Didn't get as many pics as I would have liked too. Hard as hell to shoot in a 30 mph wind (especially with smoke blowing everywhere and me trying to avoid the smoke)
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The Linton Family—The wealthy Linton family bought “Clifton,” a mansion overlooking the river that was associated with three prominent Natchez families—the Postlethwaites, the Lintons, and the Surgets. In the later subdivision of the property, Clifton Avenue was named for the house and Linton Avenue was named for the family
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Louis Duncan Kastor—In the early 1900s Louis Duncan Kastor greatly impressed a writer traveling the country to document the economic and educational progress of African Americans. He noted that Kastor was the only man of his race to conduct such a large and successful harness business. Kastor began his business on Franklin Street with $65 and by 1902 had annual sales of $22,000.
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Just a neat picture
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Issac Lowenburg—High on Jewish Hill overlooking the Mississippi River lies one of our city’s most beloved mayors, Isaac Lowenburg, who served two terms of office in the late 1870s and early 1880s. He arrived in Natchez in 1863 with the Union Army and despite this affiliation, his German accent, his Jewish faith; he rose to great heights in the business and political world of Natchez
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Rosalie Beekman—Daughter of a merchant at Natchez Under-the-Hill, seven-year-old Rosalie Beekman was the sole casualty of the bombardment of Natchez by the U. S. Essex in 1862—the city’s only significant military conflict during the Civil War. "Papa they shot me dead".
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Andrew Brown—Andrew Brown was a trained architect who emigrated from Scotland to Natchez where he established one of the most successful lumber businesses in the South. His riverfront estate, Magnolia Vale, featured one of the most famous gardens of the nineteenth-century South. A metal monument with a life-size statue pointing to heaven distinguishes the family plot.
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History Of The Jazz Funeral Band—Let our own Rusty Jenkins tell you about this famous and traditional way to honor a loved one with a special send-off. As you depart the cemetery, we’ll entertain you with our own special version of “When the Saints Go Marching In,” or shall we sing, “Out.”
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