"The old Pinckneyville Post Office, in Wikinson County is over one-hundred years old - note the heavy plank door and the hand-wrought window-shutter hinges," as documented by the WPA c. 1936(MDAH Series 443, file 73473-sb3-08)
The town was named for the prominent Pinckney family of South Carolina, from which many of its settlers came. Charles Pinckney helped draft the US Constitution and served as governor of the state of South Carolina; other members of his family were also political leaders. The settlement of Pinckneyville was mapped by James Wilkinson on his survey of what became the Natchez Trace following the 1801 Treaty of Fort Adams.[2] The Kempers of the so-called Kemper Rebellion (actually a series of minor border skirmishes and shootings) had an inn at Pinckneyville.[3]
In 1815, the Pinckneyville Academy was established here.[4]
^A Survey of the Route, proposed for the high way from Nashville in the State of Tenessee, to the Grind stone ford of the Bayou Pierre in the Mississippi- Territory
NAID: 102279464Local ID: 77-CWMF-102
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/102279464
^r2WPadmin. "Kemper Rebellion". Mississippi Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 30, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)