299:. The United States required jurisdictions through which the Trace passed to commit to development of a tavern or inn every six miles on the trace. George Selser built an inn at this site, which opened in 1780. A British traveler named Francis Bailey stayed at "Seltzer's tavern" in July 1797, recording in his journal, "We found there was no beef to be got in the place; but our host obliged us by killing an ox on purpose for us, which he dried and prepared fit for packing. We stood in want also of biscuit, which we could not readily procure here. There was only one man who knew how to make it, and that was a baker in the fort, who was a Spaniard, to him we applied, and after a good deal of entreaty (for he was obliged to do it clandestinely) he made us a quarter of a hundredweight. Here we got our horses fresh shod, and likewise had some iron hobbles made for them, to prevent their being stolen by the Indians." In 1808 there were three taverns in Seltsertown, and seven other buildings.
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238:. The mound is 35 feet (11 m) in height, with two secondary mounds at either end of its summit that rise even higher. It once had a total of six to eight mounds on its summit but only the two on the ends have survived. It covers 6 acres (2.4 ha). It was described as being of "extraordinary size" in the 1848 book
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John McCullum eventually became the owner of the inn. A sign outside of the inn, while owned by McCullum, read "Intertainment for Man and Baste." The inn caught fire and was destroyed during the
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268:, as their main ceremonial center. Emerald was abandoned by the time of the French colonial period, and the hereditary chief of the Natchez had his capital at the nearby
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The Late
Prehistory of the Natchez Region : Excavations at the Emerald and Foster Sites, Adams County, Mississippi
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of the
Natchez Bluffs Plaquemine culture chronology. It was still in use by their descendants, the historic era
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Baily, Francis; Herschel, John F. W. (John
Frederick William); De Morgan, Augustus (1856).
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Donald Ricky (Jan 1, 2000). "Indians of
Mississippi and Southeastern Woodlands:A History".
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568:. University of Pittsburgh Library System. London : Baily Bros. pp. 347–348.
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U.S. Geological Survey
Geographic Names Information System: Selsertown, Mississippi
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and it is the second-largest Pre-Columbian earthwork in the United States, after
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is located there, once known as the
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Journal of a tour in unsettled parts of North
America in 1796 & 1797
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Former populated places in Adams County, Mississippi
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353:. Somerset Publishers, Inc. p. 1.
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377:. Jefferson County MSGenWeb Index
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16:Extinct settlement, Natchez Trace
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162:400 ft (122 m)
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308:Mississippi Free Trader
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466:Steponaitis, Vincas P.
375:Communities & Maps
369:Geoghegan, Ann Allen.
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452:National Park Service
417:Squier, E.G. (1848).
306:"Ten Dollars Reward"
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185: • Summer (
109:31.62806°N 91.23611°W
859:United States portal
423:. Washington, D.C.:
297:Nashville, Tennessee
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371:"Selsertown"
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246:Monk's Mound
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805:Ghost towns
762:communities
688:County seat
141:Mississippi
112: /
52: 1816
47:Selsertown
875:Categories
838:Selsertown
795:Washington
780:Pine Ridge
748:Morgantown
743:Cloverdale
589:2024-08-28
583:HathiTrust
543:. TNGenNet
512:2009-02-02
402:26 October
322:References
289:Washington
218:ghost town
214:Selsertown
204:feature ID
100:91°14′10″W
97:31°37′41″N
78:Selsertown
34:Ghost town
26:Selsertown
770:Cranfield
293:Uniontown
258:type site
168:Time zone
159:Elevation
833:Kienstra
775:Kingston
468:(1974).
260:for the
254:Illinois
790:Stanton
713:Natchez
695:Natchez
616:28 July
547:12 July
381:29 July
285:Natchez
250:Cahokia
126:Country
818:Briers
785:Sibley
705:Cities
216:is an
207:686071
148:County
813:Arnot
758:Other
475:(PDF)
196:(CDT)
194:UTC-5
173:UTC-6
153:Adams
136:State
735:CDPs
618:2013
549:2014
404:2016
383:2013
202:GNIS
248:at
220:in
187:DST
877::
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.