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Community

Things to Do!
Things to do while you are in town!
Retire to Oxford!
"'Sophiticated Little Oxford' is waiting for you ...........what are you waiting for? NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELER
Oxford Chamber of Commerce
All Things Oxford - Check it out!
Visit Oxford
Convention & Visitor's Bureau - Calendar of Events
Oxford School District
Home of the Chargers! The mission of the Oxford School District is to produce educated, responsible citizens who are capable of taking an active role in society.
Lafayette School District
The Lafayette County School District believes that all children can learn. Our mission is to provide a quality education.
About Oxford

Nestled among the rolling hills of Lafayette County in North Mississippi, Oxford was little more than a few shops and inns when it was chartered in 1837. On land previously owned by a Chickasaw princess, Hoka, it lay at the heart of a county named for a French hero in the American Revolution. In hopes of locating Mississippi's first university within its borders, Oxford's visionary founders named it after the famous university town in England. Four years later, by a margin of only one vote, the Mississippi Legislature granted the town's wish and named it home to the forthcoming University of Mississippi, setting into motion a vibrant future for Oxford and Lafayette County as one of the South's most prominent centers of education, commerce, and culture. The university opened its doors to the first 80 students in 1848. In pre-Civil War years, a variety of stores and specialty shops lined the Lafayette Courthouse Square in downtown Oxford, much as they do today.

As a hub of commercial, intellectual, and spiritual activity, Oxford thrived during the earliest days of the war. Eventually, however, the bitter conflict took its toll, depleting the town of work-aged men. The square essentially burned to the ground in the wake of Union troops who had occupied some of it finest buildings. After a lengthy period of re-establishing the community, the stately courthouse and several surrounding stores were also rebuilt.

William Faulkner, who proudly called Oxford his home, immortalized the vivid characters that walked Oxford's streets, managed its stores and lived in its historic homes in his literary works. Faulkner's widespread acclaim and narrow focus on the inhabitants of Oxford - which he called his "little postage stamp of earth" - put his neighbors and other townsfolk at the somewhat uneasy center of national and international attention. Since Faulkner's death in 1962, however, the town has embraced his work and his legacy, now touting itself a"the literary center of the South." Truly, Oxford seems to be a breeding ground for novelists, having since been home to the likes of John Grisham, Willie Morris, Barry Hannah, Cynthia Shearer, and Larry Brown, along with dozens of noteworthy journalists, poets and other writers and artists.

For more information on life in Oxford and Lafayette County, read on or visit the links below at the bottom of this page.

The University of Mississippi - A pictoral History
USA Today article on GREAT Cities to uncomplicate your life!

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