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Amid linen and lace, antebellum legacy thrives
CSMonitor ^ | November 20, 2002 | Suzi Parker

Posted on 11/19/2002 7:53:27 PM PST by stainlessbanner

The Southern belles sip from fine antique china on a linen-covered table, lamenting that their husbands can hardly squeeze into their Confederate costumes for Pilgrimage season.

Elizabeth Boggess, her sister Anne McNeil, and Nancy Williams are typical of this small town on the shore of the Mississippi River, a place that hovers in a dreamy antebellum bubble as if the Civil War were yet to come.

In this politically correct era, when the Walt Disney Company buries its 1946 "Song of the South" because of racist overtones, the town - and this group of Natchez faithfuls - are anachronisms in antique gloves. Natchez's oldest families casually mix tales of their slave-owning pasts with talk of the weather and Ole Miss football.

The oddity of it is most apparent during Spring and Fall Pilgrimage seasons, when plantation owners in satin hoop skirts - and those belly-hugging Confederate costumes - fling open their mahogany doors to thousands of Yankee and European tourists. But the burgeoning tourist industry has created a conundrum for Natchez residents as they struggle to come to terms with a past that brings profit, but also shame.

Until 10 years ago, the word "slave" was not uttered on mansion tours. No one knew how to address the past, says Ms. Williams. Yet it was clear that Natchez drew history buffs because it is a place where the Old South lingers, where manners, magnolia, and moonlight still matter.

The majority of gawkers here are white. "We always find more white tourists who want to see the way things were done," says Laura Godfrey, director of the Natchez Chamber of Commerce. "Sure, I think one reason is because blacks have a certain pain associated with that time in history."

Yet many Natchez residents look at the past through a veil of lace and linen rather than a filter of politics. Sarah Jones, an African-American Natchez Garden Club member, insists she has no problem giving tours in houses where slaves once worked.

On a recent Saturday, Ms. Jones guided tourists through the 1798 House on Ellicott Hill, dressed in a late-1700s Empire-waist dress. "Slavery is something you can't forget," she says. "The past is a thing we can't change. We can only learn from it and make things better." And, she points out, freed African-Americans also owned slaves.

The Pilgrimage tours began in the 1930s when the Natchez economy was depressed. River traffic no longer docked here. Cotton was no longer king. And the city's grandest houses were in ruins.

The future was grim until a group of the town's wealthiest women from the oldest families opened their doors to trainloads of Northern tourists who stopped in Natchez on their way to New Orleans. That savvy entrepreneurship saved the town.

The House on Ellicott Hill, Jones told tourists, was the first restoration project of the Natchez Garden Club in 1934, after the group set out to save the city's extraordinary buildings.

These days, the Natchez Pilgrimage employs only about 100 but the fiscal impact is far greater - a spur of about $20 million to the local economy. Tourism in Natchez is boosted by bed and breakfasts and 500 restored antebellum homes.

"The thing about Natchez ... is that people still live like they did in the 1800s, among the family heirlooms and antiques," says Ms. Boggess. "No one even knew [until the Pilgrimage began] that this might be a tad strange to the outsiders."

But now, Natchez tourism officials admit, hoop-skirts and white columns often eclipse the city's rich African-American heritage. And so, in the last decade, there have been efforts to promote the African-American experience.

The William Johnson house, now being restored by the National Park Service, will soon be a major attraction. Mr. Johnson was a free African-American, a successful businessman, and a plantation owner. Many scholars describe his history as one of the most accurate and important antebellum documents.

"For both blacks and whites, it's about ... making sure [Natchez] survives," says McNeil, who recently returned from New Jersey to run her family's plantation, Elms Court. "The Pilgrimage does that. In the end, it's about the continuity of the tradition of family."


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: confederate; dixielist; heritage; history; magnolia; moonlight; oldsouth; southern; southernbelle

1 posted on 11/19/2002 7:53:28 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: *dixie_list; PAR35; condi2008; archy; BurkeCalhounDabney; bluecollarman; RebelDawg; ...
Dixie Ping!
2 posted on 11/19/2002 7:54:49 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: stainlessbanner
The William Johnson house, now being restored by the National Park Service, will soon be a major attraction. Mr. Johnson was a free African-American, a successful businessman, and a plantation owner.

Johnson was a member of the free African-American aristocracy, whose members owned property, operated businesses, entered into business deals with white landowners, had marriages officially recorded, and owned between five and twenty slaves.
Notable Natchez African-Americans

Let's see, he owned land, was married officially, and owned slaves. Well we can say one thing. We know he didn't live in Oregon or Illinois now don't we? Mr. Johnson looks to be a stand up man, although a bit of a gambler. According to the few records I've found he had a family of ten and died from a gambling dispute

3 posted on 11/19/2002 8:12:02 PM PST by billbears
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To: stainlessbanner
Maybe those in the South have a better perspective. They have not been indoctrinated, Pavlovian-style, with the white-guilt reflex.

When it was legal to own slaves, they did. When it was illegal, they stopped.

Oddly, I don't see Teddy Kennedy cringing while moving around Boston because his daddy was a rum-running, stock market manipulating crime kingpin - but if your great-great-grandpappy owned a slave, expect to be looked down upon by the same people who think Teddy is OK.

4 posted on 11/19/2002 8:13:26 PM PST by ikka
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To: stainlessbanner
Natchez is a beautiful little town of great historical interest. They do well to peddle their heritage, but it may be time to repackage it. God forbid they should adopt the Disneyfied Williamsburg model, but it's time to re-discover the antebellum South as something more complex and multi-dimensional than the paradigm manufactured by Hollywood moguls. I'd suggest they begin with a thoughtful presentation of the Old South as a society that, with all its complex mixture of evil and nobility, was a reflection of the values and beliefs of those who created it, and not something forcefully imposed by external interests intent on their own agenda.
5 posted on 11/19/2002 8:17:39 PM PST by Romulus
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To: billbears
That makes it complicated when calculating reparation payments, doesn't it.
6 posted on 11/19/2002 8:30:34 PM PST by PAR35
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To: stainlessbanner
I'd pay good money for a decent NTSC VHS or DVD copy of "Song of the South". I've seen it in the cinema (aeons ago), but the miserable buggers at Disney want to pretend it doesn't exist.
7 posted on 11/19/2002 8:36:59 PM PST by ArrogantBustard
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To: PAR35
Yes it does. When you start calculating the number of blacks that owned slaves in the South and their possible offspring, one wonders exactly how nuts like Farrakhan and Jackson plan to distribute the money. Poetic justice for me would be if someone did research into both those families and found that their ancestors were slaveholders instead of slaves
8 posted on 11/19/2002 8:46:41 PM PST by billbears
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To: ArrogantBustard
I'd pay good money for a decent NTSC VHS or DVD copy of "Song of the South".

I think you can forget about ever seeing it on DVD, unless you want to master it yourself. I know you said NTSC, but I understand that there are decent-quality PAL copies of it floating around from Disney's last UK release about 15 years ago. Might be worth scrounging around eBay or the like to see what you can turn up - PAL-to-NTSC conversion isn't very expensive, and might be the only way you can get a decent copy.

9 posted on 11/19/2002 8:55:18 PM PST by general_re
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To: stainlessbanner
I wonder if the "Cock of the Walk" restuarant is still a thriving place to eat? Natches is a wonderful place to visit.
10 posted on 11/19/2002 8:56:05 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: stainlessbanner
""Laura Godfrey, director of the Natchez Chamber of Commerce. "Sure, I think one reason is because blacks have a certain pain associated with that time in history."""

Kind of strange I don't feel any pain about the Irish Famine or the Great Depression even though my forerunners went through it.

I think much of that Black pain is from watching "Roots" when they was young. Just like "Birth of a Nation" and "Gone with the Wind" created in many Whites minds in the 20th Century what the Civil War era was like.
11 posted on 11/19/2002 9:35:34 PM PST by Swiss
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To: stainlessbanner
BUMP
12 posted on 11/20/2002 4:48:19 AM PST by RippleFire
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To: stainlessbanner
Dixie bump to the city where my parents eloped!
13 posted on 11/20/2002 4:54:38 AM PST by TomServo
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To: stainlessbanner
"The thing about Natchez ... is that people still live like they did in the 1800s, among the family heirlooms and antiques,"

They're lucky. Most of my family heirlooms and antiques are up north somewhere.

14 posted on 11/20/2002 5:05:08 AM PST by aomagrat
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To: stainlessbanner
free dixie,sw
15 posted on 11/20/2002 8:25:12 AM PST by stand watie
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