Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 17

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library, Mississippi

The Hubster and I followed the gulf coast straight through Alabama to Biloxi, Mississippi. Perhaps another trip will allow us time to explore Alabama.

Alabama

We thought a scenic drive along the gulf coast would be fun, but the stretch that we drove had many hotels and amusement parks and other businesses, making it difficult to actually see the beaches, much less the water. I guess we should’ve planned that better (not that we plan much of anything when we vacation…we are more of an ‘in the moment’ type of couple).

We did, however, plan on visiting Beauvoir and The Jefferson Davis Presidential Library, thus the purpose for driving from Florida to Mississippi.

We had it on our minds to visit here because on our last cross country trip we randomly discovered a monument to Jefferson Davis at his birthplace in Kentucky.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Now this is a beautiful unobstructed view of the gulf!

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir was the seaside retirement estate of Jefferson Davis, the one and only president of the Confederate States of America. Beauvoir was also the site of the Mississippi Confederate Soldiers Home from 1903 to 1957. The restored antebellum home sits on a 51 acre complex that includes outbuildings, the Confederate Museum, a historic cemetery, the Tomb of the Unknown Confederate Soldier, a nature trail, and a gift shop. The Jefferson Davis Presidential Library contains a biographical exhibit on Jefferson Davis in addition to the research library’s collection on nineteenth-century Southern history.

Hurricanes, including Camille in 1969 and Katrina in 2005, have repeatedly devastated Beauvoir. There has not only been extensive damage to the house, but to paintings, artifacts, the annihilation of the Library Cottage, the Hayes Cottage, the Brick Hospital Confederate Soldiers Museum, the director’s house, and the replica veterans’ barracks, the first floor of the Jefferson Davis Presidential Library and Museum and the beautiful gardens. Restoration is ongoing.

Beauvoir

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

The harp at Beauvoir is in the Grecian style, which was one of the most popular styles of the era. Over 3,000 of this style were sold in London between 1811-1820. Sarah Anne Ellis Dorsey, who owned Beauvoir and bequeathed it to Davis, probably acquired the instrument sometime between then, before she gave it to the Davis Family. The decorations on the front column of the harp are plastered and then gilded in gold leaf.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

The beautiful grandfather clock, hand crafted in 1778, by John Turnbull in George Town, Maryland, (present day Washington D.C.) was a gift to Revolutionary War veteran Samuel Emory Davis, Jefferson Davis’s father. Samuel Davis was born c.1755-58 in Georgia where he enlisted with the American forces.

The clock survived Union raids during the Civil War. The weights inside the clock are cast iron coated concrete weights. Most cast iron weights from clocks and other family trinkets of that period were melted down and used as ammunition. The clock has remained in the Davis family since Samuel received it, and endured Union troop raids that destroyed much of Samuel’s correspondences after the war. Although sources cannot confirm, it may have been passed to Jefferson Davis as a wedding gift to him and his first wife, Sarah Knox Taylor. The clock remained with Jefferson Davis through his life, ending up here in 1879 and now sits in the main entry hall of the last home of Jefferson Davis. It is the oldest piece of furniture at Beauvoir.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

There were workers under the house painstakingly sanding off the whitewash off of the brick by hand and repairing the mortar between the bricks. Then applying new whitewashing.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Jefferson Davis graduated from West Point in 1824 before beginning his military career. He was a colonel in the Mexican-American War. He was appointed to the United States Senate in 1847. In 1853, President Franklin Pierce appointed him Secretary of War. Davis oversaw the construction of the new House and Senate wings of the US Capitol. After Pierce’s administration ended in 1857, Davis returned to the Senate. He resigned in 1861 when Mississippi seceded from the United States. Davis called it “the saddest day of my life”.

On May 22, 1865, Davis was imprisoned in Fort Monroe, Virginia. After two years of imprisonment, he was released at Richmond on May 13, 1867.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

In 1877, Jefferson Davis was looking for a quiet retreat to write his books and papers. He fell in love with Beauvoir and, in 1879, bought it from Sarah Anne Ellis Dorsey for $5,500, to be paid in three payments. Davis made the first payment and six months later, she died. He was her sole heir and inherited the house along with other property.

Davis lived in the Library Pavilion, to the east of the big house, for 2 years before purchasing the property, and wrote his book, ‘The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government’, “an historical sketch of the events which preceded and attended the struggle of the Southern states to maintain their existence and their rights as sovereign communities.” – Jefferson Davis. 

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

The Hayes Cottage, to the west of the big house, is a replica of the original Margaret Davis Hayes Cottage that was used as a guest cottage. Margaret Davis Hayes is the eldest daughter of Jefferson and Varina Davis. Margaret and her family were regular visitors to Beauvoir while Jefferson and Varina resided here.

Both the Library Pavilion and the Hayes Cottages are replicas of the original structures, which were destroyed by Katrina.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir’s Confederate Memorial Cemetery is a plot of land on the back half of the property. The cemetery is the final resting place for 784 graves made up of Confederate veterans, wives, widows, civilians, and the Tomb of the Unknown Confederate Soldier. It is also the final resting place for Samuel Emory Davis, father of President Jefferson Davis.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Documents and letters in the Beauvoir archives reveal that the Beauvoir Memorial Cemetery had hand-painted wooden boards as grave markers before more permanent stones were obtained. One of the inmates, Van Buren Mass, was a sign painter, from Biloxi, paid to inscribe these wooden markers. Later, private funds were used to obtain permanent headstones.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Dec. 1, 1979, Rick Forte of Hattiesburg made the discovery of his life.

Relic hunting with a metal detector in the vicinity of Vicksburg, he found parts of a Confederate soldier’s cartridge box and canteen. Then, nearby, he found what remained of the soldier’s body 117 years after he was killed in the Vicksburg campaign of the War Between the States.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

The discovery led to the establishment of the Tomb of the Unknown Confederate Soldier in the Confederate Veterans Cemetery at Beauvoir.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

The Jefferson Davis Presidential Library has numerous exhibits, as well as an informative video to be viewed in the auditorium. There is a gift shop and a very large library, including an extensive military history section with information dating back to the American Revolution.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

“He was a man of great labor, of great learning, of great integrity, of great purity.” – Senator Reagan of Texas, Postmaster General of the Confederate Government

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

“Eloquent among the most eloquent in debate, wise among the wisest in council, and brave among the bravest in battle.” -Caleb Cushing

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

“Reared on the soil of Mississippi, the ambition of my boyhood was to do something which would redound to the honor and welfare of the state. The weight of many years admonishes me that my day of actual services has passed. Yet the desire remains undiminished to see the people of Mississippi prosperous and happy, and her fame not unlike the past, but gradually growing wider and brighter as the years roll away.” -Jefferson Davis

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

This is a pecan cracker. It was manufactured so that the owner could put it on a base and make it a stationary appliance in the home.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

An Ordinance

To dissolve the Union between the State of Mississippi, and other States, united with her, under the compact, entitled the Constitution of the United States.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

All types of uniforms and weaponry are on display.

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Jefferson Davis with his dog, Traveler, in the library at Beauvoir. -Jerry McWilliams, Artist

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

In Memoriam

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

Beauvoir The Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library

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2025

Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 16

Bald Point State Park, Florida

Bald Point State Park is located on Alligator Point where the Ochlockonee Bay meets Apalachee Bay. The Hubster and I have never been to Florida, much less the gulf coast, and we were looking for a place to stretch our legs. What a treat this place turned out to be!

The coastal marshes, pine flat woods, and oak thickets support a diverse biological community that makes this park perfect for birding and viewing wildlife. View migrations of birds and butterflies in the fall into winter. This park offers sunbathing, fishing and hiking and facilities include a fishing dock and picnic pavilions.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Pavement and boardwalks make for easy access, including wheelchairs, to white sand beaches and a marsh overlook. Public restrooms are available.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

As you can see, on this gorgeous late September day, the Hubster and I nearly had the place to ourselves.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We didn’t see sea turtles, but we were refreshed and rewarded with a peaceful panorama. The sea oats fluttering in the ocean breeze were lovely.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

It was fun watching this fisherman casting his net.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We had never seen this sea creature before (unfortunately it had met its demise), and the fisherman explained that it was a horseshoe crab. Did you know that these creatures are related to scorpions and spiders rather than crabs?! They have 10 legs and 9 eyes! They don’t reach adulthood until they are about 10 years old, and they can live to be about 20 years old.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We learned that with the outbreak of World War II, soldiers from Camp Gordon Johnston near Carrabelle practiced beach training here. In 1942, amphibious warfare training centers were hurried into construction. The Amphibious Training Center (ATC) camp covered over 100,000 acres of remote training area and varied beachfronts and sand bluffs. The US Army 4th Infantry Division that trained at Camp Gordon Johnston led the landing at Normandy. 

In addition to the training function, German and Italian POWs were moved to this site in March 1944. Camp Gordon Johnston later became the second largest POW base camp in the state with branch camps at Telogia, Dale Mabry Field and Eglin Field. Prisoners housed at this site principally performed work in the military camp.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Did you know that a Gulf Fritillary butterfly has a chemical defense mechanism in which it releases odorous chemicals in response to predator sightings? Common predators learn to avoid this species. I wonder if this is anything like the skunks in my backyard!

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

I really wanted, but not wanted, to see an alligator on this trip.

Never happened.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

We strolled on the boardwalk over the tidal marshes and creeks.

The ground ‘moving’ caught my eye and, upon closer inspection, the receding tide exposed hundreds of fiddler crabs! I think these are Leptuca pugilators, if I can believe Google, and are another creature that I don’t see back home.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

Another critter I met was the American green tree frog. I have lots of his frog cousins back home and it was a pleasure to meet this little guy. If you want to know what he sounds like, then click here.

Bald Point State Park, Alligator Point, Florida

See the world around you!

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Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 15

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia-Part 2

In my last post, I shared some of the exhibits you can find in the National Prisoner of War Museum at the Andersonville National Historic Site.

I will share some of the grounds of Andersonville Prison in this post. However, if you haven’t seen my last post, I strongly suggest reading it first, as much of what occurred here is shared there.

The Memorial Courtyard at the rear of the museum displays a meandering stream recalling the water themes common to many POW experiences, and a major brick and bronze sculpture.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

It is meant to be a place of contemplation.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Behind the Memorial Courtyard are the grounds of Andersonville Prison.

You can get a brochure from the visitor’s center. I suggest watching the films, and viewing the exhibits in the center before walking the grounds. There are signs everywhere, but you will feel more oriented if you visit the museum first.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Replicas of tents that prisoners used for shelter. Many prisoners had no shelter, or even proper clothing, to shield them from the elements.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Successful escape from Andersonville was virtually impossible, and it was much rarer than what has often been portrayed. Even most of those who managed to successfully escape from Andersonville did so between the Fall of 1864 through the Spring of 1865, when the prison and its security systems were breaking down as the war ended.

Escape from Camp Sumter (Andersonville) had an extremely high rate of failure. For a Union prisoner to make a successful attempt for freedom from the prison compound, he had to make it past stockade walls, guards, artillery surrounding the stockade, local militia, citizen mobs, and patrols with tracking hounds. Patrols for Confederate deserters and escaped slaves often caught escaped prisoners, sending dozens of men back to the stockade.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

When the prisoners returned home and wrote their memoirs, Father Whelan and his work was often recalled. Some mentioned that he had brought clothing, food, and money from Savannah. One added, “without a doubt he was the means of saving hundred of lives.” Another described Whelan’s ministering to the sick: “All creeds, color and nationalities were alike to him…He was indeed the Good Samaritan.” A sergeant, John Vaughter, in his memoirs remarked that, “of all the ministers in Georgia accessible to Andersonville, only one could hear this sentence, ‘I was sick and in prison and you visited me,’ and that one is a Catholic.”

After Father Whelan’s departure in late September, he borrowed $16,000 in Confederate money, the equivalent of $400 in gold, and purchased ten thousand pounds of wheat flour. He had it baked into bread and distributed at the prison hospital at Andersonville. It was enough bread to provide for the men for several months.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Clara Barton Monument

Clara Barton, the “Angel of the Battlefield”, nurse, humanitarian, founder and first president of the American Red Cross, spent the summer of 1865 helping find, identify, and properly bury 13,000 individuals who died in Andersonville prison camp.

In Commemoration of the Untiring Devotion of
Clara Barton


She organized and administered efficient measures for the relief of our soldiers in the field, and aided in the great work of preserving the names of more than twelve thousand of the brave men who died here.

Erected 1915 by Woman’s Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Wisconsin Monument

Let Us Have Peace

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Massachusetts Monument

“Death Before Dishonor”

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Tennessee Monument

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Michigan Monument

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

There are other monuments at Andersonville than the few that I have shared in this post.

The prisoners’ water source, the Stockade Branch, a branch of Sweetwater Creek, was contaminated with human waste and oils from the Confederate guards’ camp before it even got to the prisoners.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

“A spring of purest crystal shot up into the air in a column and, falling in a fanlike spray, went babbling down the grade into the noxious brook. Looking across the dead-line, we beheld with wondering eyes and grateful hearts the fountain spring.” – John L. Maile, 8th Michigan Infantry August 15, 1864.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

The miracle stream of water was named Providence Spring.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Providence Spring House

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Anderson was named for John Anderson, a director of the South Western Railroad in 1853 when it was extended from Oglethorpe to Americus. It was known as Anderson Station until the US post office was established in November 1855. The government changed the name of the station from “Anderson” to “Andersonville” in order to avoid confusion with the post office in Anderson, South Carolina.

The town also served as a supply depot during the war period. It included a post office, a depot, a blacksmith shop and stable, a couple of general stores, two saloons, a school, a Methodist church, and about a dozen houses. Ben Dykes, who owned the land on which the prison was built, was both depot agent and postmaster.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

“Then came the captives, weary, worn and hungry from prolonged travel cooped up like beasts in freight cars. Down from the depot they marched amid the jeers and taunts of a gaping crowd. The gate opened. The stockade swallowed them.” – Lessel Long, 13th Indiana Infantry, February 21, 1864

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

“Once inside…men exclaimed: ‘Is this hell?’ Verily, the great mass of gaunt, unnatural-looking beings, soot-begrimed, and clad in filthy tatters, that we saw stalking about inside this pen looked, indeed, as if they might belong to a world of lost spirits.”
W.B. Smith, 14th Illinois Infantry
October 9, 1864.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

“The hospital is a tough place to be in….In some cases before a man is fairly dead, he is stripped of everything, coat, pants, shirt, finger rings (if he has any). These nurses trade to the guards.”
John L. Ransom, 9th Michigan Cavalry
April 15, 1864

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

From these heights near headquarters, Capt. Henry A. Wirz could observe everything within the prison walls. Envision the white post perimeters as the stockade; 30,000 human beings within that area; the din of all those voices, the groans from the hospital, the shouts of the guards, the smell of unwashed clothes and bodies.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

The guards—mostly old men and young boys from the Georgia Reserve Corps—were reluctant witnesses to the misery at Andersonville. More seasoned troops were sent to stop Sherman’s drive toward Atlanta.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Pigeon Roosts

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Forms of punishment at Andersonville included death, “bucking and gagging,” hanging up by the thumbs, and physical punishment like whipping for offenses such as stealing. The prison’s harsh conditions and severe overcrowding also acted as a de facto punishment, leading to widespread death from disease and malnutrition. Additionally, guards had orders to shoot any prisoner who crossed the “dead line” or spoke to a sentinel.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Georgia

Firsthand Account of Private Prescott Tracy, Civil War POW

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