The Itawamba Historical Society

The Itawamba Historical Society Our mission is to Protect, Preserve, and Promote the history of Itawamba County in Mississippi. Preserving the history of Itawamba County, Mississippi.

05/28/2026

Mr. Dan Walton wants another work day for the Bonds House in Mantachie. We will be working this Saturday, May 30. Thank you for all of the volunteers who worked on cleaning the rooms and exhibits so far. If you cannot work, we will accept any cleaning supplies. Also, if you want to bring lunch, snacks, pizza or drinks for the volunteer workers, we will be there from 10 in the morning until… around 3. We appreciate your support. The Bonds House and George Poteet building receive no funding except from membership and donations. We could not continue without you.

Mr. Dan Walton wants another work day for the Bonds House in Mantachie. We will be working this Saturday, May 30. Thank ...
05/28/2026

Mr. Dan Walton wants another work day for the Bonds House in Mantachie. We will be working this Saturday, May 30. Thank you for all of the volunteers who worked on cleaning the rooms and exhibits so far. If you cannot work, we will accept any cleaning supplies. Also, if you want to bring lunch, snacks, pizza or drinks for the volunteer workers, we will be there from 10 in the morning until… around 3. We appreciate your support. The Bonds House and George Poteet building receive no funding except from membership and donations. We could not continue without you.

Dan is glad for the extra help this morning in cleaning the Bonds House and all its treasures. Taking a lunch break now ...
05/23/2026

Dan is glad for the extra help this morning in cleaning the Bonds House and all its treasures. Taking a lunch break now and will start again this afternoon. Next cleaning day starts next Tuesday at 10:00 am. Hope to see more volunteers. So happy for the group that is here today!
The Itawamba Historical Society maintains the Bonds House as well as the George Poteet building and receives no outside funding except for membership and donations. To donate or join, please stop by the office or cal 662.282.7664.

05/19/2026

May monthly meeting with speaker Janice Burns talking about jazz musician and Itawamba County native Jimmy Lunceford.

Itawamba Historical Society President, Sarah Shelton, Treasurer, Martha Stancil, and member Mary Lou Edge proudly repres...
05/19/2026

Itawamba Historical Society President, Sarah Shelton, Treasurer, Martha Stancil, and member Mary Lou Edge proudly represented the Historical Society today at the 32nd Annual Senior Citizens Day hosted by the MSU Extension Service of Itawamba County.

The beautiful flowers were given away as a door prize.

We were proud to welcome Mr. Rocky Lemmon from Byhalia  and his friends from the Olive Branch area to tour the Historic ...
05/05/2026

We were proud to welcome Mr. Rocky Lemmon from Byhalia and his friends from the Olive Branch area to tour the Historic Bond's House. Mr. Lemmon's family resided in the Bond's house at one time and he recounted some great information regarding the Bond's house.

The magnolia tree that he is standing in front of was planted by his grandmother. The tree overlooks the beautiful Tishtontee Creek.

Hope to see you there tomorrow!
04/17/2026

Hope to see you there tomorrow!

The Itawamba Memory Makers is hosting its spring quilt show this Saturday in Mantachie.

Ty Brown from the Carolina Community stopped by the library today and donated two old newspapers he found at a local ant...
04/16/2026

Ty Brown from the Carolina Community stopped by the library today and donated two old newspapers he found at a local antique shop. They are two “Fulton News Beacon” papers from 1935.
Thanks, Ty. We appreciate your gift and support.

04/16/2026

The Itawamba Memory Makers are having a Quilt Show here at the Society on Saturday, April 18th from 10 am until 2 pm. Free admission. There will be old quilts, new quilts and a quilting demonstration. Hope to see you there!

Today we celebrate Mississippi's 208th birthday. Here is some interesting information about our great state's birth.http...
12/10/2025

Today we celebrate Mississippi's 208th birthday. Here is some interesting information about our great state's birth.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1G4ZYviWQr/

President James Monroe signed a congressional resolution on December 10, 1817 that admitted the western portion of the Mississippi Territory as the State of Mississippi as the 20th state of the Union.

The Mississippi Territory was an organized incorporated territory of the United States that existed from April 7, 1798, until December 10, 1817, when the western half of the territory was admitted to the Union as the State of Mississippi. The eastern half was redesignated as the Alabama Territory until it was admitted to the Union as the State of Alabama on December 14, 1819.

The United States and Spain disputed these lands east of the Mississippi River until Spain relinquished its claim with the Treaty of Madrid, initially signed in 1795 by the two countries' representatives. The Mississippi Territory was organized in 1798 from these lands (approximately the southern half of the present states of Alabama and Mississippi).

The state of Georgia maintained a claim over almost the entire area of the present states of Alabama and Mississippi, until it surrendered its claim in 1802 following the Yazoo land scandal.

Beginning about 1808 the legislature of the Mississippi Territory held its official meetings in one of the houses owned by Charles DeFrance of the Natchez District. The DeFrance house, also known as Assembly Hall, was located in Washington, Mississippi, about 10 miles from the city of Natchez.

In 1812, declaring that it had been included in the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the United States annexed the Mobile District of West Florida, between the Perdido River and the Pearl River. Spain disputed this and maintained its claim over the area. The following year, a Federal statute was secretly enacted authorizing the President to take full possession of this area with the use of military force as deemed necessary. Accordingly, General James Wilkinson occupied this district with a military contingent; the Spanish colonial commandant offered no resistance. This annexation extended the Mississippi Territory south to the Gulf of Mexico, with the northern border being the boundary of the state of Tennessee, taking in all of what is now Alabama and Mississippi.

Federal statutes enacted on March 1 and 3, 1817, provided a plan for the division of the Mississippi Territory into the state of Mississippi in the west and the Alabama Territory in the east. On December 10, 1817, the division was finalized when the western portion was admitted to the Union as Mississippi, the 20th state.

Photo courtesy of Digital Collections, The New York Public Library

Address

Church Street(MS HWY 371) And Museum Drive
Mantachie, MS
38855

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 3pm
Wednesday 10am - 3pm

Telephone

+16622827664

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