
Recipient of the 2024 Historic Preservation award
Smokye Joe Frank is winner of 2024 Preservation Award
The honor is given by the Natchez Historical Society
The Historic Preservation Award honors individuals or organizations who have made a significant contribution to historic preservation or the study of history within the Natchez area.
When Frank learned of his selection for the award, he said he was flattered. “I Just turned 80 this year,” he said. “There are places I want to go and get back to in order to do the actual field work. But at my age, I simply can’t do it. This recognition makes a difference. It makes turning 80 not as bad. It makes growing old worthwhile.”
Frank said the last time he was surprised in this way was in 1980, when he was selected to sit on the Louisiana National Register of Historic Places Review Committee.
The preservation award was presented to Frank at the society's 2024 Annual Dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the Natchez Grand Hotel, 111 N. Broadway St.
Frank currently serves on the Natchez Preservation Commission. He is also a tour guide at Elms Court and Hope Farm. He previously served as an officer with the Natchez Historical Society.
In 2004, the Mississippi Archaeological Society honored him as the winner of the Calvin J. Brown Award.
Frank’s work as an archaeologist in Natchez started in the early 1960s, a year after he graduated from Cathedral High School, where he played football.
“In 1962, Robert S. Neitzel, archaeologist, gave me a job digging at the Grand Village of the Natchez Indian,” he recalled. “That made up my mind. From then to the spring of 1970, I worked, went to school, and looked for Natchez Indian Sites.”
For six years during the 1960s, Frank served with the Mississippi National Guard. In the spring of 1970, he graduated from Northwestern State University with a Bachelors of Arts degree in history and anthropology.
The next year found him working with Dr. Jeff P. Brain of the Peabody Museum, with whom he assisted with a Lower Mississippi Survey and spent his summer surveying the Natchez Bluff. During this time, he took college students to visit his sties. One of those students was Ian W. Brown, who is now professor emeritus in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Alabama.
Brown recounted: “In 1971 and 1972, Smokye was a major aid to Jeffrey P. Brain's Lower Mississippi Survey's operations surveying the Natchez Bluffs. This was a Peabody Museum, Harvard University project. It was at that time that Vin Steponaitis and I got to know Smokye very well, as he was constantly tracking down new sites for us.”
Brown said Frank also conducted research with Dr. Elizabeth Boggess, another respected archaeologist in Natchez.
In 1976, Frank graduated from Northwestern with a master’s degree in social studies with an emphasis on anthropology.
Frank’s work as an archaeologist can be seen in various locations in Natchez and Adams County. In 2015, he spearheaded efforts that resulted in the Adams County Board of Supervisors designating the portion of Lower Woodville Road from Col. John Pitchford Parkway to the Sibley post office as the Tunica Trail Tricentennial Bypass.
Frank said that what is now known as Lower Woodville Road was at one time a trail used by the Tunica Indians. Prior to this designation, Frank successfully led efforts to have Morgantown Road designated as the Natchez and Hamburg Railroad Company Memorial Byway.
In addition to his work in Mississippi, Frank served as an officer in the Southwest Louisiana Archaeological Society and in the newly formed Louisiana Archaeological Society.
During the 1990s, Frank worked with the Natchez Trace Archaeologist of the National Park surveying the last nine miles of the uncompleted development of the Natchez Trace Parkway into Natchez.
When surveying a site, “the goal is to determine whether human occupation ever occurred there,” Frank explained. He said the work involves, among other things, going out and selecting an area, looking at the land, walking the land, looking for artifacts, digging test holes, studying plants, studying geological information, and putting the information in a report.
Surveying also involves researching the history of the property, going back as far as one can, he said.
Since his retirement from the State of Louisiana in 2001, Frank continues to do research on various projects. In addition to looking for Natchez sites, he is retracing the Natchez and Hamburg Tracks.
Between 2001 and 2010, Frank assisted an archaeologist on sites on Fort Rosalie and The Natchez Trace.
Jessica Crawford, southeast regional director for The Archaeological Conservancy, and longtime friend of Frank, applauded his achievements.
"In 1971, he helped search for the Tunica Treasure, and he’s recorded hundreds of sites," she said. "I know he deserves many accolades!"


Recipient of the 2023 Historic Preservation award
Stanley Nelson, noted author and former newspaper editor, is the winner of the 2023 Historic Preservation Award
Historic Preservation Award
The Society honors organizations or individuals who have made a significant contribution to historic preservation or the study of history within the Natchez area. Generally, a recipient of the award is announced and honored at the annual meeting of the Society in January.
2022 Award to Stanley Nelson
From the December 30, 2022 NHS Press Release printed in the Natchez Democrat:
Stanley Nelson, noted author and former newspaper editor, is the winner of the 2023 Historic Preservation Award presented by the Natchez Historical Society, announced NHS President Maria Bowser at a recent board meeting. The award honors individuals or organizations who have made a significant contribution to historic preservation or the study of history within the Natchez area.
Nelson said he is honored to be the recipient of the award. “To understand who we are, we need to know who we were,” Nelson said. “That’s what I’ve tried to communicate, and I think that is among the goals of the Natchez Historical Society.” NHS will present the award to Nelson at its 2023 annual dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 24, at the Natchez Grand Hotel, 111 N. Broadway St.
“This recognition is well deserved,” said Bowser. “Mr. Nelson’s work as an author and newspaper editor is well known — and widely respected. His research on the civil rights movement in Natchez has contributed significantly to our understanding of what happened during that period in the 1960s.” Bowser added: “The invaluable columns he wrote for the Concordia Sentinel were a treasure trove of information on the history of the area.” Nelson was the longtime editor of Concordia Sentinel in Ferriday, La. In 2011, he was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his local reporting to unravel a 1964 civil rights-era murder in Ferriday, as well as related unsolved murders.
Nelson now works with Professional-in-Residence Chris Drew on the Louisiana State University Manship School’s racial and criminal justice reporting programs. Drawing on his work in community journalism, Nelson wrote two books on cold cases related to civil rights and the Ku Klux Klan in Louisiana and Mississippi. His first book, “Devils Walking: Klan Murders Along the Mississippi River in the 1960s” (2016, LSU Press), exposes the rise in Louisiana and Mississippi of an underground Klan terrorist cell known as the Silver Dollar Group whose members carried silver dollars as a sign of unity. His latest book, “Klan of Devils: The Murder of a Black Louisiana Deputy Sheriff” (2021, LSU Press), details the Klan attack on two Black deputies in Washington Parish, Louisiana, in 1965, resulting in the death of Deputy Oneal Moore.
Greg Iles, New York Times bestselling author, is a fan and supporter of Nelson’s work. In addition to dedicating his book, “Natchez Burning,” to Nelson, whom he described as a “humble hero,” Iles also wrote the Foreword for “Devils Walking.” “Stanley Nelson took up a group of civil rights cases so cold they could have chilled an industrial deep freeze and made them so hot that the FBI felt the burn,” Iles wrote. “That’s right – the chief law enforcement agency of the federal government had to scramble to play catch-up behind this one-man investigative juggernaut.” Iles concluded: “Stanley Nelson raised his pen against the sword of hatred, and as a result, one bend of the Mississippi River looks a lot less dark than it once did. Stanley Nelson gives me hope for the South, and for America.”
Nelson’s work has been featured in national publications, online media outlets and documentaries. In February, he was featured in PBS Frontline’s “American Reckoning,” Season 2022 Episode 1, which aired Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022. The documentary focused on the 1967 killing of Natchez NAACP leader Wharlest Jackson Sr.
Read more at: https://www.natchezdemocrat.com/2022/12/30/author-stanley-nelson-wins-2023-historic-preservation-award/