Minorville Jubilee set for Saturday

Published 12:04 am Thursday, July 24, 2014

On Saturday, history will repeat itself. That day will mark the 23rd anniversary of the Minorville Jubilee. The jubilee is the annual celebration for youth and residents of Minor Street and surrounding areas.

The neighborhood that is historically known as Minorville was carved out of the suburban estate called Concord in the mid- to late-19th century. The original area reached approximately from today’s Wilson Road to the bayou between Shadyside Street and East Oak Street.

Concord was the estate of the Minor family. Stephen (Don Esteban) Minor, a native of Pennsylvania, was the last Spanish commandant of Natchez before the United States assumed power in the late 18th century. Minor was the second owner of Concord.

Email newsletter signup

The house was built about 1790 on a rise centrally located on property near the old Titan Tire plant. The builder was Manuel Gayosa de Lemos, Minor’s predecessor.

The Minor family lived at Concord until George Malin Davis, who also owned Choctaw, Cherokee and Melrose, bought the property in the 1880s. The house burned in 1901, leaving only its servant quarters as a testament to its long existence. The quarters still exist as an attractive building surrounded by massive oaks standing northwest of the tire plant.

Before 1860, the Minors began selling lots on the edges of the estate. The antebellum house Shadyside and its former gardens on Shadyside Street occupy what probably was one of the first parcels sold. Subsequent sales yielded portions of the Woodlawn neighborhood and Minorville.

Minor Street and its surrounding area probably began to solidify into a neighborhood between 1880 and 1890, slightly after the south end of Woodlawn was formed.

Sanborne insurance maps do not recognize the area as a documented neighborhood in the 1897 edition, but do by the 1901 printing.

The area, like its neighbor Woodlawn to the west, has since the beginning been a residential center for the African-American community of Natchez.

We who are involved in the 23rd anniversary of the Minorville Jubilee are asking everyone, young and old, to come out and enjoy themselves at the festivities on Saturday.

Various functions and activities have been planned to make this day a success. Last year we had a great turnout, and we’re looking for an even larger one this year.

So if you are sitting around wondering what to do Saturday, come on over and join the Minorville family for a day of fun and laughter.

Felicia Irving is chairman of the Minorville Jubilee.