Walnut Hills (Mississippi)

[3]: 258 According to a travelogue published in 1826, "Soon after you pass the mouth of that river, your eye is cheered with the green heads of the Walnut Hills.

They are beautiful and rich eminences, clad with an abundance of those trees whose name they bear.

The stranger inquires the object and use of a cluster of little buildings that lie about the principal house, like bee-hives.

They rise boldly, though gradually, with alternate swells and gullies, to the height of nearly 500 feet, and form one of the most beautiful prospects to be met with on the Lower Mississippi.

"[5] Vicksburg itself was known as Walnut Hills in early days (from about 1806), because "When the first settlers arrived the hills on which the city now stands were densely wooded and covered from the river to their summits with a thick undergrowth of cane.

Original U.S. government survey of the Natchez Trace showing Walnut Hills
1876 map of the Vicksburg Campaign of the American Civil War, showing the Walnut Hills