It is located at 542 John R. Junkin Drive in Natchez, Mississippi.
History
The mansion was built in 1835–1836.[2] Galleries of lacy iron work said to have been brought from Belgium.[3] In 1852, Francis Surget (1784-1856) purchased it for his daughter Jane (Surget) Merrill (1829-1866) and her husband Ayres Phillips Merrill II (1826-1883).[2][4] Upon Surget's death in 1856, the property (including the house and eight enslaved people) was bequeathed to his daughter Jane.[4][2]
It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since December 2, 1977 and may be unique among Natchez plantation houses in being owned by a supporter of the Union cause leading up to and during the Civil War.[5]
^ abWilliam Kauffman Scarborough, Masters of the Big House: Elite Slaveholders of the Mid-nineteenth-century South, Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press, 2006, p. 100 [1]