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The Oxford Intelligencer Archive

  • Oxford, Mississippi
  • 18601861

About

In 1832, with the Treaty of Pontotoc, the Chickasaw gave up their ancestral lands in the rolling terrain of northern Mississippi. Lafayette, established four years later, was one of 12 original counties created from the cession. The county seat, Oxford, was chosen as the site of the first state college, the University of Mississippi, which opened its doors to students in 1848. A raid by Union troops in August 1864 left much of the town destroyed. Notable Oxford residents included lawyer, politician, and university professor Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar (1825-93) who was a member of the 1861 secession convention and who served in the United States House of Representatives (1857-60, 1873-77) and U. S. Senate (1877-85), as Secretary of the Interior (1885-88), and as Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1888-93). Nobel-Prize winning author William Faulkner (1897-1962) also called Oxford home.

Archive Info

  • 199
  • Oxford, Mississippi
  • 18601861
0

Source Information

The Oxford Intelligencer, 1860–1861 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: August 25, 2018

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The Oxford Intelligencer
Oxford, Mississippi
 • Page 3
Clipped 
Lafayette Guards - clip 2 - Sam. H Rayburn, Private
Clipped 
Roll of the Lafayette Guards - clip 1

Roll of the Lafayette Guards - clip 1

The Oxford Intelligencer
Oxford, Mississippi
 • Page 2
Clipped 
Lafayette Guards - Samuel H Rayburn

Lafayette Guards - Samuel H Rayburn

The Oxford Intelligencer
Oxford, Mississippi
 • Page 3
Clipped 
CP

CP

The Oxford Intelligencer
Oxford, Mississippi
 • Page 3
Edited 

The Oxford Intelligencer
Oxford, Mississippi
 • Page 2
Edited 

Archive Info

  • 199
  • Oxford, Mississippi
  • 18601861
0

Source Information

The Oxford Intelligencer, 1860–1861 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: August 25, 2018