Boxtown, Memphis
Boxtown is a neighborhood in South Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee near T.O. Fuller State Park. The oldest section of South Memphis, Boxtown includes White's Chapel AME Church, built in 1890. Boxtown has numerous shotgun houses.
Boundaries
The main boundary of Boxtown is Sewanee Road to the east.
History
Boxtown began as a community for emancipated slaves and freedmen soon after the signing the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, in Shelby County on the southern boundary of the City of Memphis.[1] Boxtown was so-named because its houses resembled railroad boxcars. A number of residents opened grocery stores, the most notable of whom was S.L. Jones (1914–1991), who opened a grocery at the corner of Sewanee Road and Fields Road. He later opened Jones Big Star on McLemore Avenue. On December 31, 1971, Boxtown was annexed by the City of Memphis after an failed annexation attempt in 1968.[2] A number of families have lived in the area for generations, notably the Rogers family and White Family, for whom White's Chapel Church was named.
References
- Graduates, University of Memphis (2019-09-16). "Boxtown: The Land of Broken Promises". StoryBoard Memphis. Retrieved 2021-06-20.
- "Boxtown: A forgotten piece of Memphis history". 2021-04-29. Retrieved 2021-06-20.
- Meeks, Ann. Streetscapes, The Commercial Appeal 1988-2013.
- Gibson, Stephanie. Beautifully Abandoned, Flickr 2011-2014.