Walk scenic pathways including an original section of the Natchez Trace. Also, visit its log cabin to see the displays and shop for gifts.
Little remains today of Mead’s grand estate that burned after his death during the Civil War, except the family cemetery.
Established ca. 1800, the Clinton Cemetery is one of the oldest in central Mississippi. Buried here are families of pioneer settlers, ten college presidents, and sixty-three Confederate soldiers.
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery dedicated in Clinton, Mississippi in April, 1857 with burials dating back as early as 1830.
Read MoreOak Grove Cemetery is the final resting place of Civil War soldiers and a former governor of Mississippi.
The Tenn-Tom Waterway is the largest construction project in Corps of Engineers history, requiring more earth-moving than the Panama Canal.
It is a 90 acre complex of eight burial mounds built 1,800 to 2,000 years ago. It is considered the most important archaeological site in North Mississippi.
Pickwick Lake and Bay Springs Lake are famous for scenic beauty such as 50 foot Cooper Falls located on Pickwick Lake just north of J. P. Coleman State Park.
Read MoreCrow’s Neck RV Campground is a long-term and short-term RV camping with all hookups, general store, food service, and fuel sales.
Crow’s Neck is a 530 acre wooded peninsula on 6,600 acre Bay Springs Lake.
Read MoreChurch Street was originally called Cotton Street, having been named after the Cotton family. Nine, beautiful historic churches are located on Church Street in Port Gibson.
Come take a stroll along various trails and visit the monument and gravesite of the Captain of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.