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Raymond is recognized as one of the oldest towns in
Mississippi, having been chartered on December 15, 1830. Before that
time, plantations dotted the countryside, yielding an abundance of
moneymaking crops.
Writers and historians often project a romantic
illusion of Raymond, suggesting that the town was born out of the
conflict of the Civil War. To the contrary, Raymond was born a
half-century prior to the war and designated to be the seat of Hinds
County. A magnificent courthouse was built 1857-1859, displaying all
of the elegance associated with Raymond’s southern charm. Today the
Smithsonian recognizes the Hinds County Courthouse in Raymond as one
of the ten most perfect examples of Southern architecture in the
United States.
After Raymond was established as the county seat,
large and beautiful homes were built in and around town. Although
most of the homes have disappeared from the landscape, numerous
structures remain to remind of us of Raymond’s antebellum past:
Waverly, Belcher House, Gibbs Von Seutter House, Dupree-Ratliff
House, Phoenix Hall, Shelton House, Chancery Building, Southern
Cedars, Cedarcrest, Futch House, and Mamie’s Cottage on the grounds
of the Dupree House. The Dupree House, located six miles from
Raymond, is a spacious plantation house begun in the 1850s and
completed in the 1870s. Presently, two antebellum houses are being
moved into Raymond from nearby locations and are being restored; the
Yeiser House (also known as Hiawatha) from Champion Hill that was
used as a Confederate hospital, and the Porter House, once located
several miles east of Raymond near or along the road to Cooper’s
Well. Both of these historic homes will soon be featured on
Raymond’s annual pilgrimage.
The major event that molded the history of Raymond
for centuries to come was the Civil War. On May 12, 1863, Union
General James McPherson marched toward Raymond and encountered
Confederate General John Gregg’s Brigade one mile south of town. A
six-hour battle erupted across the banks of Fourteen-Mile Creek,
resulting in one thousand combined casualties. The courthouse,
churches, schools, and many of the homes in town were turned into
hospitals. Responding to the tragedy, the women of Raymond nursed
all of the wounded soldiers, blue and gray alike, until they were
well enough to return to their homes or their regiments. A
Confederate Cemetery south of town is a memorial to those who lost
their lives.
Following the war, Raymond endured hard times. All of
the plantations were financially ruined, leaving the owners
bankrupt. The business district was also destroyed, not only as a
result of the war but also due to a fire that engulfed the town in
1858. Business owners, including the famous daguerreotype
photographer, Elias Von Setter, were forced to seek their fortunes
elsewhere.
During the 1880s, as Raymond recovered from financial
ruin, large and beautiful houses were built in town, all reflective
of the opulence associated with the Victorian era. Many of the
Victorian homes, as well as the antebellum homes, are featured
during Raymond’s annual pilgrimage, A Place Called Raymond.
Following the turn of the century, Raymond was alive
with the spirit of patriotism as the young men in town responded to
the call of duty. Raymond sacrificed hundreds of its young men who
fought and died in World War I, then, two decades later, in World
War II. Times were hard in post-war Raymond as businesses struggled
to recover from the economic woes of both wars.
In 1922-23, Hinds Junior College was established in
Raymond to provide an education for the young people of Hinds
County, especially the rural students. Since that time, the college
has grown into one of the largest community colleges in the nation.
Today, tourists enjoy visiting Raymond and seeing the
sites associated with its antebellum past: the Civil War
battlefield, the Confederate Cemetery, the antebellum homes, Grant’s
headquarters at Waverly, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, and the
historic courthouse. Tourists are also enchanted by the Victorian
influence that can be seen in the houses, the railroad depot, and
the Catholic Church.
Over the past few years, Raymond has a
fresh and charming appearance with the addition of many colorful
flowerbeds downtown and at the entrances to the town. Town square
has also taken on a decorative appearance with an array of flags and
banners on display around the water tower. It is the mixture of the
old and the new that makes Raymond the unique town that it is today,
a town where tourists love to visit and people love to live.
Rebecca Blackwell Drake
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