National Register of Historic Places listings in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of Oktibbeha County in Mississippi

This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi.

This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.[1]

There are 25 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county.

This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted February 11, 2022.[2]
Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML

Current listings[]

[3] Name on the Register[4] Image Date listed[5] Location City or town Description
1 July 16, 1992
(#92000890)
309 Blackjack Road
33°26′53″N 88°46′56″W / 33.448056°N 88.782222°W / 33.448056; -88.782222 (Bardwell House)
Starkville Constructed circa 1855
2 October 29, 1992
(#92001480)
1280 Mississippi Highway 25, S.
33°26′11″N 88°49′06″W / 33.436389°N 88.818333°W / 33.436389; -88.818333 (Bell House)
Starkville
3 May 1, 1991
(#91000531)
304 S. Jackson St.
33°27′36″N 88°48′51″W / 33.46°N 88.814167°W / 33.46; -88.814167 (Thomas Battle Carroll House)
Starkville
4 October 10, 1985
(#85003003)
Old W. Point Rd.
33°28′31″N 88°48′04″W / 33.475278°N 88.801111°W / 33.475278; -88.801111 (The Cedars)
Starkville
5 July 25, 2012
(#12000433)
Roughly bounded by Jefferson, N. Montgomery, & Yeates Sts., & railroad
33°27′48″N 88°48′52″W / 33.463311°N 88.81453°W / 33.463311; -88.81453 (Downtown Starkville Historic District)
Starkville
6 January 3, 1991
(#90002108)
110 E. Gillespie St.
33°27′28″N 88°48′55″W / 33.457778°N 88.815278°W / 33.457778; -88.815278 (C. E. Gay House)
Starkville
7 November 6, 1986
(#86003127)
Southeastern corner of the junction of Mississippi Highways 12 and 25
33°27′13″N 88°49′17″W / 33.453611°N 88.821389°W / 33.453611; -88.821389 (Gillespie-Jackson House)
Starkville
8 Greensboro Street Historic District June 14, 1982
(#82003112)
Greensboro St.; also Ernest Jones Jr. Dr., Greensboro St., Louisville St., Main St., W., Raymond St., and Yeates St.
33°27′42″N 88°49′29″W / 33.461667°N 88.824722°W / 33.461667; -88.824722 (Greensboro Street Historic District)
Starkville Second set of boundaries represents a boundary increase of July 10, 2008
9 March 17, 1993
(#93000137)
Address Restricted
Starkville
10 January 18, 1985
(#85000099)
217-223 E. Main St.
33°27′50″N 88°48′51″W / 33.463889°N 88.814167°W / 33.463889; -88.814167 (Hotel Chester)
Starkville
11 November 24, 1980
(#80002298)
117 N. Montgomery St.
33°27′56″N 88°48′38″W / 33.465556°N 88.810556°W / 33.465556; -88.810556 (Lampkin-Owens House)
Starkville
12 April 22, 1976
(#76001105)
Address Restricted
Starkville
13 August 30, 1984
(#84002284)
306 S. Jackson St.
33°27′36″N 88°48′51″W / 33.46°N 88.814167°W / 33.46; -88.814167 (Magruder-Newsom House)
Starkville
14 September 7, 2001
(#01000946)
2479 Oktoc Rd.
33°22′04″N 88°45′43″W / 33.367778°N 88.761944°W / 33.367778; -88.761944 (Meadow Woods Plantation House)
Starkville
15
Montgomery Hall
March 26, 1975
(#75001054)
Mississippi State University campus
33°27′13″N 88°47′29″W / 33.453611°N 88.791389°W / 33.453611; -88.791389 (Montgomery Hall)
Starkville Constructed 1902-03 using Beaux-Arts architectural style[6]
16 June 24, 1993
(#93000572)
525 University Dr. and 101-117 N. Nash St.
33°27′47″N 88°48′14″W / 33.463056°N 88.803889°W / 33.463056; -88.803889 (Nash Street Historic District)
Starkville
17 Odd Fellows Cemetery
Odd Fellows Cemetery
July 24, 1990
(#90001064)
Junction of U.S. Route 82 and Henderson St.
33°28′00″N 88°49′15″W / 33.466667°N 88.820833°W / 33.466667; -88.820833 (Odd Fellows Cemetery)
Starkville
18 September 28, 2017
(#100001682)
Roughly bounded by Critz & N. Montgomery Sts., Old West Point Rd. & Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. E.
33°28′08″N 88°48′29″W / 33.468971°N 88.808108°W / 33.468971; -88.808108 (Oktibbeha Gardens Subdivision Historic District)
Starkville
19 April 11, 2002
(#02000354)
2173 Oktoc Rd.
33°23′07″N 88°46′27″W / 33.385278°N 88.774167°W / 33.385278; -88.774167 (Dossey A. Outlaw Plantation)
Starkville
20 October 23, 1992
(#92001398)
Roughly bounded by Hogan, Montgomery, Gillespie, Jackson, Wood, and Washington Sts. and the Illinois Central railroad tracks
33°27′34″N 88°48′48″W / 33.459444°N 88.813333°W / 33.459444; -88.813333 (Overstreet School Historic District)
Starkville
21 September 28, 2017
(#100001684)
Longview Rd.
33°24′16″N 88°51′29″W / 33.404444°N 88.858056°W / 33.404444; -88.858056 (Emma and Ed Rogers House)
Starkville
22 June 2, 2014
(#14000277)
N. side of University Dr., W. of N. Nash & E. of Hartness Sts.
33°27′46″N 88°48′25″W / 33.462908°N 88.806842°W / 33.462908; -88.806842 (Starkville Colored Cemetery)
Starkville
23 John M. Stone Cotton Mill April 29, 1975
(#75001055)
Gillespie St.
33°27′26″N 88°48′09″W / 33.457222°N 88.8025°W / 33.457222; -88.8025 (John M. Stone Cotton Mill)
Starkville
24
Textile Building
May 12, 1975
(#75001056)
South of Starkville on the Mississippi State University campus
33°27′08″N 88°47′30″W / 33.452222°N 88.791667°W / 33.452222; -88.791667 (Textile Building)
Starkville Constructed in 1900 using Italianate, Mission & Romanesque architectural styles. Oldest academic building on the Mississippi State University campus.[7]
25
Walker-Critz House
March 22, 1989
(#89000171)
414 Chapin St.
33°28′01″N 88°48′29″W / 33.466944°N 88.808056°W / 33.466944; -88.808056 (Walker-Critz House)
Starkville

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
  2. ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved February 11, 2022.
  3. ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
  4. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  5. ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
  6. ^ Montgomery Hall
  7. ^ Textile Building
Retrieved from ""