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: Claire of Natchez — The Legend, The Evidence, The History

Your donations keep this site going A popular modern retelling claims an enslaved woman named Claire (often “Clara”) poisoned an entire plantation household in Natchez. Extensive searches of major local archives and institutional histories turn up no clear primary-source evidence for this specific event. The legend fits broader documented patterns — enslaved women accused of poisoning and acts of covert resistance — and has been amplified by modern true-crime and folklore channels. Read on for the archival search, the folklore trail, and what we can say with confidence. mdah.ms.gov+2Historic Natchez Foundation+2   Why this matters Natchez is a city with a deep and complicated history: it was a major slave-trading center and a wealthy antebellum town. Stories about resistance, violence...

Education Through History: Preserving the Past to Empower the Future

The Natchez Museum of African American Culture has launched its 2026 programming with a powerful and timely focus: the progression of education through history and its lasting impact on our young people today. Education has never existed in isolation. For African American communities, learning often took place under extraordinary challenges—limited resources, social barriers, and periods of profound injustice. Yet, despite these obstacles, dedicated educators guided their students through uncertainty, believing deeply in the transformative power of knowledge. Throughout 2026, the Museum is committed to presenting programs that explore these challenges while honoring the instructors, mentors, and community leaders who helped shape generations of learners. Our goal is to ensure that today’s ...

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