Beauvoir: Jefferson Davis Shrine
BEAUVOIR HOUSE—LAST HOME OF JEFFERSON DAVIS
ON UNITED STATES HIGHWAY 90 MIDWAY BETWEEN BILOXI AND GULFPORT, MISSISSIPPI
Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Davis
Beauvoir, freely translated “ beautiful view ,” is located on U. S. Highway 90 about halfway between Gulfport and Biloxi on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. It was originally part of a tract of land that James Brown, a prosperous planter of Madison County, Mississippi bought September 2, 1848, by Contract and Agreement from John Henderson of Pass Christian, with the right to build a family residence on it before the title was cleared. Acting upon this legal agreement, Brown paid Henderson $900.00 in cash toward the purchase price of $2,000.00, and gave him a note for the additional $1,100.00, which was to be paid on receipt of a deed proving his title to the land had been cleared.
Although the residence and outlying buildings were completed by 1852, James Brown did not obtain a deed to the property until July 16, 1855, when he bid it in for $3,000.00 at a Harrison County Court Auction. To this tract of land he had added, in the meantime, a small piece bought from the Tegardens for $250.00.
James Brown was said to have been his own architect and building superintendent for both the Mansion and the cottages he built on his new home site. He brought slaves from his plantation in Madison County to do much of the building; but, for the higher grade of work needed, he employed carpenters and decorators from New Orleans. The cypress used was from the Back Bay swamp section, with most of the timber cut at Handsboro and on the place. The slate for the roof was imported from England. The buildings thus planned and constructed were the Mansion, a Louisiana plantation type house known as Beauvoir House since the time of its occupancy by the Davis family, one cottage to the east of this main building and one to the west. A four room cottage in the rear, which was on the property when purchased, was used by the owner and his family while the other buildings were being constructed, and later became the kitchen and servants’ quarters for the families of both James Brown and Jefferson Davis.
United Daughters of the Confederacy. Mississippi Division
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RECEPTION HALL
FIRST OF THE DOUBLE PARLORS—THE FRONT PARLOR
THE BACK PARLOR, LIBRARY FOR THE DAVIS FAMILY
WINNIE DAVIS MEMORIAL ROOM
MARGARET DAVIS HAYES MEMORIAL ROOM
JEFFERSON DAVIS ROOM
MRS. DAVIS ROOM
DINING ROOM
BUTLER’S PANTRY AND CHILDREN’S DINING ROOM
THE DAVIS MUSEUM
OTHER LARGE MUSEUM PIECES ON DISPLAY
THE CONFEDERATE MUSEUM
BEAUVOIR CONFEDERATE CEMETERY
WITH A SEMI-HISTORIC GLIMPSE OF THE REAR GROUNDS OF THE SHRINE
CHRONOLOGICAL OUTLINE
PUBLICATIONS OF BEAUVOIR BOOKLETS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
ORIGIN OF THE BEAUVOIR BOOKLET
THE FLAGS OF THE CONFEDERACY
Transcriber’s Notes