The Laurel Hill Plantation in Jefferson County, Mississippi near Rodney, Mississippi, United States, was a historic plantation. It is located about two miles southeast of Rodney, in a bend of the Mississippi River named "Petit Gulf".[1] It is significant for the architecture of its main plantation house and for the development of Petit Gulf cotton, a cotton hybrid, on its property.
The plantation house was built around 1815 for Dr Rush Nutt, a scientist and agriculturalist.[2] Later, it was inherited by his son, Haller Nutt (1816-1864). Rush Nutt developed the cotton hybrid, and was also the first to use steam engine power in operating cotton gins.[2]
It was studied by the Historic American Buildings Survey.[3][4][2]
The property is not listed on the National Register of Historic Places, although the National Register's NRIS database shows an entry related to it on January 29, 1983.[5] This may have been a determination of eligibility or a delisting or some other event other than a listing. And the HABS overview page about it states "The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 29, 1973."[2] Further, and perhaps confusingly, another Mississippi plantation of the same name in Adams County is National Register-listed.