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The second edition of Mississippi: A History features a series of revisions and updates to its comprehensive coverage of Mississippi state history from the time of the region's first inhabitants into the 21st century. * Represents the only available comprehensive textbook on Mississippi history specifically for use in college-level courses * Features an engaging narrative mix of topical and chronological chapters * Includes chapter objectives that may be used by professors and students * Offers coverage of Mississippi's major political, economic, social, and cultural developments * Presents two entirely new chapters on important 21st-century developments in Mississippi * Contains expanded coverage of slavery in Mississippi history * Includes completely up-to-date chapter sources, selected bibliography, and subject index
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Cover
Title page
Copyright page
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments
Map: Mississippi’s Place in the United States
Map: The State of Mississippi
Chapter 1: Mississippi
The State Name
Climate and Physical Geography
The Influence of Geography on History
Selected Sources
Chapter 2: Two Worlds Collide
The First Mississippians
The Spanish Incursion
American Indians of Mississippi in the Late Seventeenth Century
Major Tribes
The Choctaws
The Chickasaws
Minor Tribes
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 3: French Colonies
Colonial Louisiana
Initial French Exploration
International Rivalries
Iberville’s Leadership
The Bienville Era, 1702–1743
Final Years of French Rule in Mississippi
French Colonial Life
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 4: The British Period, 1763–1781
British West Florida
The British Governors
Governor Peter Chester, 1770–1781
Social and Economic Life
The American Revolution
Selected Sources
Chapter 5: Spanish Rule, 1781–1798
The Boundary Dispute
Spain Maintains Control
Spanish Administration in Natchez
Spain’s Withdrawal
Selected Sources
Chapter 6: The Territorial Period, 1798–1817
The First Stage of Territorial Government
The Second Stage of Territorial Government
Governor William C. C. Claiborne, 1801–1803
Governor Robert Williams, 1805–1809
Governor David Holmes, 1809–1817
The Annexation of West Florida
The War of 1812
Economic Conditions
Politics
Selected Sources
Chapter 7: The New State, 1817–1832
Progress towards Statehood
The Constitutional Convention of 1817
The Constitution of 1817
Formal Admission to Statehood
Governor David Holmes, October 1817–January 1820
Governor George Poindexter, January 1820–January 1822
Governor Walter Leake, January 1822–November 1825
Governor David Holmes, January 1826–July 1826
Governor Gerard C. Brandon, July 1826–January 1832
Governor Abram M. Scott, January 1832–November 1833
The Constitution of 1832
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 8: Antebellum Politics
Review of National Political Party History
Transitions Following the Constitution of 1832
The Nullification Controversy
Governor Hiram G. Runnels, November, 1833–November, 1835
The Extraordinary Interim of Governor John A. Quitman
Governor Charles Lynch, January 1836–January 1838
Governor Alexander G. Mcnutt, January 1838–January 1842
The Union Bank Bonds Controversy
Governor Tilghman M. Tucker, January 1842–January 1844
Governor Albert G. Brown, January 1844–January1847
Selected Sources
Chapter 9: Antebellum Life
“Flush Times”
The Social Structure: Whites
The Social Structure: African Americans
Education
Religion
Selected Sources
Chapter 10: Mounting Sectional Strife
Mississippi and the War with Mexico
Governor Joseph W. Matthews, January 1848–January 1850
Governor John A. Quitman, January 1850–February 1851
Governor Henry S. Foote, January 1852–January 1854
Governor John J. McRae, January 1854–November 1857
Governor William McWillie, November 1857–November 1859
Selected Sources
Chapter 11: Secession and Civil War
John Jones Pettus, November 1859–November 1863
Presidential Election of 1860
Secession
The Civil War, 1861–1865
The Civil War Home Front
The War Ends
Selected Sources
Chapter 12: Reconstruction in Mississippi
Presidential Reconstruction, 1865–1867
Congressional or “Radical” Reconstruction, 1867–1876
The End of Reconstruction
The Hayes–Tilden Compromise
Selected Sources
Chapter 13: Bourbons and Populists
Democratic Party Supremacy
The Bourbons
Governors John M. Stone And Robert Lowry, 1876–1896
Other Bourbon Leaders
The Populists
The Demand for a New State Constitution
The Constitution of 1890
The Populist paradox
State Financial Difficulties
Governor Anselm Mclaurin, 1896–1900
Governor Andrew Houston Longino, 1900–1904
Selected Sources
Chapter 14: Into the Twentieth Century
Economic Conditions
New Opportunities for an Education
Religious Life
The Public Health
Selected Sources
Chapter 15: Progressive “Rednecks”
The Beginning of Progressive Reforms
World War I
Selected Sources
Chapter 16: A New Era: The 1920s
The Decline of the Progressive “Rednecks”
The 1927 Flood
Governor Bilbo’s Second Administration, 1928–1932
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 17: The Depression Years
Misery Sets In
Selected Sources
Chapter 18: A Rich Cultural Heritage
Literature
Music
The Fine Arts
Theater and Dance
Financial Support
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 19: The World War II Era
Another World War Begins
Mississippi and World War II
Governor Thomas L. Bailey, 1944–1947
The War as a Watershed
Selected Sources
Chapter 20: The 1950s
Postwar Transitions
Selected Sources
Chapter 21: Religious Life
Pervasive Acknowledgment of Faith
The Social Gospel
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 22: The Second Reconstruction
“Roll with Ross”
“Ambivalent Paul”
Continuing Resistance
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 23: Times of Transition
Changes in Mississippi
Transitions in Politics
Selected Sources
Chapter 24: The Social Environment
Recreation
Population Trends
Health Care
Other Social Challenges
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 25: Recent Political Trends
Governor William Winter Begins a New Era
Governor Kirk Fordice and the New Two-Party Era
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 26: Tumultuous Trends in Education
The Final Years of School Segregation
Public School Desegregation and Beyond
Educational Trends in the Late Twentieth Century
The Educational Reform Act of 1982
Higher Education
Selected Sources
Chapter 27: Recent Economic Trends
A New Era of Banking
Recent Trends in Agriculture
Industrial Development
Other Nonfarming Businesses
Energy Resources
The System of Transportation
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 28: Into the Twenty-First Century
Political Trends in Mississippi
Major Political Challenges and Accomplishments
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Chapter 29: Living in the Twenty-First Century
Major Economic Challenges and Accomplishments
Major Educational Challenges and Accomplishments
Major Social Challenges and Accomplishments
Conclusion
Selected Sources
Appendix I: European Rulers with Relation to Mississippi During the Colonial and Territorial Periods
Key Military Commandants and Governors in Mississippi during the French Period
Governors during the British Period
Governor-Generals during the Spanish Period
Governors during the Territorial Period
Governors of the State of Mississippi
Appendix II: Members of the U.S. Congress, 1817–1861
The House of Representatives
Members of the U.S. Congress, 1870–2014
Apendix III: Mississippi Symbols and Facts
Appendix IV: Total Population, 1800–2010
Appendix V: Racial Population Changes, 1800–2010
Selected Bibliography of Mississippi History
Secondary Sources
Primary Sources
Index
End User License Agreement
Chapter 09
Table 9.1 Farm sizes, 1860
Table 9.2 Slaveholders, 1860
Chapter 23
Table 23.1 Selected farm statistics, 1930–2000
Table 23.2 Farm owners by race, 1930–1969 (thousands)
Table 23.3 Selected major crops, 1890, 1969
Chapter 24
Table 24.1 Urban population, 1890–2000
Table 24.2 Infant and maternity mortality rates, 1922, 1968, 2000
Table 24.3 Poverty levels by county, 2000
Chapter 26
Table 26.1 Selected data for public schools
Table 26.2 Enrollment in institutions of higher learning, 1970–2000
Chapter 27
Table 27.1 Personal income, 1932–2012 (millions of dollars)
Table 27.2 Mississippi: top jobs, 2010
Chapter 01
Map 1.1 Soil regions
Plate 1.1 Piney woods.
Map 1.2 Major rivers
Plate 1.2 Big Black River.
Plate 1.3 Pascagoula River.
Chapter 02
Plate 2.1 Model of a Natchez Indian house.
Plate 2.2 Indian mound, Nanih Waiya.
Map 2.1 Indian tribes
Chapter 03
Plate 3.1 Mississippi River at Natchez.
Plate 3.2 The Pearl River.
Chapter 04
Plate 4.1 Fort Panmure at Natchez.
Plate 4.2 British Governor Elias Durnford and his wife.
Plate 4.3 River scene showing a keel boat.
Chapter 05
Map 5.1 North America, 1783
Plate 5.1 Rosalie, an antebellum home in Natchez.
Plate 5.2 William Dunbar.
Chapter 06
Map 6.1 Mississippi territory, 1798–1817
Plate 6.1 Natchez “Under-the-Hill.”
Plate 6.2 Mount Locust.
Plate 6.3 The Natchez Trace.
Map 6.2 The Louisiana Purchase and the exploration of the far west
Plate 6.4 Governor David Holmes.
Chapter 07
Plate 7.1 Home of John Ford, site of the “Pearl River Convention.”
Map 7.1 Indian land cessions
Plate 7.2 Greenwood Leflore’s mansion “Malmaison.”
Plate 7.3 Chief Pushmataha.
Chapter 08
Plate 8.1 The Old Capitol.
Plate 8.2 Governor Alexander G. McNutt.
Plate 8.3 The Governor’s Mansion.
Plate 8.4 Governor Albert G. Brown.
Chapter 09
Plate 9.1 Picking cotton.
Map 9.1 Early roads
Plate 9.2 Port Gibson Bank, 1840.
Plate 9.3 The Ruins of Windsor are the remains of a four-story antebellum plantation home in Claiborne County. Completed at the beginning of the Civil War, the home was occupied by both Union and Confederate soldiers. In 1890 fire destroyed Windsor, leaving only the 23 columns.
Plate 9.4 “Negro Quarters.”
Plate 9.5 William Johnson’s home in Natchez.
Plate 9.6 Jefferson College.
Plate 9.7 Mississippi College, Provine Chapel. Constructed during the 1850s, the oldest building on the campus of Mississippi College in Clinton, Provine Chapel, served as a hospital for Union soldiers during General Grant’s Vicksburg campaign.
Chapter 10
Plate 10.1 Governor John A. Quitman.
Plate 10.2 Jefferson Davis.
Plate 10.3 Governor William McWillie.
Chapter 11
Plate 11.1 Secession symbols.
Map 11.1 The Vicksburg Campaign, April to July 1863
Plate 11.2 Ulysses S. Grant Statue, Vicksburg National Military Park.
Plate 11.3 General John Clifford Pemberton.
Plate 11.4 General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
Plate 11.5 Monument to African American Soldiers, Vicksburg National Military Park.
Plate 11.6 Brice’s Crossroads battle reenactment.
Plate 11.7 Governor Charles Clark.
Plate 11.8 Jefferson and Varina Davis.
Chapter 12
Plate 12.1 African American refugees, 1897.
Plate 12.2 Blanche K. Bruce.
Plate 12.3 Hiram Revels.
Plate 12.4 James Lusk Alcorn.
Chapter 13
Plate 13.1 L. Q. C. Lamar.
Plate 13.2 African American convicts at work.
Plate 13.3 Ethelbert Barksdale.
Plate 13.4 Grangers’ Meeting Place in Vicksburg.
Chapter 14
Plate 14.1 A typical African American sharecropper’s shanty.
Plate 14.2 One perfect pine tree, 185 years old.
Plate 14.3 Steam locomotive on the Pearl River Valley RR.
Plate 14.4 The Lyceum at the University of Mississippi.
Plate 14.5 Tougaloo College, “The Mansion.” Tougaloo College’s oldest building, “The Mansion,” dates to 1860 when it was constructed as the home of a cotton planter. It became the original building at the college. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Plate 14.6 Tougaloo College, Woodworth Chapel. Woodworth Chapel was constructed initially as a church in 1901. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Chapel became an important part of the Civil Rights Movement. Medgar Evers, Fannie Lou Hamer, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and many other leaders spoke there, and Tougaloo College gained recognition as the center of civil rights activities in Mississippi.
Plate 14.7 Belhaven University, Fitzhugh Hall. The oldest building on the present campus of Belhaven University, Fitzhugh Hall was constructed in 1911. It was named for the institution’s first president. The 100-year-old building recently underwent extensive reconstruction and continues to house administration and academic facilities.
Plate 14.8 First Presbyterian Church in Brandon.
Chapter 15
Plate 15.1 Governor James K. Vardaman.
Plate 15.2 Public execution of an African American man.
Plate 15.3 Governor Theodore G. Bilbo.
Plate 15.4 Capitol Street in Jackson.
Plate 15.5 Street scene in Gulfport.
Plate 15.6 The War Memorial in Jackson.
Chapter 16
Plate 16.1 Carrie Belle Kearney.
Plate 16.2 Nellie Nugent Somerville.
Plate 16.3 Women’s Christian Temperance Union Parade.
Plate 16.4a Victims of the 1927 flood: cattle stranded along a railroad.
Plate 16.4b Victims of the 1927 flood: refugee tents.
Plate 16.4c Victims of the flood: African American refugees seeking aid.
Chapter 17
Plate 17.1 “Common folks” during the Great Depression.
Plate 17.2 Governor Martin Sennett Conner.
Plate 17.3 The Threefoot Building in Meridian was constructed by a Jewish-German immigrant family of merchants in the late 1920s. For decades the 16-story structure claimed to be the tallest building in the state, housing professional offices, a radio station, and many stores and other businesses in the center of the city. In 1979 it gained recognition by the National Register of Historic Places. After being abandoned in the 1990s, the building was added to list of America’s Most Endangered Places.
Plate 17.4 WPA sewing room in Jackson.
Plate 17.5 Governor Hugh Lawson White.
Chapter 18
Plate 18.1 Eudora Welty.
Plate 18.2 Margaret Walker Alexander.
Plate 18.3 Eudora Welty’s house.
Plate 18.4 Rowan Oak, the home of William Faulkner.
Plate 18.5 Dunbar Rowland.
Plate 18.6 Blues singer “Son” (Rufus) Thomas.
Plate 18.7 Elvis Presley’s birthplace in Tupelo.
Plate 18.8 Governor William Winter with Eudora Welty, Leontyne Price, and Elise Winter.
Plate 18.9 George Ohr, the Mad Potter of Biloxi.
Chapter 19
Plate 19.1 Governor Paul Johnson, Sr.
Plate 19.2 Soldiers marching on Capitol Street in Jackson.
Plate 19.3 A mid-twentieth century contrast in modes of transportation.
Plate 19.4 “Victory Gardeners.”
Plate 19.5 Governor Fielding L. Wright.
Chapter 20
Plate 20.1 Paramount Theatre in Jackson.
Plate 20.2 Rex Theatre “For Colored People.”
Plate 20.3 Dixiecrats poster.
Plate 20.4 Governor J. P. Coleman.
Chapter 21
Plate 21.1 Chapel of the Cross, Madison County.
Plate 21.2 Bethel AME Church.
Plate 21.3 The only Hindu Temple in the states of Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Alabama is located in Rankin County. The Hindu Temple Society of Mississippi built the 6,000 square foot structure in 1989. The temple is dedicated to thirteen gods in the Hindu pantheon represented by icons which were custom-made in India.
Plate 21.4 Church of Port Gibson.
Plate 21.5 Galloway United Methodist Church in Jackson.
Chapter 22
Plate 22.1a The Ross Barnett Reservoir.
Plate 22.1b Pearl River at Ross Barnett Reservoir.
Plate 22.2 Civil Rights march in Hattiesburg.
Plate 22.3 Amzie Moore.
Plate 22.4 James Meredith entering Ole Miss. Lieutenant Governor Paul Johnson, Jr. denied James Meredith’s admission to the University of Mississippi in 1962, although he held the court order and faced Meredith and two federal marshals.
Plate 22.5 Aaron Henry.
Plate 22.6 Medgar Evers’ home in Jackson.
Plate 22.7 Medgar Evers.
Plate 22.8 Vernon Dahmer’s property, firebombed by the Ku Klux Klan.
Plate 22.9 Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, Sam Bowers.
Chapter 23
Plate 23.1 Hurricane Camille destruction of a church.
Plate 23.2 Loading logs.
Plate 23.3 Ox team hauling pine wood.
Plate 23.4 Oil pump.
Plate 23.5 Governor William Waller.
Plate 23.6 Evelyn Gandy.
Plate 23.7 Senator Trent Lott.
Chapter 24
Plate 24.1 Weidmanns Restaurant, established 1870. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, Weidmanns Restaurant in Meridian may be Mississippi’s oldest restaurant in continuous operation. Opened by a Swiss immigrant in 1870, it became widely famous for rarely closing, having the longest bar in the state, and serving railroad workers as well as state and national celebrities.
Plate 24.2 Horses, a popular form of sport and recreation.
Plate 24.3 Choctaw women and children in traditional dress.
Map 24.1 Counties
Chapter 25
Plate 25.1 Governor Winter speaking at Neshoba County Fair.
Plate 25.2 Congressman Bennie Thompson.
Chapter 26
Plate 26.1 Old one-room schoolhouse.
Plate 26.2 Early integrated classroom.
Plate 26.3 Jackson State University.
Plate 26.4 Belhaven University.
Chapter 27
Plate 27.1 Cattle in a pasture.
Plate 27.2a An old house for chickens.
Plate 27.2b The modern Peco Foods storage tower.
Plate 27.3 Catfish pond.
Plate 27.4 Cotton field.
Plate 27.5 WorldCom Headquarters in Clinton.
Plate 27.6 Truck stop along interstate at Jackson.
Plate 27.7 Modern freight train in Rankin County.
Chapter 28
Plate 28.1 Mississippi Republican Party Rally with George H. W. Bush.
Plate 28.2 Senator Thad Cochran.
Plate 28.3 Governor Haley Barbour.
Plate 28.4 State Attorney General Jim Hood.
Plate 28.5 Congressman Gregg Harper.
Plate 28.6 Governor Phil Bryant.
Chapter 29
Plate 29.1 Hurricane Katrina destruction in Gulfport.
Plate 29.2 Hurricane Katrina destruction of U.S. Highway 90.
Plate 29.3 Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum.
Plate 29.4 Abortion clinic.
Cover
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Second Edition
Westley F. Busbee, Jr.
This edition first published 2015© 2015 John Wiley & Sons IncEdition history: Harlan Davidson, Inc. (1e, 2005)Harlan Davidson Inc. was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in May 2012
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Busbee, Westley F. Mississippi : a history / Westley F. Busbee, Jr. – Second edition. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-118-75590-7 (paperback)1. Mississippi–History. I. Title. F341.B93 2015 976.2–dc23
2014021667
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Cover image: Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson, Mississippi © DenisTangneyJr / istockphoto
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