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 Neste Passeio (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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