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Walking Tours through
Historic Yazoo City
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Yazoo City is somewhat distinctive among Mississippi towns
in that it is a planned community. Unlike many other places in the State that grew up
around the happenstance barn, gin or store, Yazoo City's location was carefully selected
by some of the most successful speculators of the Jacksonian era. It was first chosen in
1826 by the wily half-French Indian chief, Greenwood Leflore, who received the acreage on
which Yazoo City was built as a part of the Treaty of Doak's Stand.
Leflore, in turn, sold it within a few months for $10 an acre to
a group of developers who laid out the town on a precise grid plan and called it
Manchester. The streets were named after presidents and after the developers themselves
and the lots were auctioned off between 1830-1834. |

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By 1839, the citizens had developed
a sense of place that made the name Manchester inappropriate. The town had become the
largest community in the county and had the potential of becoming the marketing center of
several counties.
The name that most clearly described these facts was chosen as
the legal title of the town. The town was inextricably tied to the river Yazoo. It took
the name that described this focus: YAZOO CITY.
It is a pleasure to share the Yazoo Historical District with you.
As you make your tour, please remember that the residences are private, not open to public
visits except by special arrangements with the owners or a events scheduled by the
community. It is requested that all homes be viewed from the sidewalk next to the street
and that care be taken not to intrude upon the privacy and quiet residential integrity of
the neighborhood. |
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