home. It was a great trip and an interesting
experience and something we highly recommend.
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