Natchez Trace Parkway: Nashville to Natchez
🚗15 mapped stops
A 444-mile drive along an ancient path — from Nashville, Tennessee to Natchez, Mississippi. The Trace follows trails used by Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Natchez peoples for centuries before European explorers walked this same ground.
Paradas en Este Tour (15)
- 1 Northern Terminus — Nashville Mile 444 — the Trace begins in the wooded hills south of Nashville. The parkway was authorized by Congress in 1938, following the path of the original wilderness road.
- 2 Double Arch Bridge A modern engineering landmark — two graceful concrete arches carry the Trace 155 feet above a valley. It was the first segmentally constructed concrete arch bridge in the United States.
- 3 Leipers Fork A charming hamlet just off the Trace where Nashville songwriters retreat to write. Puckett's Grocery serves up country cooking and live music most evenings.
- 4 Meriwether Lewis Monument — Milepost 385.9 The explorer died here under mysterious circumstances in 1809. His grave and a reconstructed inn mark the spot where one of America's greatest adventurers met his end.
- 5 Jackson Falls — Milepost 404.7 A short trail descends to a 30-foot waterfall. The limestone bluff sheltered travelers on the old Trace for thousands of years.
- 6 Colbert Ferry — Tennessee River George Colbert, a Chickasaw chief, operated a ferry here that Andrew Jackson himself used. The Tennessee River crossing marked the boundary of Chickasaw territory.
- 7 Freedom Hills Overlook — Milepost 317 The highest point on the Trace in Alabama at 800 feet. The rolling hills give way to the Black Belt prairies of Mississippi ahead.
- 8 Pharr Mounds — Milepost 286.7 Eight ancient burial mounds built between 1 and 200 AD. The Woodland-period earthworks are among the largest ceremonial sites in the Southeast.
- 9 Tupelo — Elvis Presley Birthplace The two-room shotgun house where Elvis Aaron Presley was born on January 8, 1935. Tupelo was also the site of a devastating 1936 tornado that killed 216 people.
- 10 Chickasaw Village — Milepost 261.8 An interpretive site marking a Chickasaw village that existed here when Europeans first traveled the Trace. The Chickasaw controlled this territory for centuries.
- 11 Jeff Busby Site — Milepost 193.1 One of the few service stops on the Trace. Little Mountain summit offers views across the Mississippi hill country — a sea of green rolling to every horizon.
- 12 Cypress Swamp — Milepost 122 A boardwalk trail through a tupelo-bald cypress swamp. Alligators sun on the logs and barred owls call from the canopy in this primordial Southern wetland.
- 13 Emerald Mound — Milepost 10.3 The second-largest ceremonial mound in the United States, built by ancestors of the Natchez people around 1300 AD. It covers nearly eight acres.
- 14 Natchez — Southern Terminus Mile 0 — the Trace ends at the Mississippi River. Natchez's antebellum mansions and the bluff above the river tell the story of cotton wealth, slavery, and the Old South.
- 15 Natchez Under-the-Hill The rough-and-tumble riverfront where flatboat men — the "Kaintucks" — ended their journeys and walked the Trace back north. Gambling, drinking, and danger defined this landing.
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