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The "Hanging Tree".
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This park giant is a favorite of photographers and sketch artists. It is a white oak.
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The town of D'Lo, Mississippi traces its history back to the early 1800s before Mississippi was a state. Early American pioneers began settling in the area soon after the Revolutionary War. An Indian trail crossed the Strong River in the present-day D'Lo Water Park and wherever fords existed on navigable streams traders tended to gather. The fact that this area was a Choctaw annual pilgrimage site added to its importance as a population center.
In 1836 a state legislator, Brewster Jaynes, and his brother Anslem began construction of three water-powered factories, or mills, on the Strong River between the confluence of Sellers' Creek and the falls. The mills produced fine lumber and it was hauled by oxen to Brandon and then to Jackson for the construction of the (Old) Capitol. The mills served their purpose but in the 1850s fell into disuse. The mills had the river dammed and trees eroding out of the banks upstream soon jammed into one another and produced a river packed with debris and that was completely non-navigible. In 1859 an unknown arsonist set fire to the mills and destroyed all of them.
There were several other mills up the length of Sellers' Creek all the way to the present-day community of Weathersby. This region between Weathersby and the Jaynes' mills became known as Millhaven.
Following the War Between the States Millhaven was to become incorporated and receive a United States Post Office. When the name Millhaven was rejected by the Postmaster General's office in Washington, D.C. for unknown reasons, another name was sought.
The next name of the new town to be submitted was De'l'eau. This is a French word that means simply "of water". Careful and lengthy research by University of Southern Mississippi anthropology graduate students shed light on this submission in 2003. It seems that there is an early French map of this region that shows the confluence of Strong River and Sellers' Creek, the spot nearly exactly where D'Lo sits today. There is a dot on the map and the French words "de'l'eau sans potable". This translates into English as bad drinking water. (the name Strong River comes from the English translation of the Choctaw words "Bogue Homi", or 'Bitter Creek", a generic Choctaw place-name found identifying Strong River as well as several other major streams across the region).
The name De'l'eau was accepted but it was shortened and spelled phonetically. The new spelling was simply "D'Lo".
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