NPS preparing work on Natchez historic buildings
Published 12:07 am Saturday, May 10, 2014
NATCHEZ — The William Johnson House site in downtown Natchez will be closed to the public on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays through the rest of the month as contractors gear up to begin work on two historic buildings.
The William Johnson House site is one unit of Natchez National Historical Park.
The William Johnson House itself at 210 State St. was home to “the Barber of Natchez” who was a free man of color, entrepreneur and diarist in antebellum Natchez. It houses modern museums on the first floor and the furnished residential rooms of William Johnson and his family upstairs.
The second building slated for work is the historic kitchen structure that sits behind the main house. It was constructed in the 1890s by several of William Johnson’s children who continued to live at the house as adults and work as local schoolteachers. Today, it is used for park staff offices.
Cyclic repairs to these brick structures will include replacement of their wood shingle roofs as well as repainting of their wooden elements in historic colors. The work should not impact the visitor center functions at the site on the days the house remains open. There is no entrance fee charged at this site.
Call 601-447-5790 for more information or visit nps.gov/natc.
“We apologize for any inconvenience caused by this necessary repair work at the site,” park superintendent Kathleen Jenkins said. “We will keep the site open to the public on weekends as well as on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, and the work should be complete in just a few weeks.”