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overlooking the
Mississippi River about six miles upriver from the new international boundary, was judged to be a good position for observing and thwarting military movements on the river and was described by Wilkinson as the "most southerly tenable position within our limits." The new fort was named
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was the first in a series of treaties that ceded
Choctaw land to the U.S. government and eventually led to the expulsion of the Choctaw Nation from lands east of the Mississippi River. In exchange for 2,641,920 acres (10,691.5 km) of land, the Choctaws received merchandise worth about $ 2,000
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In subsequent years, the river channel shifted away, leaving Fort Adams far from the
Mississippi River. As of 1993, Fort Adams was a small community and the site of businesses that provided supplies to hunting and fishing camps in the region.
128:(Davion's Rock) for many years thereafter. It acquired the name Loftus Heights in 1764, when a British expeditionary force led by Major Arthur Loftus was ended after being attacked by Indians at this site.
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298:. Compiled by Charles J. Kappler. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1904. Retrieved from Oklahoma State University Library Electronic Publishing Center, March 4, 2013.
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The town was called
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Cultural
Resources Survey of Fort Adams Reach Revetment, Mile 312.2 to 306.0-L, Mississippi River, Wilkinson County, Mississippi
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on the
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selected Loftus
Heights for a military post in 1798 on the advice of Captain Isaac Guion. The site, on a
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In
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set up operations at Fort Adams, which was the first steamboat landing beyond the state line.
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363:"The Role of the Professional Slave Trader in a Slave Economy: Austin Woolfolk, A Case Study"
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mission called the Rock of Davion, first settled as such circa 1689–1700.
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When
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Unincorporated communities in
Wilkinson County, Mississippi
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The site became Fort Adams after the United States and
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Unincorporated community in Mississippi, United States
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Mississippi populated places on the Mississippi River
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over parts of what is now southern Mississippi. The
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New Orleans District, COELMN/PD-91/04. August 1993.
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143:(Pinckney's Treaty), signed in 1795, established
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548:Map of Mississippi highlighting Wilkinson County
340:. University Press of Mississippi. p. 165.
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209:U.S. annexation of the Republic of West Florida
25:June 1864 sketch map of Fort Adams, Mississippi
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108:named Father Albert Davion established a
60:. It is notable for having been the U.S.
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86:This is also the site where the
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289:Treaty with the Choctaw, 1801
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361:Calderhead, William (1977).
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262:Louisiana State University
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229:"Fort Adams, Mississippi"
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271:July 27, 2014, at the
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423:31.08667°N 91.54806°W
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153:Mississippi Territory
141:Treaty of San Lorenzo
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651:United States portal
181:Treaty of Fort Adams
149:Spanish West Florida
93:was signed in 1801.
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644:Mississippi portal
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315:on January 6, 2014
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114:Christianity
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615:Clarksville
602:Ghost towns
559:communities
523:Centreville
498:County seat
426: /
122:New Orleans
70:New Orleans
50:Mississippi
667:Categories
620:Loch Leven
572:Fort Adams
444:Fort Adams
414:91°32′53″W
411:31°05′12″N
215:References
170:John Adams
135:settled a
38:Fort Adams
629:Footnotes
592:Wilkinson
535:Woodville
505:Woodville
395:143907436
387:1533-6271
116:to local
610:Artonish
567:Doloroso
319:March 5,
292:Archived
269:Archived
203:See also
145:latitude
587:Rosetta
177:Choctaw
118:Indians
110:mission
97:History
88:Choctaw
64:on the
58:Natchez
529:Crosby
393:
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106:priest
103:French
81:Jesuit
515:Towns
391:S2CID
161:bluff
133:Spain
383:ISSN
342:ISBN
321:2013
151:and
74:fort
42:port
375:doi
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.