Hendersonville is an extinct town located in Yalobusha County, Mississippi .
5-533: Hendersonville may refer to: Places [ edit ] United States [ edit ] Hendersonville, Mississippi , an early settlement ( extinct town ) in Yalobusha County, Mississippi Hendersonville, North Carolina , a town south-east of Asheville Hendersonville, Pennsylvania , a suburb of Pittsburgh Hendersonville, South Carolina , an unincorporated community Hendersonville, Tennessee ,
10-414: A farm known as 'Oakchickamau,'" owned by Franklin E. Plummer. An early resident of county named Mr. E. Percy Howe, appeared to dislike both Hendersonville and Coffeeville. He left a poem behind after moving away: Upon a hill near Derden's Mill There is a place called Coffeeville; The meanest town I ever saw Save Plummer's town, 'Oakchickamau.' This United States ghost town -related article
15-544: A suburb of Nashville Hendersonville, Virginia , a defunct town [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hendersonville&oldid=1066398029 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
20-626: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Hendersonville, Mississippi Once the largest town in Yalobusha County, the former settlement is today covered by forest. John Henderson, a Presbyterian missionary and the town's namesake, settled in the area in 1798. In 1833, the Mississippi Legislature authorized the formation of 17 counties, including Yalobusha. Yalobusha County's first elected officials, called
25-470: The "Board of Police", met in 1834 at Hendersonville. A county seat had not yet been selected, and the Board of Police solicited land donations. At the second meeting, a nearby location more centrally located in the county, later named Coffeeville , was selected for the county seat. A local resident, Capt. L. Lake, wrote in 1834: "Hendersonville then went down and ultimately lost its name, being absorbed in
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