Bruinsburg, Mississippi Explained

Official Name:Bruinsburg, Mississippi
Settlement Type:Ghost town
Pushpin Map:Mississippi#USA
Pushpin Label:Bruinsburg
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Bruinsburg
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Claiborne
Timezone:Central (CST)
Utc Offset:-6
Timezone Dst:CDT
Utc Offset Dst:-5
Elevation M:24
Elevation Ft:79
Coordinates:31.9425°N -91.1572°W
Postal Code Type:ZIP code
Blank Name:GNIS feature ID
Blank Info:691732

Bruinsburg is an extinct settlement in Claiborne County, Mississippi, United States. Founded when the Natchez District was part of West Florida, the settlement was one of the end points of the Natchez Trace land route from Nashville to the lower Mississippi River valley.

It was located on the south bank of Bayou Pierre, 3miles east of the Mississippi River. The town's port, Bruinsburg Landing, was located directly on the Mississippi River, just south of the mouth of the Bayou Pierre.

Once an important commercial and military location, nothing remains today of the village or its port.[1]

History

Establishment to 1860

Bruinsburg is named for Peter Bryan Bruin. The Bruins built their main residence and also their barn atop Indian mounds near the confluence of Bayou Pierre and the Mississippi River. Bruin's settlement was "most northern settlement of the district at that time." Bruin's daughter claimed that she and her father had arrived in Mississippi in 1784.[2] In 1794 Bruin signed contracts arranging for a sawmill to be constructed at Bayou Pierre by four hired slaves: "Stephen, Ben, Ben (mulatto), and Peter."[3] There had previously been a gristmill at the location. On May 7, 1796, at one in the afternoon, a British traveler named Francis Bailey stopped at the settlement, writing in his journal that Bayou Pierre was "a little stream which rises up in the district of the Natchez, and upon the head waters of which, there are some settlements, which form part of that district; there were also two or three plantations at its mouth. Here we went ashore in our canoe, and got some eggs and milk, which were acceptable to us who had been so long deprived of every luxury of this kind. The land here was very nearly overflowed, being very few inches above the level of the river. The inhabitants told me they never remembered the river so high."[4]

Bruinsburg was one of the endpoints of the ancient trail that was surveyed by the U.S. government as the "highway from Nashville in the State of Tennessee to the Grindstone ford of the Bayou Pierre in the Mississippi Territory," now known as the Natchez Trace. [5] The community was also had a Mississippi River boat landing, and future U.S. President Andrew Jackson set up a trading post there during the 1790s. Bruinsburg was where Jackson worked as a slave trader, selling to planters of both the Natchez District and forwarding some people on to New Orleans when the time and price were right.[6] A old resident of Rodney, Mississippi, wrote that in those early days, Jackson "often in company with Bruin, Price, Crane, Freeland, Harmon and others, would engage in running races, wrestling and all those manly exercises common to new countries."[7] According to a history published in the Port Gibson Reveille newspaper, "A tiny village grew up [at Bruinsburg] containing several stores, a tavern, &c., and the place became a lively trading point for the interior country."[8]

After the southern lands near the Mississippi River became American possessions, Bruinsburg was reportedly the first place in the newly organized Territory to hoist the American flag. Bruin was appointed a territorial judge by President John Adams.[9] In January 1807, former Vice-President Aaron Burr, who at the time was wanted on a charge of treason, visited Bruin while fleeing federal agents. As retold by J. F. H. Claiborne, "Early in January, of the coldest winter ever known here, Colonel Burr, with nine boats, arrived at the mouth of Bayou Pierre, and tied up on the western or Louisiana shore. He crossed over to the residence of Judge Bruin, (whom he had known in the revolutionary war) and there learned, for the first time, that the Territorial authorities would oppose his descent, though his landing on the Louisiana side would seem to indicate that he apprehended some opposition. He immediately wrote to Governor Mead, disavowing hostile intentions towards the Territory or the country; that he was en route to the Ouachitta to colonize his lands, and that any attempt to obstruct him would be illegal and might provoke civil war."[10] A witness at Burr's trial stated that Judge Bruin's place was a mile and a quarter below Bayou Pierre and had a cotton gin.[11]

A traveler of 1808 reported that Bruin had recently sold "Bruinsbury...together with a claim to about three thousand acres of the surrounding land to Messrs. Evans and Overaker of Natchez, reserving to himself his house, offices and garden. It is a mile below the mouth of bayau Pierre, the banks of which being low and swampy, and always annually overflowed in the spring, he projected the intended town of Bruinsbury, where there was a tolerably high bank and a good landing which has only been productive of a cotton gin, a tavern, and an overseer's house for Mr. Evans' plantation, exclusive of the judge's own dwelling house, and it will probably never now become a town notwithstanding many town lots were purchased, as Mr. Evans means to plant all the unappropriated lots, preferring the produce in cotton to the produce in houses."[12] [13]

There was a cotton gin and farmland at Bruinsburg in 1822, when two boatmen stopped there on the way down from Cincinnati. One of the boatmen recorded in his journal, "...after some enquiry we got lodging with one Mr. Foot who appeared to have the charge of a cotton gin owned by Evans at a settlement called Bruinsburg. Foot informed me that Judge Bruins the former owner of the farm had laid out considerable of a town here & sold the lots at auction but the purchasers neglecting to enter their claims it returned back to the proprietor who sold it to the present owner & purchased a farm adjacent. Met three Boats going up the Buyo [bayou] loaded with various kinds of provision such as, flour, lard, butter, corn, venison, potatoes, pork, &c." One "R Brasher...quite hearty & rugged" lived "near Bruinsburgh at the mouth of Buyo Pierre..." at that time.In 1841, Rice C. Ballard was the trustee selling the 2,300-acre Bruinsburg plantation in Claiborne County and the enslaved people who worked the land in order "to pay three promissory notes" that were owed Rowan & Harris, a major slave-trading firm in Natchez.[14] The land owners at that time were Robert C. Evans, Thomas L. Evans, and Anna C. Evans. Enslaved residents of Bruinsburg Plantation in 1841 were 90 older children, teens, and adults (Jim Kelly, Nathan, Peter David, Buky, Condorus, Joe, Tom Kelly, Green, Dave, George B, Henry Jeff, Simeon Brown, Jim, Jacob, John Doyle, Isaac, Adam, John B, Nelson, Ralph, George, Aaron Carter, Grandison, Peter Sterne, Grandison, Reason, Washington, Bill Cole, Gaunay, Bill Gray, John Goslin, Jerry, Tom, Joe, Charlotte, Anny, Dinah, Caroline B, Nancy, Betsey, Nelly, Mary, Mary Ann, Hannah, Daphen, Silvey, Anna, Lucy, Melinda, Mary W, Rachael W, Caroline, Beckey, Ann J, Rachael, Ellen, Nancy, Viney, Margaret, Eliza, Ann Mott, Mary J. Jefferson, Beverly, Bill, Milton, Anthony, Lize, Thornton, Peyton, Matthew, Wilson, Daniel, John Smith, Thos Hall, Henry J, Henry P, W. Duckett, George W, Madison N, John, Alfred, Critty, Susan, Henry, Mary B, Emeline B, Peggy N, Sophia, Rachael N, and Kate) and 23 children eight years old and younger.[15]

By 1848 it was noted in a river guide for steamboat people as only a "small place, on the lower side of Bayou Pierre."[16] The plantation and the enslaved families who lived there upon were listed for auction again in 1850.[17] According to the 1890 Port Gibson history, Bruinsburg had "relapsed into a semi-wilderness long before the civil war." Bruinsburg was never incorporated.[18]

American Civil War

According to Henry Watkins Allen, the Confederate governor of Louisiana, at the time of the civil war, Bruinsburg was more plantation than settlement. He commented, "All estates in the South have names given them, for the convenience of marking cotton bales; also, I suppose, from a feeling of pride in the landowners, being a remnant of Anglo-Saxon customs, Bruinsburg belonged to the Evans' estate, a family whose ancestor had not been undistinguished in the war of 1814."[19]

Union Army General Ulysses S. Grant was planning a massive assault on the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, Mississippi. After having failed to land his army at Grand Gulf, Mississippi, he arrived on April 29, 1863, at Disharoon's Plantation in Louisiana, about 5miles north of Bruinsburg on the opposite bank of the Mississippi River. Grant made a plan to land his troops at Rodney, Mississippi, about 12miles downstream, until late that night, an escaped slave (described in the records as an "intelligent contraband") told Grant about the much nearer port of Bruinsburg, which had an excellent steamboat landing, and a good road ascending the bluffs east of the river.

The following day, April 30, 1863, Union soldiers began landing at Bruinsburg, marking the beginning of the Battle of Port Gibson, part of the larger Vicksburg Campaign. Because river traffic had diminished through the war, when the soldiers arrived at Bruinsburg the port was nearly deserted, and, according to historian Warren Grabau, the sole witness was one of Grant's scouts, who promptly explained the route inland to Port Gibson and informed the commanding generals that "there were no Rebels anywhere" in the immediate vicinity. The port proved to have a good solid bank, and space for many boats. The U.S. Army moved 22,000 troops, provisions, and artillery across the Mississippi River in approximately 24 hours. The landing at Bruinsburg stood as the largest amphibious operation in American military history for 79 more years, until the 1942 landings in North Africa surpassed Grant's record.

20th and 21st centuries

There was still a boat landing and a post office at Bruinsburg circa 1913.[20] In the first few years of the 20th century "several dozen families lived in the Judge's burg, and buildings included not only houses but also a church, school and post office." Eudora Welty wrote about the place in Some Notes on River Country, first published in 1944: "Two miles beyond, at the end of a dim jungle track where you can walk, is the river, immensely wide and vacant, its bluff occupied sometimes by a casual camp of fishermen under the willow trees, where dirty children playing about and nets drying have a look of timeless roaming and poverty and sameness....Go till you find the hazy shore where the Bayou Pierre, dividing in two, reaches around the swamp to meet the river. It is a gray-green land, softly flowered, hung with stillness, Houseboats will be tied there among the cypresses under falls of long moss, all of a color. Aaron Burr's 'flotilla' tied up there, too, for this is Bruinsburg Landing, where the boats were seized one wild day of apprehension. Bruinsburg grew to be a rich, gay place in cotton days. It is almost as if a wand had turned a noisy cotton port into a handful of shanty boats. Yet Bruinsburg Landing has not vanished: it is this."[21]

There was still one derelict building standing on pilings at Bruinsburg in the 1980s, and "a metal sign nailed to a tree, but growth had covered all but the word Bruins." The former town and its landing are now located on private property. A historic plaque commemorating Bruinsburg is located on Church Street in Port Gibson.[22] [23]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Weiser . Kathy . Bruinsburg to Port Gibson in the Vicksburg Campaign . Legends of America . March 2012 .
  2. News: 1857-12-30 . We recorded a few days since... . The Weekly Natchez Courier . 1.
  3. Book: McBee, May Wilson . The Natchez court records, 1767–1805 : abstracts of early records . 1953 . Ann Arbor, Michigan : Edwards Brothers, Inc. . Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center . 106, 200.
  4. Book: Baily, Francis . Journal of a tour in unsettled parts of North America in 1796 & 1797 . Herschel . John F. W. (John Frederick William) . De Morgan . Augustus . 1856 . London : Baily Bros. . University of Pittsburgh Library System . 278.
  5. Phelps . Dawson A. . 1954 . The Natchez Trace in Tennessee History . Tennessee Historical Quarterly . 13 . 3 . 195–203 . 0040-3261.
  6. Book: Forman, Samuel . Ill-fated frontier: peril and possibilities in the early American West . 2021 . Lyons Press . 978-1-4930-4462-7 . Guilford, Connecticut.
  7. News: 1886-07-25 . Old Mississippi Correspondence - Rodney - Sept 7, 1854 - Idler . 2024-08-15 . The Times-Picayune . 5.
  8. News: n.a. . 1890-05-30 . The Battle of Port Gibson . The Port Gibson Reveille . 1 . en-us . Newspapers.com . XV . 9.
  9. Book: Rowland, Dunbar . Dunbar Rowland . Courts, Judges, and Lawyers of Mississippi, 1798–1935 . Press of Hederman Bros. . Mississippi Historical Society, and Mississippi Department of Archives and History . 1935 . Jackson, Mississippi . HathiTrust, digitized by Google Books from a copy held by the University of Michigan Libraries.
  10. Book: Claiborne, J. F. H. (John Francis Hamtramck) . Mississippi, as a province, territory, and state : with biographical notices of eminent citizens . 1880 . Jackson, Miss. : Power & Barksdale . Cornell University Library . 278.
  11. Web site: The debates and proceedings in the Congress of the United States, with an appendix, containing important state papers and public documents, and all the ... 10th Cong. 1807-1808. . 2024-08-19 . HathiTrust . 459 . en.
  12. Book: Thwaites, Reuben Gold . Cuming's tour to the western country...v.5, Bradbury's travels in the interior of America...v.6, Brackenridge's journal up the Missouri...Franchère's voyage to Northwest Coast...v.7, Ross's adventures of the first settlers on the Oregon or Columbia River...v.8, Buttrick's voyages...Evan's pedestrious tour . 1904 . A. H. Clark Company . 311 . en.
  13. Book: Cuming, Fortescue . Sketches of a tour to the western country : through the states of Ohio and Kentucky, a voyage down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and a trip through the Mississippi territory, and part of West Florida, commenced at Philadelphia in the winter of 1807, and concluded in 1809 . 1810 . Pittsburgh : Cramer, Spear & Eichbaum . University of Pittsburgh Library System.
  14. News: 1841-04-08 . Trustee's Sale . 2024-07-04 . Mississippi Free Trader . 4 . Advertisement.
  15. News: 1841-03-25 . Trustee's Sale . 2024-08-14 . Mississippi Free Trader . 4 . Advertisement.
  16. Web site: Conclin's new river guide, or, A gazetteer of all the towns on the western waters : containing sketches of the cities, towns, and countries bordering on the ... . 2024-07-13 . HathiTrust . 102 . en.
  17. News: 1850-08-30 . Trustee's Sale . 2024-08-17 . The Port Gibson Herald, and Correspondent . 4.
  18. Web site: Cotton . Gordon . 2020-01-26 . Bethel, Bruinsburg and Burr: little-known history in Claiborne County . 2024-08-19 . Vicksburg Daily News . en-US.
  19. Book: Dorsey, Sarah Anne . Recollections of Henry Watkins Allen . 1866 . M. Doolady . 978-0-7950-0378-3 . 162 . en.
  20. Web site: National Archives NextGen Catalog . 2024-07-07 . catalog.archives.gov.
  21. Book: Welty, Eudora . Some notes on river country . 2003 . Jackson : University Press of Mississippi . Internet Archive . 978-1-57806-525-7.
  22. Web site: Bruinsburg Crossing (April 30-May 1) . November 14, 2016 . National Park Service.
  23. Web site: Bruinsburg . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160311021025/http://markeroni.com/catalog/display.php?code=ms_0070 . March 11, 2016 . November 14, 2016 . Markeroni.