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Claiborne County, Mississippi

Claiborne County is a county located in the U.S. state of Mississippi. As of the 2020 census, the population was 9,135.[1] Its county seat is Port Gibson.[2] The county is named after William Claiborne, the second governor of the Mississippi Territory.

Claiborne County
Claiborne County courthouse and Confederate Monument in Port Gibson
Location within the U.S. state of Mississippi
Mississippi's location within the U.S.
Coordinates: 31°58′N 90°55′W / 31.97°N 90.91°W / 31.97; -90.91
Country United States
State Mississippi
Founded1802
Named forWilliam C. C. Claiborne
SeatPort Gibson
Largest cityPort Gibson
Area
 • Total501 sq mi (1,300 km2)
 • Land487 sq mi (1,260 km2)
 • Water14 sq mi (40 km2)  2.8%
Population
 (2020)
 • Total9,135
 • Density18/sq mi (7.0/km2)
Time zoneUTC−6 (Central)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
Congressional district2nd
Websitewww.ccmsgov.us

Claiborne County is included in the Vicksburg, MS Micropolitan Statistical Area as well as the Jackson-Vicksburg-Brookhaven, MS Combined Statistical Area. It is bordered by the Mississippi River on the west and the Big Black River on the north.

As of the 2020 Census, this small county has the highest percentage of black or African American residents of any U.S. county, at 88.6% of the population.[3] Located just south of the area known as the Mississippi Delta, this area also was a center of cotton plantations and related agriculture along the river, supported by enslaved African Americans. After emancipation, many generations of African Americans have stayed here because of family ties and having made the land their own.

Claiborne County was the center of a little-known but profound demonstration and struggle during the civil rights movement.[4]

History edit

The county had been settled by French, Spanish, and English colonists, and American pioneers as part of the Natchez District; organized in 1802, it was the fourth county in the Mississippi Territory.[5] European-American settlers did not develop the area for cotton plantations until after Indian Removal in the 1830s, at which time they brought in numerous slaves through the domestic slave trade. In total, this transported one million enslaved African Americans from the Upper South to the Deep South, disrupting numerous families. Using the enslaved workers, planters developed long plantations that had narrow fronts on the rivers: the Mississippi to the west and the Big Black River to the north,[5] which were the transportation byways. As in other parts of the Delta, the bottomlands areas further from the river remained largely frontier and undeveloped until after the American Civil War.[6] Well before the Civil War, the county had a majority-black population.

Grand Gulf, a port on the Mississippi River, shipped thousands of bales of cotton annually before the Civil War. It received cotton shipped by railroad from Port Gibson and three surrounding counties. The trading town became cut off from the river by its changing course and shifting to the west. Grand Gulf had 1,000 to 1500 residents about 1858; by the end of the century, it had 150 and became a ghost town.[7] Businesses in the county seat of Port Gibson, which served the area, included a cotton gin and a cottonseed oil mill (which continued into the 20th century.) It has also been a retail center of trade.

After the Reconstruction era, white Democrats regained power in the state legislature by the mid-1870s; paramilitary groups such as the Red Shirts suppressed black voting through violence and fraud in many parts of the state.[8] These groups acted as "the military arm of the Democratic Party."[9]

 
The district from 2003 to 2013

In the late nineteenth century, these Redeemers redefined districts to "reduce Republican voting strength," creating a "'shoestring' Congressional district running the length of the Mississippi River," where most of the black population was concentrated.[10] Five other districts all had white majorities. While party alignments changed in the 20th century, such gerrymandering has persisted to support white political strength. Claiborne County is within the black-majority 2nd congressional district, as may be seen on the map to the right. The state has three other congressional districts, all white majority.

Democrats passed a new constitution in 1890 that included requirements for poll taxes; these and later literacy tests (administered subjectively by whites) were used in practice to disfranchise most blacks and many poor whites, preventing them from registering to vote.[11] This second-class status was enforced by whites until after the civil rights movement gained passage of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965.[12]

The county's economy continued to be based on agriculture. After the Civil War and emancipation, the system of sharecropping developed. More than 80 percent of African-American workers were involved in sharecropping from the late 19th century into the 1930s, shaping all aspects of daily life for them.[13]

20th century to present edit

Excluded from the political process and suffering lynchings and other violence, many blacks left the county and state in the Great Migration. In 1900 whites numbered 4565 in the county, and blacks 16,222.[5] A local history noted many blacks were leaving the county at that time.[5] As can be seen in the Historical Population table in the "Demographics" section below, from 1900 to 1920, the population of the county declined by 41%, more than 8500 persons from the peak of 20,787. Most of these rural blacks migrated to the industrial North and Midwest cities, such as Chicago, to seek jobs and other opportunities elsewhere. Rural whites also migrated out of the South.[14]

Despite the passage of national civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s, African Americans in Claiborne County continued to struggle against white supremacy in most aspects of their lives. The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission continued to try to spy on and disrupt black meetings. "African Americans insisted on dignified treatment and full inclusion in the community's public life, while whites clung to paternalistic notions of black inferiority and defended inherited privilege."[15]

In reaction to harassment and violence, in 1966 blacks formed a group, Deacons for Defense, which armed to protect the people and was strictly for self-defense. They learned the law and stayed within it. After shadowing police to prevent abuses, its leaders eventually began to work closely with the county sheriff to keep relations peaceful. In later years, five of the Deacons worked in law enforcement and two were the first blacks to run for county sheriff.[16]

In the late 1960s, African Americans struggled to integrate schools, and to register and vote.[17] In 1965 NAACP leader Charles Evers (brother of Medgar, who had been assassinated) became very active in Claiborne County and other areas of southwest Mississippi, including Adams and Jefferson counties. He gained an increase in voter registration as well as increasing membership in the NAACP throughout the region. Evers was influential in a developing a moderate coalition of blacks and white liberals in Mississippi. They wanted to develop alternatives to both the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and the all-white Democratic Regulars.[18]

In the June 1966 Democratic primary, blacks in Claiborne and Jefferson counties cast decisive majorities, voting for the MFDP candidate, Marcus Whitley, for Congress and giving him victory in those counties. In the November election, Evers led an African-American vote for the Independent senatorial candidate, Prentiss Walker, who won in those counties but lost to incumbent James O. Eastland, a white Democrat.[19] (Claiborne County and southwest Mississippi were then in the Mississippi's 4th congressional district.) Walker was a conservative who in 1964 was elected as the first Republican Congressman from Mississippi in the 20th century, as part of a major realignment of political parties in the South.

To gain integration of public facilities and more opportunities in local businesses, where no black clerks were hired, African Americans undertook an economic boycott of merchants in the county seat of Port Gibson. (Similar economic boycotts were conducted in this period in Jackson and Greenville.) Evers led the boycott, enforced its maintenance, and later negotiated with merchants and their representatives on how to end it. While criticized for some of his methods, Evers gained support from the national NAACP for his apparent effectiveness, from the segregationist Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission for negotiating on certain elements, and from local African Americans and white liberals.[4] The boycott was upheld as a legal form of political protest by the United States Supreme Court.

The economic boycott was concluded in late January 1967, when merchants agreed to hire blacks as clerks. Nearly two dozen people were hired, and merchants promised more courteous treatment and ease of shopping. In addition, by this time 50 students were attending formerly whites-only public schools. In November 1966 Floyd Collins ran for the school board; he was the county's first black candidate for electoral office since Reconstruction. He was defeated, but a majority of blacks carried the county against Democratic Regular candidates for the Senate and Congress, incumbent senator James Eastland and John Bell Williams.[20]

In 1979, Frank Davis was elected as the county's first black sheriff since Reconstruction.[21]

Since 2003, when Mississippi had to redistrict because it lost a seat in Congress, Claiborne County has been included in the black-majority 2nd congressional district. Its voters strongly support Democratic candidates. The three other districts are white majority and vote for Republicans.

Law enforcement edit

Claiborne County Sheriff's Office
AbbreviationCCSO
Agency overview
Formed1818
Jurisdictional structure
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersPO Box 247
410 Main Street
Port Gibson, MS 39150
Agency executive
Website
http://www.claibornecountysheriff.org/

The Claiborne County Sheriff's Department was formed in 1818, when A. Barnes became Claiborne County's first sheriff. Despite having a majority black population, Claiborne has only had three black sheriffs. In 1874, during the period known as Reconstruction, Thomas Bland became the county's first black sheriff. He served for less than a year. It would be over a hundred years before Claiborne would have another black sheriff when Frank Davis took office in 1979.[21] Davis served until 2012, when Marvin Lucas, the current sheriff, took office.[22] Frank Davis, the current sheriff, took office in January 2016.[22]

Politics edit

United States presidential election results for Claiborne County, Mississippi[23]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 603 13.55% 3,772 84.78% 74 1.66%
2016 540 12.64% 3,708 86.80% 24 0.56%
2012 625 11.40% 4,838 88.22% 21 0.38%
2008 748 13.72% 4,682 85.86% 23 0.42%
2004 950 17.74% 4,362 81.46% 43 0.80%
2000 883 19.13% 3,670 79.52% 62 1.34%
1996 784 16.87% 3,739 80.46% 124 2.67%
1992 935 21.19% 3,302 74.84% 175 3.97%
1988 1,233 28.35% 3,083 70.89% 33 0.76%
1984 1,294 28.86% 3,179 70.90% 11 0.25%
1980 1,129 26.70% 3,032 71.71% 67 1.58%
1976 1,078 27.99% 2,657 68.98% 117 3.04%
1972 1,521 41.76% 2,076 57.00% 45 1.24%
1968 230 6.57% 2,129 60.79% 1,143 32.64%
1964 1,226 93.59% 84 6.41% 0 0.00%
1960 180 17.37% 205 19.79% 651 62.84%
1956 191 23.24% 339 41.24% 292 35.52%
1952 560 53.03% 496 46.97% 0 0.00%
1948 14 1.81% 19 2.45% 742 95.74%
1944 45 5.96% 710 94.04% 0 0.00%
1940 32 4.11% 737 94.61% 10 1.28%
1936 31 3.85% 774 96.03% 1 0.12%
1932 16 2.19% 713 97.67% 1 0.14%
1928 43 5.73% 708 94.27% 0 0.00%
1924 14 2.26% 605 97.74% 0 0.00%
1920 14 3.37% 401 96.39% 1 0.24%
1916 5 1.13% 435 98.64% 1 0.23%
1912 3 0.74% 399 98.76% 2 0.50%

Geography edit

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 501 square miles (1,300 km2), of which 487 square miles (1,260 km2) is land and 14 square miles (36 km2) (2.8%) is water.[24]

Major highways edit

Adjacent counties edit

National protected area edit

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18103,102
18205,96392.2%
18309,78764.1%
184013,07833.6%
185014,94114.2%
186015,6794.9%
187013,386−14.6%
188016,76825.3%
189014,516−13.4%
190020,78743.2%
191017,403−16.3%
192013,019−25.2%
193012,152−6.7%
194012,8105.4%
195011,944−6.8%
196010,845−9.2%
197010,086−7.0%
198012,27921.7%
199011,370−7.4%
200011,8314.1%
20109,604−18.8%
20209,135−4.9%
U.S. Decennial Census[25]
1790-1960[26] 1900-1990[27]
1990-2000[28] 2010-2013[1]

Population declined from 1940 to 1979 as more African Americans left in the Great Migration. After gains from 1970 to 1980, population has declined since 1980 by nearly 25%. Because of limited economic opportunities in the rural county, residents have left.

Claiborne County by race as of 2020[29]
Race Num. Perc.
White 974 10.66%
Black or African American 7,959 87.13%
Native American 8 0.09%
Other/Mixed 122 1.34%
Hispanic or Latino 72 0.79%

As of the 2020 United States census, there were 9,135 people, 2,908 households, and 1,897 families residing in the county.

Communities edit

City edit

Census-designated place edit

Unincorporated communities edit

Ghost towns edit

Sites of interest edit

 
Alcorn State University

Education edit

All of the county is zoned to the Claiborne County School District.[30]

Notable people edit

  • E. S. Dortch, planter and politician from Bossier Parish in northwestern Louisiana, last surviving (1943) Bossier Parish veteran of the Confederate States Army, born in Claiborne County in 1841[31]
  • Abijah Hunt, New Jersey native and merchant who became a major planter in the area
  • David Hunt, nephew of Abijah Hunt who inherited his plantations and businesses, and acquired even more properties, becoming one of 12 planter millionaires in the Natchez District before the American Civil War
  • James Monroe Trotter, the first African-American promoted to lieutenant in the US Army during the American Civil War, and first to be hired by the U.S. Postal Service; he was appointed in 1886 as federal Recorder of Deeds in Washington, D.C.[32]
  • Joseph Edison Walker, physician and entrepreneur, was born and grew up in Tillman, and founded the Universal Life Insurance Company, one of the largest black-owned insurance companies in the nation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved October 26, 2021.
  2. ^ . National Association of Counties. Archived from the original on May 31, 2011. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  3. ^ "Minorities now in the majority in nearly 10% of U.S. counties", Lexington Herald-Leader August 8, 2007, p. A8
  4. ^ a b Crosby, Emilye (2006). Little Taste of Freedom: The Black Freedom Struggle in Claiborne County, Mississippi. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807856383.
  5. ^ a b c d "Claiborne County", Mississippi: Comprising Sketches of Counties, Towns, Events, Institutions ..., ed. by Dunbar Rowland, Southern Historical Publishing Association, 1907, pp. 420-423
  6. ^ John C. Willis, Forgotten Time: The Yazoo-Mississippi Delta after the Civil War, Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2000
  7. ^ Mississippi: Comprising Sketches of Counties, Towns, Events, Institutions ..., ed. by Dunbar Rowland, Southern Historical Publishing Association, 1907, p. 794
  8. ^ Nicholas Lemann, Redemption: The Last Battle of the Civil War, New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Paperback, 2007
  9. ^ George C. Rable, But There Was No Peace: The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1984, p. 132
  10. ^ Eric Foner, Reconstruction, 1863-1877, New York: Perennial Classics, p. 590
  11. ^ Michael Perman, Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888-1908 (2000), ch 4.
  12. ^ Neil McMillen, Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow (1989), pp. 1-17
  13. ^ Crosby (2005), A Little Taste of Freedom, p. 3
  14. ^ Gregory, James N. (2005), The Southern Diaspora: How the Great Migrations of Black and White Southerners Transformed America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 12-17.
  15. ^ Crosby (2005), Little Taste of Freedom, p. xv
  16. ^ Crosby (2005), A Little Taste of Freedom, pp. 179-186
  17. ^ Crosby (2005), A Little Taste of Freedom, pp.
  18. ^ Crosby (2005), A Little Taste of Freedom, pp. 193-194
  19. ^ Crosby (2006), A Little Taste of Freedom, pp. 195-196
  20. ^ Crosby (2006), A Little Taste of Freedom, pp. 205-206
  21. ^ a b "Untitled Bio of Sheriff Frank Davis". Claiborne County Sheriff's Office. Retrieved July 22, 2015. Sheriff Davis made history in 1979. He was elected the first black sheriff in Claiborne County, Mississippi in over 100 years.
  22. ^ a b . Claiborne County Sheriff's Office. Archived from the original on July 23, 2015. Retrieved July 22, 2015. Sheriff Lucas was elected to the position of Sheriff of Claiborne County in 2011, and took office in January 2012.
  23. ^ Leip, David. "Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections". uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  24. ^ . United States Census Bureau. August 22, 2012. Archived from the original on September 28, 2013. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  25. ^ "U.S. Decennial Census". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  26. ^ . University of Virginia Library. Archived from the original on August 11, 2012. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  27. ^ "Population of Counties by Decennial Census: 1900 to 1990". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  28. ^ "Census 2000 PHC-T-4. Ranking Tables for Counties: 1990 and 2000" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. (PDF) from the original on March 27, 2010. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  29. ^ "Explore Census Data". data.census.gov. Retrieved December 9, 2021.
  30. ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Claiborne County, MS" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. (PDF) from the original on July 31, 2022. Retrieved July 31, 2022. - Text list
  31. ^ "Col. E. S. Dortch Dies at Atlanta: Bossier Veteran Who Fought Under Stonewall Jackson Succumbs". The Shreveport Times through findagrave.com. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  32. ^ "James Monroe Trotter". Monticello.org. Retrieved March 9, 2014.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Claiborne County, Mississippi at Wikimedia Commons
  • Claiborne County Public School District

31°58′N 90°55′W / 31.97°N 90.91°W / 31.97; -90.91

claiborne, county, mississippi, claiborne, county, county, located, state, mississippi, 2020, census, population, county, seat, port, gibson, county, named, after, william, claiborne, second, governor, mississippi, territory, claiborne, countycountyclaiborne, . Claiborne County is a county located in the U S state of Mississippi As of the 2020 census the population was 9 135 1 Its county seat is Port Gibson 2 The county is named after William Claiborne the second governor of the Mississippi Territory Claiborne CountyCountyClaiborne County courthouse and Confederate Monument in Port GibsonLocation within the U S state of MississippiMississippi s location within the U S Coordinates 31 58 N 90 55 W 31 97 N 90 91 W 31 97 90 91Country United StatesState MississippiFounded1802Named forWilliam C C ClaiborneSeatPort GibsonLargest cityPort GibsonArea Total501 sq mi 1 300 km2 Land487 sq mi 1 260 km2 Water14 sq mi 40 km2 2 8 Population 2020 Total9 135 Density18 sq mi 7 0 km2 Time zoneUTC 6 Central Summer DST UTC 5 CDT Congressional district2ndWebsitewww wbr ccmsgov wbr usClaiborne County is included in the Vicksburg MS Micropolitan Statistical Area as well as the Jackson Vicksburg Brookhaven MS Combined Statistical Area It is bordered by the Mississippi River on the west and the Big Black River on the north As of the 2020 Census this small county has the highest percentage of black or African American residents of any U S county at 88 6 of the population 3 Located just south of the area known as the Mississippi Delta this area also was a center of cotton plantations and related agriculture along the river supported by enslaved African Americans After emancipation many generations of African Americans have stayed here because of family ties and having made the land their own Claiborne County was the center of a little known but profound demonstration and struggle during the civil rights movement 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century to present 2 Law enforcement 3 Politics 4 Geography 4 1 Major highways 4 2 Adjacent counties 4 3 National protected area 5 Demographics 6 Communities 6 1 City 6 2 Census designated place 6 3 Unincorporated communities 6 4 Ghost towns 7 Sites of interest 8 Education 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe county had been settled by French Spanish and English colonists and American pioneers as part of the Natchez District organized in 1802 it was the fourth county in the Mississippi Territory 5 European American settlers did not develop the area for cotton plantations until after Indian Removal in the 1830s at which time they brought in numerous slaves through the domestic slave trade In total this transported one million enslaved African Americans from the Upper South to the Deep South disrupting numerous families Using the enslaved workers planters developed long plantations that had narrow fronts on the rivers the Mississippi to the west and the Big Black River to the north 5 which were the transportation byways As in other parts of the Delta the bottomlands areas further from the river remained largely frontier and undeveloped until after the American Civil War 6 Well before the Civil War the county had a majority black population Grand Gulf a port on the Mississippi River shipped thousands of bales of cotton annually before the Civil War It received cotton shipped by railroad from Port Gibson and three surrounding counties The trading town became cut off from the river by its changing course and shifting to the west Grand Gulf had 1 000 to 1500 residents about 1858 by the end of the century it had 150 and became a ghost town 7 Businesses in the county seat of Port Gibson which served the area included a cotton gin and a cottonseed oil mill which continued into the 20th century It has also been a retail center of trade After the Reconstruction era white Democrats regained power in the state legislature by the mid 1870s paramilitary groups such as the Red Shirts suppressed black voting through violence and fraud in many parts of the state 8 These groups acted as the military arm of the Democratic Party 9 nbsp The district from 2003 to 2013In the late nineteenth century these Redeemers redefined districts to reduce Republican voting strength creating a shoestring Congressional district running the length of the Mississippi River where most of the black population was concentrated 10 Five other districts all had white majorities While party alignments changed in the 20th century such gerrymandering has persisted to support white political strength Claiborne County is within the black majority 2nd congressional district as may be seen on the map to the right The state has three other congressional districts all white majority Democrats passed a new constitution in 1890 that included requirements for poll taxes these and later literacy tests administered subjectively by whites were used in practice to disfranchise most blacks and many poor whites preventing them from registering to vote 11 This second class status was enforced by whites until after the civil rights movement gained passage of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 12 The county s economy continued to be based on agriculture After the Civil War and emancipation the system of sharecropping developed More than 80 percent of African American workers were involved in sharecropping from the late 19th century into the 1930s shaping all aspects of daily life for them 13 20th century to present edit Excluded from the political process and suffering lynchings and other violence many blacks left the county and state in the Great Migration In 1900 whites numbered 4565 in the county and blacks 16 222 5 A local history noted many blacks were leaving the county at that time 5 As can be seen in the Historical Population table in the Demographics section below from 1900 to 1920 the population of the county declined by 41 more than 8500 persons from the peak of 20 787 Most of these rural blacks migrated to the industrial North and Midwest cities such as Chicago to seek jobs and other opportunities elsewhere Rural whites also migrated out of the South 14 Despite the passage of national civil rights legislation in the mid 1960s African Americans in Claiborne County continued to struggle against white supremacy in most aspects of their lives The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission continued to try to spy on and disrupt black meetings African Americans insisted on dignified treatment and full inclusion in the community s public life while whites clung to paternalistic notions of black inferiority and defended inherited privilege 15 In reaction to harassment and violence in 1966 blacks formed a group Deacons for Defense which armed to protect the people and was strictly for self defense They learned the law and stayed within it After shadowing police to prevent abuses its leaders eventually began to work closely with the county sheriff to keep relations peaceful In later years five of the Deacons worked in law enforcement and two were the first blacks to run for county sheriff 16 In the late 1960s African Americans struggled to integrate schools and to register and vote 17 In 1965 NAACP leader Charles Evers brother of Medgar who had been assassinated became very active in Claiborne County and other areas of southwest Mississippi including Adams and Jefferson counties He gained an increase in voter registration as well as increasing membership in the NAACP throughout the region Evers was influential in a developing a moderate coalition of blacks and white liberals in Mississippi They wanted to develop alternatives to both the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and the all white Democratic Regulars 18 In the June 1966 Democratic primary blacks in Claiborne and Jefferson counties cast decisive majorities voting for the MFDP candidate Marcus Whitley for Congress and giving him victory in those counties In the November election Evers led an African American vote for the Independent senatorial candidate Prentiss Walker who won in those counties but lost to incumbent James O Eastland a white Democrat 19 Claiborne County and southwest Mississippi were then in the Mississippi s 4th congressional district Walker was a conservative who in 1964 was elected as the first Republican Congressman from Mississippi in the 20th century as part of a major realignment of political parties in the South To gain integration of public facilities and more opportunities in local businesses where no black clerks were hired African Americans undertook an economic boycott of merchants in the county seat of Port Gibson Similar economic boycotts were conducted in this period in Jackson and Greenville Evers led the boycott enforced its maintenance and later negotiated with merchants and their representatives on how to end it While criticized for some of his methods Evers gained support from the national NAACP for his apparent effectiveness from the segregationist Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission for negotiating on certain elements and from local African Americans and white liberals 4 The boycott was upheld as a legal form of political protest by the United States Supreme Court The economic boycott was concluded in late January 1967 when merchants agreed to hire blacks as clerks Nearly two dozen people were hired and merchants promised more courteous treatment and ease of shopping In addition by this time 50 students were attending formerly whites only public schools In November 1966 Floyd Collins ran for the school board he was the county s first black candidate for electoral office since Reconstruction He was defeated but a majority of blacks carried the county against Democratic Regular candidates for the Senate and Congress incumbent senator James Eastland and John Bell Williams 20 In 1979 Frank Davis was elected as the county s first black sheriff since Reconstruction 21 Since 2003 when Mississippi had to redistrict because it lost a seat in Congress Claiborne County has been included in the black majority 2nd congressional district Its voters strongly support Democratic candidates The three other districts are white majority and vote for Republicans Law enforcement editClaiborne County Sheriff s OfficeAbbreviationCCSOAgency overviewFormed1818Jurisdictional structureGeneral natureLocal civilian policeOperational structureHeadquartersPO Box 247410 Main StreetPort Gibson MS 39150Agency executiveFrank Davis SheriffWebsitehttp www claibornecountysheriff org The Claiborne County Sheriff s Department was formed in 1818 when A Barnes became Claiborne County s first sheriff Despite having a majority black population Claiborne has only had three black sheriffs In 1874 during the period known as Reconstruction Thomas Bland became the county s first black sheriff He served for less than a year It would be over a hundred years before Claiborne would have another black sheriff when Frank Davis took office in 1979 21 Davis served until 2012 when Marvin Lucas the current sheriff took office 22 Frank Davis the current sheriff took office in January 2016 22 Politics editUnited States presidential election results for Claiborne County Mississippi 23 Year Republican Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 603 13 55 3 772 84 78 74 1 66 2016 540 12 64 3 708 86 80 24 0 56 2012 625 11 40 4 838 88 22 21 0 38 2008 748 13 72 4 682 85 86 23 0 42 2004 950 17 74 4 362 81 46 43 0 80 2000 883 19 13 3 670 79 52 62 1 34 1996 784 16 87 3 739 80 46 124 2 67 1992 935 21 19 3 302 74 84 175 3 97 1988 1 233 28 35 3 083 70 89 33 0 76 1984 1 294 28 86 3 179 70 90 11 0 25 1980 1 129 26 70 3 032 71 71 67 1 58 1976 1 078 27 99 2 657 68 98 117 3 04 1972 1 521 41 76 2 076 57 00 45 1 24 1968 230 6 57 2 129 60 79 1 143 32 64 1964 1 226 93 59 84 6 41 0 0 00 1960 180 17 37 205 19 79 651 62 84 1956 191 23 24 339 41 24 292 35 52 1952 560 53 03 496 46 97 0 0 00 1948 14 1 81 19 2 45 742 95 74 1944 45 5 96 710 94 04 0 0 00 1940 32 4 11 737 94 61 10 1 28 1936 31 3 85 774 96 03 1 0 12 1932 16 2 19 713 97 67 1 0 14 1928 43 5 73 708 94 27 0 0 00 1924 14 2 26 605 97 74 0 0 00 1920 14 3 37 401 96 39 1 0 24 1916 5 1 13 435 98 64 1 0 23 1912 3 0 74 399 98 76 2 0 50 Geography editAccording to the U S Census Bureau the county has a total area of 501 square miles 1 300 km2 of which 487 square miles 1 260 km2 is land and 14 square miles 36 km2 2 8 is water 24 Major highways edit nbsp U S Route 61 nbsp Mississippi Highway 18 nbsp Mississippi Highway 547 nbsp Mississippi Highway 548 Natchez Trace ParkwayAdjacent counties edit Warren County north Hinds County northeast Copiah County southeast Jefferson County south Tensas Parish Louisiana west National protected area edit Natchez Trace Parkway part Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 18103 102 18205 96392 2 18309 78764 1 184013 07833 6 185014 94114 2 186015 6794 9 187013 386 14 6 188016 76825 3 189014 516 13 4 190020 78743 2 191017 403 16 3 192013 019 25 2 193012 152 6 7 194012 8105 4 195011 944 6 8 196010 845 9 2 197010 086 7 0 198012 27921 7 199011 370 7 4 200011 8314 1 20109 604 18 8 20209 135 4 9 U S Decennial Census 25 1790 1960 26 1900 1990 27 1990 2000 28 2010 2013 1 Population declined from 1940 to 1979 as more African Americans left in the Great Migration After gains from 1970 to 1980 population has declined since 1980 by nearly 25 Because of limited economic opportunities in the rural county residents have left Claiborne County by race as of 2020 29 Race Num Perc White 974 10 66 Black or African American 7 959 87 13 Native American 8 0 09 Other Mixed 122 1 34 Hispanic or Latino 72 0 79 As of the 2020 United States census there were 9 135 people 2 908 households and 1 897 families residing in the county Communities editCity edit Port Gibson county seat and only municipality Census designated place edit Alcorn State University Hermanville PattisonUnincorporated communities edit Alcorn Carlisle Peyton RussumGhost towns edit Bruinsburg Grand Gulf Rocky SpringsSites of interest edit nbsp Alcorn State UniversityAlcorn State University Claiborne County Courthouse Grand Gulf Nuclear Generating Station Grand Gulf Military State Park Mississippi Windsor RuinsEducation editAll of the county is zoned to the Claiborne County School District 30 Notable people editE S Dortch planter and politician from Bossier Parish in northwestern Louisiana last surviving 1943 Bossier Parish veteran of the Confederate States Army born in Claiborne County in 1841 31 Abijah Hunt New Jersey native and merchant who became a major planter in the area David Hunt nephew of Abijah Hunt who inherited his plantations and businesses and acquired even more properties becoming one of 12 planter millionaires in the Natchez District before the American Civil War James Monroe Trotter the first African American promoted to lieutenant in the US Army during the American Civil War and first to be hired by the U S Postal Service he was appointed in 1886 as federal Recorder of Deeds in Washington D C 32 Joseph Edison Walker physician and entrepreneur was born and grew up in Tillman and founded the Universal Life Insurance Company one of the largest black owned insurance companies in the nation See also editNational Register of Historic Places listings in Claiborne County MississippiReferences edit a b State amp County QuickFacts United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved October 26 2021 Find a County National Association of Counties Archived from the original on May 31 2011 Retrieved June 7 2011 Minorities now in the majority in nearly 10 of U S counties Lexington Herald Leader August 8 2007 p A8 a b Crosby Emilye 2006 Little Taste of Freedom The Black Freedom Struggle in Claiborne County Mississippi University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807856383 a b c d Claiborne County Mississippi Comprising Sketches of Counties Towns Events Institutions ed by Dunbar Rowland Southern Historical Publishing Association 1907 pp 420 423 John C Willis Forgotten Time The Yazoo Mississippi Delta after the Civil War Charlottesville University of Virginia Press 2000 Mississippi Comprising Sketches of Counties Towns Events Institutions ed by Dunbar Rowland Southern Historical Publishing Association 1907 p 794 Nicholas Lemann Redemption The Last Battle of the Civil War New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux Paperback 2007 George C Rable But There Was No Peace The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction Athens University of Georgia Press 1984 p 132 Eric Foner Reconstruction 1863 1877 New York Perennial Classics p 590 Michael Perman Struggle for Mastery Disfranchisement in the South 1888 1908 2000 ch 4 Neil McMillen Dark Journey Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow 1989 pp 1 17 Crosby 2005 A Little Taste of Freedom p 3 Gregory James N 2005 The Southern Diaspora How the Great Migrations of Black and White Southerners Transformed America Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press pp 12 17 Crosby 2005 Little Taste of Freedom p xv Crosby 2005 A Little Taste of Freedom pp 179 186 Crosby 2005 A Little Taste of Freedom pp Crosby 2005 A Little Taste of Freedom pp 193 194 Crosby 2006 A Little Taste of Freedom pp 195 196 Crosby 2006 A Little Taste of Freedom pp 205 206 a b Untitled Bio of Sheriff Frank Davis Claiborne County Sheriff s Office Retrieved July 22 2015 Sheriff Davis made history in 1979 He was elected the first black sheriff in Claiborne County Mississippi in over 100 years a b History of the Sheriff s Office Claiborne County Sheriff s Office Archived from the original on July 23 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 Sheriff Lucas was elected to the position of Sheriff of Claiborne County in 2011 and took office in January 2012 Leip David Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections uselectionatlas org Retrieved March 4 2018 2010 Census Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau August 22 2012 Archived from the original on September 28 2013 Retrieved November 3 2014 U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 3 2014 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Archived from the original on August 11 2012 Retrieved November 3 2014 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 3 2014 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved November 3 2014 Explore Census Data data census gov Retrieved December 9 2021 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Claiborne County MS PDF U S Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on July 31 2022 Retrieved July 31 2022 Text list Col E S Dortch Dies at Atlanta Bossier Veteran Who Fought Under Stonewall Jackson Succumbs The Shreveport Times through findagrave com Retrieved March 23 2015 James Monroe Trotter Monticello org Retrieved March 9 2014 External links edit nbsp Media related to Claiborne County Mississippi at Wikimedia Commons Claiborne County Courthouse Pictures Claiborne County Public School District31 58 N 90 55 W 31 97 N 90 91 W 31 97 90 91 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claiborne County Mississippi amp 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