Most of Natchez's slave quarters were demolished, hidden, or absorbed into later structures. Concord Quarters remains visible from the public road — brick dependencies dating to the 1840s, a rare physical reminder of the labor system behind the mansions. The city of Natchez was founded in 1716 as Fort Rosalie. By the 1840s, when these quarters were built, the plantation economy defined the city. The mansions that draw visitors today required labor to sustain them. This is what sustained them: people who lived in structures like these. The site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The property is private. View from the road. Do not enter the grounds.
- ·One of the few visible surviving slave quarter complexes in Natchez.
- ·Most slave quarters were demolished, hidden, or absorbed into later structures.
- ·Brick dependencies dating to the 1840s.
- ·Visible from the public road — a rare physical reminder of the labor system behind the mansions.
- ·Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
- ·Exterior viewing from the road. Private property — do not enter the grounds.
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