Old Courthouse Museum – Vicksburg, Mississippi - Atlas Obscura

Old Courthouse Museum

Museum of the Old South that never was. 

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The “Lost Cause of the Confederacy” was the name given to the pseudo-historical ideology that aristocratic Southerners used to reconcile the loss of the Civil War. The Lost Cause portrayed the Confederacy’s cause as a noble one, as opposed to one motivated by a desire to continue profiting from the labor of enslaved workers. The movement condemned Reconstruction, rebranded the Civil War the “War of Northern Aggression,” and spoke of a time when the South would rise again.

One artifact of, and monument to, the Lost Cause, is the Old Courthouse in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Completed in 1860 and built by enslaved laborers, the building was nearly destroyed by neglect, before being reborn in 1947 as a museum dedicated to the South.

Today the museum houses a rich assortment of artifacts including “confederate flags, including one that was never surrendered, and the tie worn by Jefferson Davis at his inauguration as Confederate President.” It also houses a collection of early photographs of Vicksburg and the surrounding area and many Civil War artifacts. However it retains a strong feel of the antebellum south and items which are enough to upset some visitors from the north. One visitor remarked “I personally found it distasteful, especially when I saw the “mammy” dolls, pickininny dolls, and the book “little black.”

The Vicksburg Historical Society owns and maintains the museum and its collections. The society also maintains the McCardle Research Library which contains over 1,400 volumes of local history and genealogical records.