Morrison recalls first Pilgrimage
Published 12:00 am Tuesday, October 9, 2001
Tuesday, October 09, 2001
The Natchez Democrat
NATCHEZ – For the 69 years since the Natchez Pilgrimage began
in 1932, Virginia Morrison has been a part of the festivities.
As Fall Pilgrimage opens today, Morrison’s home, Green Leaves,
will be among the first six houses to open for the event, which
continues daily through Oct. 27.
&uot;I still have the dress I wore in 1932,&uot; Morrison
said. &uot;It was old then, a beautiful handmade white dress
that probably belonged to my grandmother or her sister.&uot;
A ritual at each Pilgrimage time is to bring out the small
antique dress for display. It is one of a house full of personal
items collected through many generations of Morrison’s family
at Green Leaves.
&uot;One of the reasons people like this house so much is
that we have many old family things like the dress,&uot; she
said.
For Morrison, Pilgrimage time at Green Leaves has changed little
since 1932. &uot;Green Leaves is the same; I’m the one who has
changed,&uot; she said with a chuckle. &uot;In 1932, I was a
little girl; now I’m an old lady.&uot;
This season, as America watches with concern the war against
terrorists who launched the Sept. 11 attack on the World Trade
Center in New York City and the Pentagon across the Potomac River
from Washington, D.C., Morrison recalls another war – the only
one that has interrupted the annual Natchez pilgrimages.
&uot;We did not have Pilgrimage in 1943, 1944 or 1945,&uot;
she said. &uot;We did have it in 1942; we had just gotten into
the war late in 1941. But Pilgrimage was very small in 1942 –
we even held the pageant in Stanton Hall instead of at the City
Auditorium.&uot;
Few people were traveling in the spring of 1942, she said.
As for the fall of 2001, some Pilgrimage and tourism officials
have said the cautious mood among travelers may bring more people
by automobile from the surrounding region.
At Stanton Hall, also on tour today, manager Gayle Ferrell
said the staff is looking forward to donning old-fashioned costumes
and greeting Pilgrimage guests.
Although Stanton Hall is one of the antebellum houses open
year round, Pilgrimage time is special, she said.
&uot;We try to ensure the house is shiny and pretty,&uot;
Ferrell said. &uot;Stanton Hall is so grand. You can see the
amazement of people in their faces as they walk toward the house.&uot;
During Fall Pilgrimage, houses are open only on the days of
their scheduled tours. Each half-day tour of three houses each,
morning, 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and afternoon, 1:30 to 4:30
p.m., is $18 per person.
No tickets are sold at individual houses but, rather, at Natchez
Pilgrimage Tours, at the corner of Canal and State streets.
Eighteen houses are on tour, with styles varying from the circa
1790 Airlie to the imposing Magnolia Hall, dating to 1858 and
considered the last great mansion built in Natchez prior to the
Civil War.
Evening entertainment during the Pilgrimage includes the Amos
Polk Voices of Hope spiritual singers and the Mississippi Medicine
Show.