Mount Carmel is a ghost town in Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi, United States.
Mount Carmel, Mississippi | |
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Ghost town | |
![]() ![]() Mount Carmel ![]() ![]() Mount Carmel | |
Coordinates: 31°38′43″N 89°47′43″W | |
Country | United States |
State | Mississippi |
County | Jefferson Davis |
Elevation | 492 ft (150 m) |
Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) |
GNIS feature ID | 673998[1] |
Once a thriving 19th-century community, little remains today of Mount Carmel but a museum located within a historic home.
Mount Carmel is one of the oldest settlements in Jefferson Davis County.[2]
Mt. Zion Methodist Church was established near Mount Carmel in 1817.[3]
John Ragan, a Revolutionary soldier from Virginia, laid out the town in 1819, in what was then Covington County.[2][4] The plan provided for lots, streets, and a large central square with two springs.[2] Mount Carmel incorporated in 1835, and had two or three stores, and two churches.[2]
The town also had a well-regarded co-educational school, Mount Carmel Academy, which opened prior to 1830. At one point it had 70 to 80 students. The school moved in 1845.[2][5]
Benjamin L.C. Wailes traveled through the community in 1852 and wrote in his journal:
After crossing [the] Bouie over a bridge (passing through the bottom land in which there is a good deal of large oak & gum mixed with some Shortleaf pine) ascended a considerable eminence to a level table land of Oak and hickory, on which the village of Mount Carmel is situated. About 70 inhabitants. Two or three considerable Country Stores. More business [is] done [here] than at Williamsburg, and the situation is much handsomer, & the buildings (tho' plain frame) [are] better.[2]
Around 1873, John Fielding Holloway built a large house in Mount Carmel, and it remains the community's only 19th-century structure.[2]
Mount Carmel was by-passed during the construction of the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad in 1899, and the Mississippi Central Railroad in 1903. As a result, many businesses and residents moved to one of the nearby railway towns of Prentiss, Bassfield, or Collins.[2] In 1904, Mount Carmel was officially unincorporated.[2]
The nearly abandoned community began to grow again during the early 20th century, when African-Americans began purchasing land in the town and surrounding community. The new community began to prosper, and contained all the essential services, goods and farm products needed for self-sufficiency.[2] In 1911, Robert Decatur "Cap" Polk, a leading African-American planter and businessmen, purchased the Holloway House, and installed a large and modern farm on the nearby property.[2] Now called the John Fielding Holloway House, it remains one of the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in Jefferson Davis County. The home is a historical and cultural center, and tours are available.[6]
Municipalities and communities of Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi, United States | ||
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County seat: Prentiss | ||
Towns | ![]() | |
Unincorporated communities |
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Ghost town | ||
Footnotes | ‡This community also has portions in adjacent county or counties | |
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