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Louisiana's Loss, Mississippi’s Gain, by Robert Scharff
Extracting from the Echo’s 1978 Heritage edition, the following is reported:
“In 1859, F.W. Brown settled on 90 acres now located at the southwest comer of the current intersection of Highway 90 with Waveland Avenue. By the time he had been on the property for the required five years and purchased it in 1864 under the Homestead Act, 15 acres had already been planted in Muscadine grapes.” (p. 188)
“Brown usually made about 50 barrels of wine a year.” (p. 326)
Hancock County Historical Society
The Hancock County Historical Society has accumulated other items of interest over the years. A description in its files mentions that the vines grew in arbors “about ten feet square and eight feet high and ten feet apart....[These] allowed the visitors to walk under and pick grapes off the vines.”
Guests came from the hotels like the Pickwick, Tulane and Clifton of Bay St. Louis, about five miles away. These were folks from New Orleans, Natchez, and other places -people who vacationed at the Bay. They came to the vineyard in “tally-hos,” carts or wagons drawn by double teams of horses that would transport a number of guests together.
The Brown house contained a center hall, alongside of which were separate rooms with tables where guests were served the wine, together with homemade bread and butter. Inside the vineyard, there was also a pavilion where people would dance to tunes played on the piano, and anyone who could play was welcome to do so. A professional pianist would sometimes be called.
The wine business prospered over the years, both in local sales and mail-order business. Its demise was occasioned by the federal law called Prohibition, which was effective on midnight of January 16, 1920. Afterward, the Browns emptied the wine cellar and buried the remaining inventory. There are stories that subsequently, the revenuers came to the place, dug up the bottles and destroyed them.
The files of HCHS also contain a transcript of an interview with Mr. Charles Banderet, taken on tape on May 12, 1977 by Margaret M. Gibbens. Mr. Banderet was a regular pianist at Brown’s Vineyard, and was age 85 at the time. He was bom on September 9, 1891, and died on August 21, 1984. That transcript is attached, in its entirety.


Browns Vineyard Historical-Marker-Application-2004-(2)
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