Haunted Natchez
By Alan Brown
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About this ebook
Take a tour though a charming small town full of all the appeal Dixie has to offer—a tour that reveals there is more to Natchez than its pristine exterior suggests . . .
Just beneath the unassuming placid gentility of classic Southern mansions and estates, ghosts and spirits pervade Natchez. From the old Adams County Jail to the Natchez City Cemetery, spirits from generations past remain in Natchez. Join Alan Brown, experienced Mississippi author and expert on all things haunted, as he surveys the historic haunts of Natchez, a town as rich in history as it is in ghostly activity.
Alan Brown
Alan Brown is a freelance artist who started out as a storyboard artist for a London agency before going back to his roots in the North East to pursue a career in graphic design. As much as he loved working in design for large blue chip clients, Alan’s love has always been illustration. Alan has be fortunate to work on a variety of jobs including Ben 10 Omniverse graphic novels for Viz Media, as well as children’s book illustrations for the likes of HarperCollins and Watts. He has a keen interest in the comic book world and is at home working on bold graphic pieces and strip work. Alan works from an attic studio along with his trusty side kick, Ollie the miniature schnauzer (miniature in size, giant in personality and appetite), and his two sons Wilf and Teddy.
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Haunted Natchez - Alan Brown
ARLINGTON
One of the most prominent of Natchez’s pioneering families was the Surget family. Pierre Surget was born in 1731 in Rochelle, France. As a young man, Pierre worked as a ship’s captain. In the 1780s, he received a Spanish land grant of twenty-five hundred acres southeast of Natchez, Mississippi. At the same time, he moved his wife, Catherine, and their eleven children from Louisiana to Mississippi, which became their permanent home. Three of his children—Captain Francis Surget, James Surget and Jane Surget White—became prominent landowners and citizens of Natchez. Pierre went on to acquire large landholdings in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. He and his other family members owned hundreds of slaves, who worked in the cotton and cornfields.
The Surget family sold their cotton through agents in Liverpool, England, and New Orleans. They also held bank accounts in New York and New Orleans and loaned money to landowners in the Natchez area.
Arlington.
In the years prior to the Civil War, members of the Surget family eventually intermarried with other landowning families in the area. Many people living in Natchez today remember Pierre Surget primarily because of his connection to one of the city’s most significant—and legendary—antebellum homes.
In 1816, construction began on a home for Pierre Surget’s eldest daughter, Mrs. Jane White. In 1820, Mrs. White moved into her beautiful Federal-style villa. Tragically, she died after spending only one night in her beautiful home. Her sister, Mrs. Bingaman, inherited the house, the property and all of the furnishings. Five generations of the Surget family lived at Arlington and added to its store of luxurious furnishings. By 1977, Arlington still contained a three-hundred-year-old spinet piano, objets d’art and a library consisting of thousands of books.
Even though Arlington was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1974, it was an abandoned wreck by the late 1990s. In 2001, a devastating fire destroyed the rear gallery, which had been added after the home was first constructed. The roof was destroyed as well, but the rooms in the main house were undamaged. The owner of the old mansion, the Historic Natchez Foundation (HNF), installed a new roof and rafters and took additional measures to stabilize the house. Still, Arlington is a sad shadow of its former self. All of the windows are broken, and much of the exterior and interior has been marred by spray-painted graffiti. At the time of this writing, the HNF was in the process of installing an alarm system to protect the house from further vandalism.
The ghost story that members of the Surget family passed down from one generation to the next has become as faded as the house itself. For years, people said that every night at the stroke of midnight, a ghostly carriage drove up the long drive and pulled up at the main entrance of Arlington. The door opened, and a beautiful woman climbed out, walked up the steps and passed through the unopened front door. Most people believe that the specter was the ghost of Jane White, who never had the opportunity to spend much time in her beautiful home while she was alive. One can only hope that after Arlington has been fully restored, its signature ghost story will be revived as well.
DUNLEITH
In 1777, a Welsh immigrant named Jeremiah Routh moved his wife and four children to Spanish West Florida in the Natchez District, where he had received a land grant of five hundred acres. In 1791, Routh traveled to Ohio to buy lumber for a two-story frame house. The flatboat on which the lumber had been loaded arrived at Natchez-Under-the-Hill just as a storm was brewing. The next morning, the flatboat and its cargo were gone.
Routh reported the theft to the governor of the post of Natchez. A scoundrel named Olivarez said that the flatboat had come loose from its moorings during the storm, and he claimed the craft and its cargo by right of salvage. Apparently, the stress proved to be too much for Jeremiah Routh. He died in 1791, and the estate was left to his two sons, Job and Jeremiah R., who divided up the property.
Several years later, a judge ordered Olivarez to reimburse Job Routh for the cost of the stolen lumber. Following his marriage to Anne Madeline Miller on May 30, 1792, Job purchased additional acreage with the intention of growing cotton on it. He also acquired a seventeen-hundred-acre land grant south of the center of Natchez. Over the years, Job sold off most of his landholdings, except for the fifty acres on which he had built Routhland. John Routh died of debility on December 12, 1834. His property, including his slaves, was divided among his nine children.
Routh’s daughter Mary, who had married a wealthy planter named Thomas Ellis in 1829, when she was sixteen, inherited Routhland. After Thomas Ellis died in 1839, Mary married a Natchez banker named Charles Dahlgren. Dahlgren immediately took control of Job Routh’s holdings in Mississippi and Louisiana and settled all of his father-in-law’s debts. On August 18, 1855, the Dahlgrens’ fortunes, which had been steadily rising since their marriage, were drastically reversed when their home, Routhland, burned down while they were vacationing in Beersheba Springs, Tennessee.
Dahlgren decided to start all over by building an entirely new mansion where Routhland once stood. He used a plan for a Greek Revival mansion that appeared in the book The Architecture of Country Houses (1856) by Alexander Jackson Davis and Andrew Jackson Downing. The mansion was constructed between 1856 and 1857. The exterior was lined with twenty-six Doric columns. The five-story mansion included a cellar, two parlors,