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History

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From earliest inhabitants to United States annexation

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The earliest inhabitants of the area were Choctaw and Muscogee Indians, who lived along the banks of a river (later named the Jourdan River) emptying into the Bay of Saint Louis. These tribes hunted, fished, and trapped on this land prior to settlement by the French. In 1682, René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, a French explorer, claimed the region for France and named it "Louisiana", in honor of King Louis XIV and the Mississippi Gulf Coast became part of the Lower Louisiana District.

Following the French claiming of the land, French settlers, many from Canada, began to move into the area surrounding modern-day Kiln. These settlers were exclusively male and were mostly hunters and trappers. The only commercial activity was in hides and pelts, which were sent to New Orleans for shipping.[1] The first known white settlers in the area were Jean Baptiste Nicaize (Necaise) and his family. It is likely they moved from the Wolf River area near current-day DeLisle to Kiln and acquired the J. B. Necaise claim under a Spanish land grant around 1800 or before. There is a record of marriage on May 11, 1745, of Jean Baptiste Nicaize to Marie Cathering Miot (Meaut) in the Wolf River area. This record also noted that the father of J. B. Necaise was a native of Paris, France.[2] The Jourdan River received its name from Noel Jourdan, an early settler on the river, who had received a Spanish land grant at the present site of Diamondhead. Jourdan later served as a delegate to the Mississippi Constitutional Convention of 1817 and he was the first representative of Hancock County in the Mississippi Legislature. The area came to be known as the Jourdan Community by its inhabitants.[3] With the arrival of white settlers from the East, the Indian tribes eventually left the area. By the turn of the 19th century, the last full-blooded Choctaw Indians left the area for land grants in Oklahoma.[4]

In 1762, France ceded Louisiana east of the Mississippi River to Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris French and Indian War. The area became part of the colony British West Florida. In 1783, British West Florida was ceded to Spain as part of the Peace of Paris and the area became part of the colony Spanish West Florida. The United States claimed West Florida in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase. However, Spain disputed this claim. Tensions between the United States and Spain grew as many Americans began to move into the area. A large number of these immigrants were Tories who resented Spanish rule.[5] On May 14, 1812, immediately prior to the start of the War of 1812 with Great Britain, with whom Spain was allied, the United States assigned the claimed area to the Mississippi Territory,[6] even though the area was still governed by Spain. On February 12, 1813, the United States Congress passed a statute giving President James Madison authority to occupy the area.[7] In April 1813, an American force occupied Mobile and received the surrender of the Spanish commander.

Timber Industry Boom and Bust

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Jourdan River Lumber Company Sawmill
Jourdan River Lumber Company Hotel
Annunciation Catholic Church, 1919

Kiln takes its name from the many kilns once found in the area. These kilns served the timber industry; they produced naval stores such as tar, which were shipped by schooner to New Orleans and used for caulking ships. Tar kilns had operated in the Hancock County area to produce naval stores since the days when it was part of British West Florida. During the 1840s, the Jourdan Community had a prosperous business in the production of charcoal, which it also sold on the New Orleans market. By the 1880s, some inhabitants began referring to the community as "Kiln" and by 1913, the town's name was firmly established. Today, the area is referred to by locals as "the Kiln", with the "n" silent.[8]

The sawmill era began around the time of the American Civil War when a sawmill was built on the Jourdan River by Samuel L. Favre from Mobile, Alabama. He also built a home on the Jourdan River in 1859. Later, this house was moved to its present location near Annunciation Catholic Church and is currently owned by one of his descendants. It is considered the oldest house in the Kiln. Francois Haas from New Orleans built a sawmill on Bayou Talla in the Kiln area. After the Civil War, Favre moved to the Logtown and Napoleon areas, and the Francois Haas sawmill was operated by Elisha Haas and Timothy Herlihy. Later, the mill became known as the Herlihy and Haas Mill.[9] In the late 19th century, the Jourdan River had shipyards and the river provided water transportation access to the nearby Mississippi Gulf Coast ports that served the then booming yellow pine timber industry. One shipyard on the Jourdan was operated by a man named Willie Curet, another shipyard on Bayou Talla was operated by a man named Jeremiah Haas, and Savadore Necaise operated a shingle mill. These family names are familiar in the area, and descendants of these men live in Hancock County today.[10]

In 1906, the population of Kiln was 67. Many more people, however, lived in the countryside instead of the rural community.[11] During the sawmill era boom years, the Kiln was home to many timber mills. On December 7, 1908, the W. W. Carre Company, Ltd., from New Orleans purchased the Herlihy and Haas Mill and built a railroad track to the northern end of Hancock County to facilitate the flow of raw lumber.[12] The sawmill burned in 1912 and in December of that year, the logging railroad and equipment were sold to the Stern Foundry & Machinery Company, of New Orleans. In January 1913, the remaining property at Kiln was sold to the Edward Hines Lumber Company, of Chicago and the operation was reorganized as the Jourdan River Lumber Company. The original mill was replaced in 1914 with a new mill with a cutting capacity of 150,000 feet (46,000 m) per day.[13] To accommodate all of the workers at the mill, around 200 mill houses were built. A school building was also built in the area. To support the number of workers coming into the area, other businesses began to establish themselves. These local businesses included a company store, a fifty-room hotel with a restaurant, a small hospital with round-the-clock physician and nurse, a movie theater, and a drug store. In addition, there was a secondary school, several churches, and a semi-pro baseball team. According to historian Samuel Grady Thigpen, for a time, the Kiln was the busiest town between Hattiesburg and New Orleans.[14]

Many of the sawmills in Hancock County cut vast amounts of timber without regard to restocking and replenishing the forests. The use of slash-and-burn techniques also annually destroyed the young trees on the land.[15] This depletion of the forest land combined with the Great Depression hit the Kiln hard, leading to the loss of many local businesses. In 1933, Hines Lumber Company left the Kiln, marking the end of the sawmill era.[16]. The Kiln also lost its hotel, hospital, and railroad. The source of electricity for the town was cut off. By the mid-1930s, the Kiln had become a ghost town with no major industry. Much of the land that had been cleared for logging was grown over and once-again became a forest wilderness. Many of the residents who stayed in the Kiln managed a living by distilling illegal whiskey. The production of whiskey became a big business in the Kiln after Mississippi passed a state-wide prohibition act in 1908. Being a source of sought-after moonshine during the Prohibition Era and also because of its high quality and ready availability, Kiln became known as the “Moonshine Capital of the World.” At the height of moonshine popularity in the late 1920s, there were at least 50 moonshine stills operating in the Kiln. Mississippi's state-wide prohibition act was not repealed until 1966.[17] Despite the depression and mass emigration from the town, a few older structures remain to this day, including Annunciation Catholic Church and the original post office (later Curet's Grocery), which has since been turned into a lawnmower repair shop.

Population Growth and Hurricane Katrina

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Annonciation Catholic Church, 2013

Toward the end of the 20th century, the Kiln's population began to grow. The Kiln's population grew from 1,262 people in 1990[18] to 2,040 by the end of the century[19], nearly a 62% increase in population over the decade. One of the main reasons for the population increase in not only the Kiln but the entire Mississippi Gulf Coast was the growth of the casino industry in the area. The Mississippi Gaming Control Act of 1990 specified that gaming sites were restricted to the southernmost three counties in Mississippi (Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson counties). On December 5, 1990, Hancock County was the first county in Mississippi to approve dockside gambling. Three casinos opened in neighboring Harrison County in August 1992 and, on September 30, 1992, Casino Magic opened in Bay Saint Louis at the location of the current Hollywood Casino. Bayou Caddy's Jubilee Casino opened on January 7, 1994, in Lakeshore at the location of the current Silver Slipper Casino. The Gulf Coast casinos brought in new tourism and economic development to the area, which led to an increase in population in many cities and towns along the Gulf Coast, including Kiln.[20] The Kiln became the fastest growing area in Hancock County. This growth led to the establishment of several new businesses, a new post office, two new schools, and a new library in the town.[21]

On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina made its third landfall on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Before and during landfall, water poured into the Bay of St. Louis, and the initial flooding occurred in low-lying areas along the Jourdan River and its tributary bayous. Therefore, Kiln and Diamondhead began to flood before the bulk of the surge came.[22] The Kiln saw at least 30 feet of floodwater.[23] Several homes were severely damaged and destroyed. Kiln was spared the worst of the damage and served as a major point for reconstruction of Bay Saint Louis and Waveland afterwards.

  • Page 525-526, Coast Electric/returning power to the Kiln


References

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  1. ^ Keating, James. "European Colonization of the Mississippi Gulf Coast during the Eighteenth Century" (PDF). The Historian of Hancock County. January 2017: 1–3. Retrieved August 7, 2017.
  2. ^ "Early History of the Kiln". Hancock County Historical Society. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  3. ^ "Early History of the Kiln". Hancock County Historical Society. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  4. ^ "Brief History of Kiln and Annunciation Parish". Hancock County Historical Society. Kiln Annunciation Church. Retrieved July 21, 2017.
  5. ^ Cox, Isaac Joslin (January 1912). "The American Intervention in West Florida". The American Historical Review. 17 (2). Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Historical Association: 290–311.
  6. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774-1875". The Library of Congress. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  7. ^ Stat. 472
  8. ^ "Early History of the Kiln". Hancock County Historical Society. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  9. ^ "Early History of the Kiln". Hancock County Historical Society. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  10. ^ Ellis, Dan (August 22, 2000). Kiln Kountry: Home of Brett Favre. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. pp. 14–16. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  11. ^ Scharff, Robert G. (1999). Louisiana's Loss, Mississippi's Gain: A History of Hancock County, Mississippi: From the Stone Age to the Space Age. Lawrenceville, Virginia: Brunswick Publishing Corporation. p. 415.
  12. ^ "Brief History of Kiln and Annunciation Parish". Hancock County Historical Society. Kiln Annunciation Church. Retrieved July 21, 2017.
  13. ^ "Jordan River Lumber Co". Mississippi Rails: Mississippi's Railroad History & Heritage. Retrieved July 21, 2017.
  14. ^ Thigpen, Samuel Grady (1965). Pearl River: Highway to Glory Land. Kingsport Press.
  15. ^ Scharff, p. 420
  16. ^ The Sea Coast Echo (July 31, 1977). 1977 Heritage Edition. Vol. 84, No. 43. Bay Saint Louis, Mississippi
  17. ^ Ellis, Dan (August 22, 2000). Kiln Kountry: Home of Brett Favre. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. pp. 24–27. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  18. ^ "1990 Census of Population and Housing" (PDF). Census.gov. p. MIssissippi 33. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  19. ^ "Mississippi: 2000: Summary Population and Housing Statistics" (PDF). Census.gov. p. 34 Mississippi. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  20. ^ Klaus J., Meyer-Arendt. "Casino Gaming on the Mississippi Gulf Coast". UWF Institutional Repository. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  21. ^ Gagnet, Betsy (June 29, 1997). "Kiln fastest growing area in the county". No. Hancock Today Special Edition. Hancock County Historical Society: The Sea Coast Echo. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  22. ^ "Katrina's Surge: Part 10". Weather Underground. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  23. ^ Plombon, Betty (2006). Katrina and the Forgotten Gulf Coast. Dog Ear Publishing. p. 7.