Isom Place

Isom Place
Location 1003 Jefferson Ave., Oxford, Mississippi
Coordinates 34°22′9″N 89°31′10″W / 34.36917°N 89.51944°W / 34.36917; -89.51944Coordinates: 34°22′9″N 89°31′10″W / 34.36917°N 89.51944°W / 34.36917; -89.51944
Area less than one acre
Built 1835 (1835)
NRHP Reference # 80002256[1]
Added to NRHP April 2, 1980

Isom Place is located at 1003 Jefferson Avenue in Oxford, Mississippi and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1] The home was constructed by Thomas Dudley Isom, a physician in Lafayette County. The exact dates of construction are lost, due in part to a lack of records from 1865-1883.[2] The earliest version of the structure was a two or three bedroom cabin, but by 1840 Isom used the cabin as a core for the current home.[3]

At the age of thirty in 1856 Isom married Sarah McGhehee of Abbeville, South Carolina. Lore reports that McGhehee brought a shoot of a magnolia tree from South Carolina and planted it in the front yard of Isom Place; it is not known if the tree remains standing.[4] Their daughter, Sarah Isom, would be born in the 1850s in this house and become the first female faculty member at the nearby University of Mississippi and the first female faculty member at a coeducational institution of higher education in the Southeast United States.[5]

Isom Place currently houses the Barksdale Reading Institute.[6]

Gallery

References

  1. 1 2 Staff (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Isom Place". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  3. Sobotka, C. John, Jr.. A History of Lafayettte County, Mississippi. Oxford, MS: Rebel Press, 1976, p. 80
  4. Doyle, Don H. Faulkner's County: The Historical Roots of Yoknapatawpha. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2001, pp. 104-105.
  5. "Sarah Isom Center". Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  6. "Barksdale Reading Institute". Retrieved 2015-12-30.


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