STARKVILLE COMMUNITY


STARKVILLE
COMMUNITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
TOURISM
RETIREMENT
ABOUT THE
PARTNERSHIP
BECOME A
MEMBER
MEMBERSHIP
DIRECTORY
CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
FOR THE MEDIA
WEBSITE SPONSORS
CONTACT US


COMMUNITY LINKS
STARKVILLE'S HISTORY

LOCATION
HISTORY
CITY & COUNTY MAPS
GOVERNMENT
HOUSING
UTILITIES

HEALTHCARE

EDUCATION
DINING
SHOPPING
RECREATION
COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS
MEDIA OUTLETS
MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
REQUEST INFORMATION


FOR MORE DETAILED
INFORMATION:
  TIME LINE | HISTORIC DISTRICTS




 

HISTORIC DISTRICTS

 

Starkville's past comes to life in its beautiful historic districts. Many of Starkville's structures and sites are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Browse the links below to discover the uniqueness of each historic district Starkville has to offer.

DOWNTOWN STARKVILLE

GREENSBORO STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

OVERSTREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

NASH STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY

COTTON DISTRICT



DOWNTOWN STARKVILLE

Starkville's early identity as "Boardtown" disappeared with the sawmill and the boardwalks, but Starkville has kept the flavor and character of its "boomtown" years at the turn of the 19th century. Several restored brick stores front Main Street's wagon-high sidewalks. Well-preserved churches and the 1925 Hotel Chester add character and charm. Many downtown buildings date to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. An 1874 fire destroyed most of the original downtown structures, so the brick replacements are the oldest remaining buildings found in the area.

Surviving buildings include the First Baptist Chapel, the early to mid-20th century Episcopal, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches, and the row of former attorneys offices (now Mugshots Bar & Grill) on the west side of the Oktibbeha County Courthouse.

The newly-renovated 1920s Hotel Chester is one of Starkville's many sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The former People's Bank Building at 203 Main and the two-story commercial and residential buildings on the north side of Main Street are also some of the best surviving buildings in Starkville.

Surviving south side edifices include the former Rex Theater at the corner of Main and Washington Streets and the Masonic building nearby. Notice also the building housing the former Wier Drug Store at 204 Main Street. Another businessman, Robert Wier, had a barber shop in a small brick building to the east of the drug store. At the time he was in business, he was the only black businessman on Main Street.




GREENSBORO STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

Greensboro Street was originally part of "Greensboro Road", a dirt pathway between the now-vanished town of Greensboro in Winston County and an early riverboat landing along the Tombigbee River south of Columbus, Mississippi. Cotton wagons were heavy users of this early road. Homes were built along the road as it came eastward past the Oktibbeha County Courthouse making Greensboro Street the "neighborhood of choice" for early merchants and civic leaders beginning in the late 1860s.

Many of the houses were once adorned with beautiful classical porch columns and three-part entrances. With post-reconstruction came the Victorian vernacular style houses and cottages. With their irregular shapes, multiple roofs, and layered wooden shingles, these ornate homes were statements of financial success and civic hopes.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Colonial Revival homes began to gain popularity. These large-scale homes were a return to the South's pre-Civil War styles featuring verandahs and classical columns and entryways. The "Jacobethan-style" former middle school, the Greensboro Center, now the headquarters of the Starkville School District, is among the most architecturally outstanding buildings in Starkville.




OVERSTREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

As post-Civil War Starkville began to grow, property owners south of Main Street divided up their holdings into city lots. South Jackson, South Montgomery, and Gillespie Streets remain home to many of the original houses built during this era. These houses, built close to downtown and to Overstreet School, form Starkville's largest historic district. Homes range from ornate Queen Anne and less spectacular Folk Victorians and Colonial Revivals to mid-20th century Craftsman and Bungalow styles. An occasional cook's house or smoke house can be seen behind the main houses and are reminders of another era.

In the early stages of the Overstreet neighborhood, wooden plank walks connected homes to "distant" Wood and Washington Streets, to the local school and downtown businesses.

The Ovestreet Elementary School was erected in 1894 as a public school. It was recognized in 1994 as one of the top schools in the country.

The Overstreet Historic District is bordered by Washington Street to the west, Wood Street to the south, South Montgomery Street to the east, and Hogan Street to the north.




NASH STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

Starkville's youngest official historic district, the Nash Street area, was originally know as the "East End Land Company Subdivision". Now Starkville's earliest unchanged subdivision, this quaint neighborhood of Nash Street homes was built in the 1930s and early 1940s primarily by people associated with nearby Mississippi State University.

The best examples of substantial 1930s architecture are in this historic district. Tudor Revival, Craftsman, and Colonial Revival styles can all be recognized. Examples of Tudor Revival are the homes at 525 University Drive and 113 North Nash Street.

A fine example of 1930s Colonial Revival design is located at 114 North Nash. Because of its modern-styled homes and landscaped plans, this 17-home neighborhood once was known as "The Garden District".




MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY

Mississippi State University began as Mississippi A & M College. Although none of the original 1878 buildings from Mississippi A & M survived, the MSU campus has a unique collection of early 20th century, classically detailed, brick buildings. Three are listed on the National Register of Historic Places: the Industrial Education Building, Montgomery Hall, and the E. E. Cooley Building. These and several others are Mississippi landmark buildings.



The twin-towered Industrial Education Building was built and equipped to train students to make fabric from cotton. The "Textile School" existed from 1901 to 1914, but the building, with its Italianate towers and cast concrete trill, still serves as classrooms and offices.




At the western edge of campus, the John M. Stone Cotton Mill, now the E. E. Cooley Building, once was the centerpiece of "Needmore", a Starkville neighborhood known for its mill housing. Note the Cooley Building's central tower and massive early 20th century brick detailing.
 

Montgomery Hall, built in 1902 as the "Science Hall", also served as the library until 1921. Its Beaux Arts classical form and pedimented facade are often the subjects of art, drafting, and architecture students. It is named in honor of David Montgomery, an early Oktibbeha County settler and advocate who helped bring the railroad and college to Starkville.



COTTON DISTRICT

  A 20th century developer and designer, Dan Camp, has rebuilt much of the old "Needmore" neighborhood and its surrounding area. Now know as "The Cotton District", this thriving area between campus and downtown was first called "Campton" after its developer.

What Dan Camp began creating many years ago, out of a simple dream and his love for traditional architecture, has since been given the name New Urbanism or Traditional Neighborhood Design, and is being replicated throughout the country.



The most photographed area in the city, the Cotton District -- until the late 1950s -- was a collection of row houses and shanties housing workers for the nearby cotton mill. With cobblestone alleys and walkways, porches, balconies, courtyards, and meticulously-landscaped grounds, the Cotton District pulls people outdoors creating a greater sense of community.

Capture the flavor of Savannah, Charleston, and New Orleans with a walk through the Cotton District's more than 130 award-winning, brightly colored properties, including Planters Row, a collection of 28 Charlestonian-style townhomes, and Seven Sisters, a group of homes named after seven women in Camp's family. All feature detailed renovations with handcrafted shutters, dormers, balconies, railings and trim moldings.



DOWNTOWN STARKVILLE

GREENSBORO STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

OVERSTREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

NASH STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT

MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY

COTTON DISTRICT

 

Contact the Partnership at:
200 East Main Street • Starkville, MS 39759
Phone: 662.323.3322 • Fax: 662.323.5815 • Toll Free: 800.649.8687