Holly Bluff, Mississippi
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The village of Holly Bluff is a small unincorporated community in Yazoo County, Mississippi, United States, in the Mississippi Delta.
Originally known as "Sharbrough's Landing" to river boat pilots the community was established by the Sharbrough family in 1877. Located on the Sunflower River early delta cotton planters used the river to ship their cotton to Vicksburg and New Orleans.
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[edit] Geography
Holly Bluff is located at [1].
(32.82139, -90.70889)[edit] The Sharbrough Family
No history of Holly Bluff would be complete without discussing the Sharbrough family. Following the American Civil War, three brothers, Franklin Wilson, John Walter and William Chambliss Sharbrough came to the area now known as Holly Bluff, Mississippi. Their father, Franklin Wilson Sharbrough, a cotton planter from Smith County, Mississippi had lost everything during the war.
The Sharbrough brothers first lived in the area around Green Hill Plantation on Silver Creek. They worked together buying and clearing land for farming. They built the first roads, bridges, levees and cotton gin. Later, they built the first church then called "Sharbrough's Chapel" which still operates today and is now known as Holly Bluff United Methodist Church.
In 1906, the railroad requested the Sharbrough family change the name of Sharbrough's Landing to Sharbroughville. However, the family thought Sharbroughville would be too hard to spell and settled on the name Holly Bluff.
[edit] The Yazoo Delta Railroad
The Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad had been incorporated in 1882 by the Illinois Central to penetrate the fertile Yazoo Delta.[1] In 1905 a line of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad, affectionately called the "Yellow Dog," was laid from Silver City, Mississippi to Holly Bluff.[2] The Principal purpose of the Holly Bluff line was to gain access to the cotton grown by the Sharbrough family in this rich section of the Mississippi Delta. After the building of the railroad, most of the cotton from Holly Bluff was sold in Memphis rather than New Orleans.
[edit] The Prehistoric Mississippian site
Located just outside of Holly Bluff on Mississippi highway 16 is the Lake George mound site. The mounds were built during the prehistoric Temple Mound period. The largest mound rises 55 feet and is the fourth tallest native American mound in the United States. The mounds were built for religious ceremonies and not habitation. The site is important in that it is on the southern margin of the Mississippian cultural advance down the Mississippi River and on the northern edge of that of the Cole's Creek and Plaquemine cultures of the South.[3]
[edit] References
- ^ US Gazetteer files: 2000 and 1990. United States Census Bureau (2005-05-03). Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
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