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Jackson, Mississippi

Jackson, officially the City of Jackson, is the capital of and the most populous city in the U.S. state of Mississippi. The city is also one of two county seats of Hinds County, along with Raymond. The city had a population of 153,701 at the 2020 census, down from 173,514 at the 2010 census. Jackson's population declined more between 2010 and 2020 (11.42%) than any major city in the United States.[3] Jackson is the anchor for the Jackson metropolitan statistical area, the largest metropolitan area completely within the state. With a 2020 population estimated around 600,000, metropolitan Jackson is home to over one-fifth of Mississippi's population. The city sits on the Pearl River and is located in the greater Jackson Prairie region of Mississippi.

Jackson, Mississippi
Nickname(s): 
Crossroads of the South, Jack-town, The 601
Motto: 
The City with Soul
Location of Jackson within Hinds County, Mississippi
Jackson
Location within Mississippi
Jackson
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 32°17′56″N 90°11′05″W / 32.29889°N 90.18472°W / 32.29889; -90.18472Coordinates: 32°17′56″N 90°11′05″W / 32.29889°N 90.18472°W / 32.29889; -90.18472
Country United States
State Mississippi
CountiesHinds, Madison, Rankin
Incorporated1822
Named forAndrew Jackson
Government
 • TypeMayor–Council
 • MayorChokwe Antar Lumumba (D)
 • Council
Members
  • Ward 1: Ashby Foote
  • Ward 2: Melvin Priester, Jr.
  • Ward 3: Kenneth Stokes
  • Ward 4: De'Keither Stamps
  • Ward 5: Charles H. Tillman
  • Ward 6: Aaron Banks
  • Ward 7: Virgi Lindsey
Area
 • State capital city113.85 sq mi (294.88 km2)
 • Land111.72 sq mi (289.34 km2)
 • Water2.14 sq mi (5.53 km2)
Elevation
279 ft (85 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • State capital city153,701
 • RankUS: 149th
 • Density1,375.82/sq mi (531.21/km2)
 • Urban
347,693 (US: 118th)
 • Urban density1,466.1/sq mi (566.1/km2)
 • Metro
591,978 (US: 99th)
DemonymJacksonian
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
ZIP codes
39200-39299
Area codes601, 769
FIPS code28-36000
GNIS feature ID0711543[2]
Websitewww.jacksonms.gov
For additional city data see City-Data

Founded in 1821 as the site for a new state capital, the city is named after General Andrew Jackson, who was honored for his role in the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812 and later served as U.S. president. Following the nearby Battle of Vicksburg in 1863 during the American Civil War, Union forces under the command of General William Tecumseh Sherman began the siege of Jackson and the city was subsequently burned.[4]

During the 1920s, Jackson surpassed Meridian to become the most populous city in the state following a speculative natural gas boom in the region. The current slogan for the city is "The City with Soul".[5] It has had numerous musicians prominent in blues, gospel, folk, and jazz. The city is located in the deep south halfway between Memphis and New Orleans on Interstate 55 and Dallas and Atlanta on Interstate 20. Being at this location has given the city the nickname the "crossroads of the south".

The city has a number of museums and cultural institutions, including the Mississippi Children's Museum, Mississippi Museum of Natural Science, Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, Mississippi Museum of Art, Old Capital Museum, Museum of Mississippi History. Other notable locations are the Mississippi Coliseum and the Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium, home of the Jackson State Tigers Football Team.

The Jackson metropolitan statistical area is the state's second largest metropolitan area overall, due to four counties in northern Mississippi being part of the Memphis, Tennessee metropolitan area.[6] In 2020, the Jackson metropolitan area held a GDP of 30 billion dollars, accounting for 29% of the state's total GDP of 104.1 billion dollars.

History

 
The entire Choctaw Nation's location and size compared to the U.S. state of Mississippi

Native Americans

The region that is now the city of Jackson was historically part of the large territory occupied by the Choctaw Nation. The Choctaw name for the locale was Chisha Foka.[7] The area now called Jackson was obtained by the United States under the terms of the Treaty of Doak's Stand in 1820, by which the United States acquired the land owned by the Choctaw Native Americans. After the treaty was ratified, American settlers moved into the area, encroaching on remaining Choctaw communal lands. One of the original Choctaw members, in 1849, described what he and his people experienced during this turbulent time when the Europeans had come to take their land. "We have had our habitations torn down and burned" as well as their "fences burned" while they constantly faced personal abuse and have been "scoured, manacled and fettered".[8]

Under pressure from the U.S. government, the Choctaw Native Americans agreed to removal after 1830 from all of their lands east of the Mississippi River under the terms of several treaties.[9] Although most of the Choctaw moved to Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma, along with the other of the Five Civilized Tribes, a significant number chose to stay in their homeland, citing Article XIV of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek. They gave up their tribal membership and became state and United States citizens at the time.[10] Today, most Choctaw in Mississippi have reorganized and are part of the federally recognized Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. They live in several majority-Indian communities located throughout the state. The largest community is located in Choctaw 100 miles (160 km) northeast of Jackson.

Founding and antebellum period (to 1860)

 

Located on the historic Natchez Trace trade route, created by Native Americans and used by European American settlers, and on the Pearl River, the city's first European American settler was Louis LeFleur, a French-Canadian trader. The village became known as LeFleur's Bluff.[11] During the late 18th century and early 19th century, this site had a trading post. It was connected to markets in Tennessee. Soldiers returning to Tennessee from the military campaigns near New Orleans in 1815 built a public road that connected Lake Pontchartrain in Louisiana to this district.[12] A United States treaty with the Choctaw, the Treaty of Doak's Stand in 1820, formally opened the area for non-Native American settlers.

LeFleur's Bluff was developed when it was chosen as the site for the new state's capital city. The Mississippi General Assembly decided in 1821 that the state needed a centrally located capital (the legislature was then located in Natchez). They commissioned Thomas Hinds, James Patton, and William Lattimore to look for a suitable site. The absolute center of the state was a swamp, so the group had to widen their search.

After surveying areas north and east of Jackson, they proceeded southwest along with the Pearl River until they reached LeFleur's Bluff in today's Hinds County.[11] Their report to the General Assembly stated that this location had beautiful and healthful surroundings, good water, abundant timber, navigable waters, and proximity to the Natchez Trace. The Assembly passed an act on November 28, 1821, authorizing the site as the permanent seat of the government of the state of Mississippi.[11] On the same day, it passed a resolution to instruct the Washington delegation to press Congress for a donation of public lands on the river for improved navigation to the Gulf of Mexico.[13] One Whig politician lamented the new capital as a "serious violation of principle" because it was not at the absolute center of the state.[14]

The capital was named for General Andrew Jackson, to honor his (January 1815) victory at the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812. He was later elected as the seventh president of the United States.

The city of Jackson was originally planned, in April 1822, by Peter Aaron Van Dorn in a "checkerboard" pattern advocated by Thomas Jefferson.[15] City blocks alternated with parks and other open spaces. Over time, many of the park squares have been developed rather than maintained as green space. The state legislature first met in Jackson on December 23, 1822. In 1839, the Mississippi Legislature passed the first state law in the U.S. to permit married women to own and administer their own property.[16]

Jackson was connected by public road to Vicksburg and Clinton in 1826.[17] Jackson was first connected by railroad to other cities in 1840. An 1844 map shows Jackson linked by an east–west rail line running between Vicksburg, Raymond, and Brandon. Unlike Vicksburg, Greenville, and Natchez, Jackson is not located on the Mississippi River, and it did not develop during the antebellum era as those cities did from major river commerce. The construction of railroad lines to the city sparked its growth in the decades following the American Civil War.

American Civil War

 
"Raising the Stars and Stripes Over the Capitol of the State of Mississippi", engraving from Harper's Weekly, June 20, 1863, after the capture of Jackson by Union forces during the American Civil War
 
September 1863 map of the siege of Jackson

Despite its small population, during the Civil War, Jackson became a strategic center of manufacturing for the Confederacy. In 1863, during the military campaign which ended in the capture of Vicksburg, Union forces captured Jackson during two battles—once before the fall of Vicksburg and once after the fall of Vicksburg.

On May 13, 1863, Union forces won the first Battle of Jackson, forcing Confederate forces to flee northward towards Canton. On May 14, Union troops under the command of William Tecumseh Sherman burned and looted key facilities in Jackson, a strategic manufacturing and railroad center for the Confederacy.[18][19] After driving the Confederate forces out of Jackson, Union forces turned west and engaged the Vicksburg defenders at the Battle of Champion Hill in nearby Edwards. The Union forces began their siege of Vicksburg soon after their victory at Champion Hill. Confederate forces began to reassemble in Jackson in preparation for an attempt to break through the Union lines surrounding Vicksburg and end the siege. The Confederate forces in Jackson built defensive fortifications encircling the city while preparing to march west to Vicksburg.

Confederate forces marched out of Jackson in early July 1863 to break the siege of Vicksburg. But, unknown to them, Vicksburg had already surrendered on July 4, 1863. General Ulysses S. Grant dispatched General Sherman to meet the Confederate forces heading west from Jackson. Upon learning that Vicksburg had already surrendered, the Confederates retreated into Jackson. Union forces began the siege of Jackson, which lasted for approximately one week. Union forces encircled the city and began an artillery bombardment. One of the Union artillery emplacements has been preserved on the grounds of the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. Another Federal position is preserved on the campus of Millsaps College. John C. Breckinridge, former United States vice president, served as one of the Confederate generals defending Jackson. On July 16, 1863, Confederate forces slipped out of Jackson during the night and retreated across the Pearl River.

Union forces completely burned the city after its capture this second time. The city was called "Chimneyville" because only the chimneys of houses were left standing.[18] The northern line of Confederate defenses in Jackson during the siege was located along a road near downtown Jackson, now known as Fortification Street.

 
Mississippi Old Capitol, downtown Jackson

Because of the siege and following destruction, few antebellum structures have survived in Jackson. The Governor's Mansion, built-in 1842, served as Sherman's headquarters and has been preserved. Another is the Old Capitol building, which served as the home of the Mississippi state legislature from 1839 to 1903. The Mississippi legislature passed the ordinance of secession from the Union on January 9, 1861, there, becoming the second state to secede from the United States. The Jackson City Hall, built in 1846 for less than $8,000, also survived. It is said that Sherman, a Mason, spared it because it housed a Masonic Lodge, though a more likely reason is that it housed an army hospital.[20]

Reconstruction

During Reconstruction, Republicans granted African Americans civil rights. Schools were established and African Americans held political offices. Eugene Welborne, Charles Reese, Weldon Hicks, and George Caldwell Granberry were among the legislators who represented Hinds County in the legislature. African Americans also served in local offices, as judges, and as marshalls.

Mississippi had considerable insurgent action, as whites struggled to maintain white supremacy. Jackson's appointed mayor Joseph G. Crane was stabbed to death in 1869. The assailant, Edward M. Yerger, was arrested by military authorities but, after a U.S. Supreme Court case (Ex parte Yerger), he was bonded out, moved to Baltimore and was never tried.

The economic recovery from the Civil War was slow through the start of the 20th century, but there were some developments in transportation. In 1871, the city introduced mule-drawn streetcars which ran on State Street, which were replaced by electric ones in 1899.[21] In 1875, the Red Shirts were formed, one of the second waves of insurgent paramilitary organizations that essentially operated as "the military arm of the Democratic Party" to take back political power from the Republicans and to drive black people from the polls (Mississippi Plan).[22]

Post-Reconstruction

Democrats regained control of the state legislature in 1876. The constitutional convention of 1890, which produced Mississippi's Constitution of 1890, was held at the capitol.[23] This was the first of new constitutions or amendments ratified in each Southern state through 1908 that effectively disenfranchised most African Americans and many poor whites, through provisions making voter registration more difficult: such as poll taxes, residency requirements, and literacy tests. These provisions survived a Supreme Court challenge in 1898.[24][25] As 20th-century Supreme Court decisions later ruled such provisions were unconstitutional, Mississippi and other Southern states rapidly devised new methods to continue disfranchisement of most black people, who comprised a majority in the state until the 1930s. Their exclusion from politics was maintained into the late 1960s.

The so-called New Capitol replaced the older structure upon its completion in 1903. Today the Old Capitol is operated as a historical museum.[23]

Early 20th century (1901–1960)

 
Panorama of downtown Jackson in 1910. The Old Capitol and Capitol Street can be seen at the center of the photo. The New Capital is at the left.
 
Map of Jackson in 1919
 
April 16, 1921 flood on Town Creek, a tributary of the Pearl River in Jackson. The photo is a view of East Capitol Street looking east from North Farish Street.
 
Standard Life Building at night, downtown Jackson

Author Eudora Welty was born in Jackson in 1909, lived most of her life in the Belhaven section of the city, and died there in 2001. Her memoir of development as a writer, One Writer's Beginnings (1984), presented a picture of the city in the early 20th century. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973 for her novel, The Optimist's Daughter, and is best known for her novels and short stories. The main library of the Jackson/Hinds Library System was named in her honor,[26] and her home has been designated as a National Historic Landmark.

Richard Wright, a highly acclaimed African-American author, lived in Jackson as an adolescent and young man in the 1910s and 1920s. He related his experience in his memoir Black Boy (1945). He described the harsh and largely terror-filled life most African Americans experienced in the South and Northern ghettos such as Chicago under segregation in the early 20th century. Jackson had significant growth in the early 20th century, which produced dramatic changes in the city's skyline. Jackson's new Union Station downtown reflected the city's service by multiple rail lines, including the Illinois Central.

Across the street, the new, luxurious King Edward Hotel opened its doors in 1923, having been built according to a design by New Orleans architect William T. Nolan. It became a center for prestigious events held by Jackson society and Mississippi politicians. Nearby, the 18-story Standard Life Building, designed in 1929 by Claude Lindsley, was the largest reinforced concrete structure in the world upon its completion.

Jackson's economic growth was further stimulated in the 1930s by the discovery of natural gas fields nearby. Speculators had begun searching for oil and natural gas in Jackson beginning in 1920. The initial drilling attempts came up empty. This failure did not stop Ella Render from obtaining a lease from the state's insane asylum to begin a well on its grounds in 1924, where he found natural gas. (Render eventually lost the rights when courts determined that the asylum did not have the right to lease the state's property.) Businessmen jumped on the opportunity and dug wells in the Jackson area. The continued success of these ventures attracted further investment. By 1930, there were 14 derricks in the Jackson skyline.

Mississippi Governor Theodore Bilbo stated:

It is no idle dream to prophesy that the state's share [of the oil and natural gas profits] properly safe-guarded would soon pay the state's entire bonded indebtedness and even be great enough to defray all the state's expenses and make our state tax free so long as obligations are concerned.

This enthusiasm was subdued when the first wells failed to produce oil of a sufficiently high gravity for commercial success. The barrels of oil had considerable amounts of saltwater, which lessened the quality. The governor's prediction was wrong in hindsight, but the oil and natural gas industry did provide an economic boost for the city and state. The effects of the Great Depression were mitigated by the industry's success. At its height in 1934, there were 113 producing wells in the state. The overwhelming majority were closed by 1955.[27]

Due to provisions in the federal Rivers and Harbors Act, on October 25, 1930, city leaders met with U.S. Army engineers to ask for federal help to alleviate Jackson flooding.[28] J.J. Halbert, city engineer, proposed a straightening and dredging of the Pearl River below Jackson.[29]

Jackson's Gold Coast

During Mississippi's extended Prohibition period, from the 1920s until the 1960s, illegal drinking and gambling casinos flourished on the east side of the Pearl River, in Flowood along with the original U.S. Route 80 just across from the city of Jackson. Those illegal casinos, bootleg liquor stores, and nightclubs made up the Gold Coast, a strip of mostly black-market businesses that operated for decades along Flowood Road. Although outside the law, the Gold Coast was a thriving center of nightlife and music, with many local blues musicians appearing regularly in the clubs.

The Gold Coast declined and businesses disappeared after Mississippi's prohibition laws were repealed in 1966, allowing Hinds County, including Jackson, to go "wet".[30] In addition, integration drew off business from establishments that earlier had catered to African Americans, such as the Summers Hotel. When it opened in 1943 on Pearl Street, it was one of two hotels in the city that served black clients. For years its Subway Lounge was a prime performance spot for black musicians playing jazz and blues.

In another major change, in 1990 the state-approved gaming on riverboats.[31] Numerous casinos have been developed on riverboats, mostly in Mississippi Delta towns such as Tunica Resorts, Greenville, and Vicksburg, as well as Biloxi on the Gulf Coast. Before the damage and losses due to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the state ranked second nationally in gambling revenues.

World War II and later development

During World War II, Hawkins Field (at that time, also known as the Jackson Army Airbase) the American 21st, 309th, and 310th Bomber Groups that were stationed at the base were re-deployed for combat.[32] Following the German invasion of the Netherlands and the Japanese invasion of the Dutch East Indies, between 688 and 800 members of the Dutch Airforce escaped to the UK or Australia for training and, out of necessity, were eventually given permission by the United States to make use of Hawkins Field.[33]

From May 1942 until the end of the war, all Dutch military aircrews trained at the base and went on to serve in either the British or Australian Air Forces.[34]

In 1949, the poet Margaret Walker began teaching at Jackson State University, a historically black college. She taught there until 1979 and founded the university's Center for African-American Studies. Her poetry collection won a Yale Younger Poets Prize. Her second novel, Jubilee (1966), is considered a major work of African-American literature. She has influenced many younger writers.

Civil rights movement in Jackson

The civil rights movement had been active for decades, particularly mounting legal challenges to Mississippi's constitution and laws that disfranchised black people. Beginning in 1960, Jackson as the state capital became the site for dramatic non-violent protests in a new phase of activism that brought in a wide variety of participants in the performance of mass demonstrations.

In 1960, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Jackson's population as 64.3% white and 35.7% black.[35] At the time, public facilities were segregated and Jim Crow was in effect. Efforts to desegregate Jackson facilities began when nine Tougaloo College students tried to read books in the "white only" public library and were arrested. Founded as a historically black college (HBCU) by the American Missionary Association after the Civil War, Tougaloo College helped organize both black and white students of the region to work together for civil rights. It created partnerships with the neighboring mostly white Millsaps College to work with student activists. It has been recognized as a site on the "Civil Rights Trail" by the National Park Service.[36]

The mass demonstrations of the 1960s were initiated with the arrival of more than 300 Freedom Riders on May 24, 1961. They were arrested in Jackson for disturbing the peace after they disembarked from their interstate buses. The interracial teams rode the buses from Washington, D.C. and sat together to demonstrate against segregation on public transportation, as the Constitution provides for unrestricted public transportation.[37] Although the Freedom Riders had intended New Orleans as their final destination, Jackson was the farthest that any managed to travel. New participants kept joining the movement, as they intended to fill the jails in Jackson with their protest. The riders had encountered extreme violence along the way, including a bus burning and physical assaults. They attracted national media attention to the struggle for constitutional rights.

After the Freedom Rides, students and activists of the Freedom Movement launched a series of merchant boycotts,[38] sit-ins and protest marches,[39] from 1961 to 1963. Businesses discriminated against black customers. For instance, at the time, department stores did not hire black salesclerks or allow black customers to use their fitting rooms to try on clothes, or lunch counters for meals while in the store, but they wanted them to shop in their stores.

In Jackson, shortly after midnight on June 12, 1963, Medgar Evers, civil rights activist and leader of the Mississippi chapter of the NAACP, was assassinated by Byron De La Beckwith, a white supremacist associated with the White Citizens' Council. Thousands marched in Evers' funeral procession to protest the killing.[40] Two trials at the time both resulted in hung juries. A portion of U.S. Highway 49, all of Delta Drive, a library, the central post office for the city, and Jackson–Evers International Airport were named in honor of Medgar Evers. In 1994, prosecutors Ed Peters and Bobby DeLaughter finally obtained a murder conviction in a state trial of De La Beckwith based on new evidence.[41]

During 1963 and 1964, civil rights organizers gathered residents for voter education and voter registration. Black people had been essentially disfranchised since 1890. In a pilot project in 1963, activists rapidly registered 80,000 voters across the state, demonstrating the desire of African Americans to vote. In 1964 they created the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party as an alternative to the all-white state Democratic Party, and sent an alternate slate of candidates to the national Democratic Party convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, that year.

Segregation and the disfranchisement of African Americans gradually ended after the Civil Rights Movement gained Congressional passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965. In June 1966, Jackson was the terminus of the James Meredith March, organized by James Meredith, the first African American to enroll at the University of Mississippi. The march, which began in Memphis, Tennessee, was an attempt to garner support for full implementation of civil rights in practice, following the legislation. It was accompanied by a new drive to register African Americans to vote in Mississippi. In this latter goal, it succeeded in registering between 2,500 and 3,000 black Mississippians to vote. The march ended on June 26 after Meredith, who had been wounded by a sniper's bullet earlier on the march, addressed a large rally of some 15,000 people in Jackson.

In September 1967 a Ku Klux Klan chapter bombed the synagogue of the Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson, and in November bombed the house of its rabbi, Dr. Perry Nussbaum.[42] He and his congregation had supported civil rights.

Gradually the old barriers came down. Since that period, both whites and African Americans in the state have had a consistently high rate of voter registration and turnout. Following the decades of the Great Migration, when more than one million black people left the rural South, since the 1930s the state has been majority white in total population. African Americans are a majority in the city of Jackson, although the metropolitan area is majority white. African Americans are also a majority in several cities and counties of the Mississippi Delta, which are included in the 2nd congressional district.[43] The other three congressional districts are majority white.

Mid-1960s to present

The first successful cadaveric lung transplant was performed at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson in June 1963 by Dr. James Hardy. Hardy transplanted the cadaveric lung into a patient suffering from lung cancer. The patient survived for eighteen days before dying of kidney failure.[44]

In 1966 it was estimated that recurring flood damage at Jackson from the Pearl River averaged nearly a million dollars per year. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers spent $6.8 million on levees and a new channel in 1966 before the project completion to prevent a flood equal to the December 1961 event plus an additional foot.[45]

Since 1968, Jackson has been the home of Malaco Records, one of the leading record companies for gospel, blues, and soul music in the United States. In January 1973, Paul Simon recorded the songs "Learn How to Fall" and "Take Me to the Mardi Gras", found on the album There Goes Rhymin' Simon, in Jackson at the Malaco Recording Studios. Many well-known Southern artists recorded on the album, including the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section (David Hood, Jimmy Johnson, Roger Hawkins, Barry Beckett), Carson Whitsett, the Onward Brass Band from New Orleans, and others. The label has recorded many leading soul and blues artists, including Bobby Bland, ZZ Hill, Latimore, Shirley Brown, Denise LaSalle, and Tyrone Davis.

On May 15, 1970, Jackson police killed two students and wounded twelve at Jackson State College after a protest of the Vietnam War included students' overturning and burning some cars. These killings occurred eleven days after the National Guard killed four students in an anti-war protest at Kent State University in Ohio, and were part of national social unrest.[46] Newsweek cited the Jackson State killings in its issue of May 18 when it suggested that U.S. President Richard Nixon faced a new home front.

The influx of illegal drugs occurred nationally as smugglers used the highways, seaports, and airports of the Gulf region.[47][48] The 1980s in Jackson were dominated by Mayor Dale Danks Jr. until he was unseated by lawyer and legislator J. Kane Ditto, who criticized the deficit funding and the politicized police department of the city.[49] Federal investigations of drug trafficking at Jackson's Hawkins Field airport were a part of the Kerry Report, the 1986 U.S. Senate investigation of public corruption and foreign relations.[50]

As Jackson has become the medical and legal center of the state, it has attracted Jewish professionals in both fields. Since the late 20th century, it has developed the largest Jewish community in the state.[51]

In 1997, Harvey Johnson, Jr. was elected as Jackson's first African-American mayor. During his term, he proposed the development of a convention center to attract more business to the city. In 2004, during his second term, 66 percent of the voters passed a referendum for a tax to build the Convention Center.[52]

Mayor Johnson was replaced by Frank Melton on July 4, 2005. Melton generated controversy through his unconventional behavior, which included acting as a law enforcement officer. A dramatic spike in crime ensued during his term, despite Melton's efforts to reduce crime. The lack of jobs contributed to crime.[53] In 2006 a young African-American businessman, Starsky Darnell Redd, was convicted of money laundering in federal court along with his mother, other associates, and Billy Tucker, the former airport security chief.[54]

In 2007, Hinds County sheriff Malcolm McMillin was appointed as the new police chief in Jackson, setting a historic precedent. McMillin was both the county sheriff and city police chief until 2009, when he stepped down due to disagreements with the mayor. Mayor Frank Melton died in May 2009, and City Councilman Leslie McLemore served as acting mayor of Jackson until July 2009, when former Mayor Harvey Johnson was elected and assumed the position.[55]

On June 26, 2011, 49-year-old James Craig Anderson was killed in Jackson after being beaten, robbed, and run over by a group of white teenagers. The district attorney described it as a "hate crime", and the FBI investigated it as a civil rights violation.[56][57][58]

On March 18, 2013, a severe hailstorm hit the Jackson metro area. The hail caused major damage to roofs, vehicles, and building siding. Hail ranged in size from golfball to softball. There were more than 40,000 hailstorm claims of homeowner and automobile damage.[59][60]

In 2013, Jackson was named as one of the top 10 friendliest cities in the United States by CN Traveler. The capital city was tied with Natchez as Number 7. The city was noticed for friendly people, great food, and green and pretty public places.[61]

On July 1, 2013, Chokwe Lumumba was sworn into office as mayor of the city. After eight months in office, Lumumba died on February 25, 2014. Lumumba was a popular yet controversial figure due to his prior membership in the Republic of New Afrika, as well as being a co-founder of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America.

Lumumba's son, Chokwe Antar Lumumba, ran for the mayoral seat following his father's death, but lost to Councillor Tony Yarber on April 22, 2014.[62] In 2017, however, Chokwe Antar Lumumba ran for mayor again, and won. Following his victory, on June 26 he was interviewed by Amy Goodman on Democracy Now!,[63] at which time he declared a commitment to make Jackson the "Most Radical City on the Planet".

For several years, the city water supply failed to meet federal drinking water standards and was subject to many boil water orders in 2021 and 2022. Due to deteriorating water infrastructure, some parts of the city experienced low water pressure, and in some neighborhoods residents reported untreated sewage flowing in city streets.[64] In August 2022, Jackson lost access to water when its largest water treatment plant failed, leaving tap water untreated.[65]

Geography

 
Photograph of Jackson Mississippi taken from the International Space Station

Jackson is located primarily in northeastern Hinds County, with small portions in Madison and Rankin counties. The city of Jackson also includes around 3,000 acres (12.1 km2) comprising Jackson-Medgar Evers International Airport in Rankin County and a small portion of Madison County. The Pearl River forms most of the eastern border of the city. A small portion of the city containing Tougaloo College is the portion of Jackson that lies in Madison County, bounded on the west by Interstate 220 and on the east by the U.S. Route 51 and Interstate 55. In the 2010 census, only 622 of the city's residents lived in Madison County,[66] and only 1 lived within the city limits in Rankin County.[67] The city is bordered to the north by Ridgeland in Madison County, to the northeast by Ross Barnett Reservoir on the Pearl River, to the east by Flowood and Richland in Rankin County, to the south by Byram in Hinds County, and to the west by Clinton in Hinds County.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 113.2 square miles (293.3 km2), of which 111.0 square miles (287.6 km2) are land and 2.2 square miles (5.7 km2), or 1.94% of the total, are water.[68]

Cityscape

 
Downtown Jackson from Mississippi Baptist Hospital in June of 2020

Downtown Jackson is situated directly on the banks of the Pearl River. The downtown district has direct connections to both Interstate 55 via Pearl Street and Pasagoula Street and Interstate 20 via State Street (US 51). Much of the downtown was constructed before the 1980s and only small additions to the skyline have been made since then.

Major highways

Geology

For the most part, Jackson is built on acidic, variably drained silt loam soil. Loess forms the topsoil in western sections, where the Loring soil series is common. The Tippo series, also a silt loam, is found in the central flood plain. Farther east, common soil series include Guyton silt loam, Providence silt loam and Smithdale fine sandy loam.[69]

 
Jackson structure map

Jackson sits atop the extinct Jackson Volcano, located 2,900 feet (880 m) underground. It is the only capital city in the United States to have this feature. The buried peak of the volcano is located directly below the Mississippi Coliseum.[70] The municipality is drained on the west by tributaries of the Big Black River and on the east by the Pearl River, which is 150 feet (46 m) higher than the Big Black near Canton. The artesian groundwater flow is not as extensive in Jackson for this reason. The first large-scale well was drilled in the city in 1896, and the city water supply has relied on surface water resources.[71]

Climate

Jackson is located in the humid subtropical climate zone (Köppen Cfa). Rain occurs throughout the year, though the winter and spring are the wettest seasons, while September and October are usually the driest months. Snow is rare, and accumulation very seldom lasts more than a day.[72] Average annual precipitation is 57.35 inches (1,457 mm), see climate table.[73] Much of Jackson's rainfall occurs during thunderstorms. Thunder is heard on roughly 70 days each year. Jackson lies in a region prone to severe thunderstorms which can produce large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes. Among the most notable tornado events was the F5 Candlestick Park tornado on March 3, 1966, which destroyed the shopping center of the same name and surrounding businesses and residential areas, killing 19 in South Jackson.

The record low temperature is −5 °F (−21 °C), set on January 27, 1940,[74] and the record high is 107 °F (42 °C), last recorded August 30, 2000.[74]

Climate data for Jackson–Evers International Airport, Mississippi (1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1896–present)[b]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 85
(29)
89
(32)
95
(35)
94
(34)
100
(38)
105
(41)
107
(42)
107
(42)
107
(42)
98
(37)
89
(32)
84
(29)
107
(42)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 75
(24)
79
(26)
84
(29)
87
(31)
92
(33)
96
(36)
98
(37)
96
(36)
96
(36)
90
(32)
82
(28)
77
(25)
100
(38)
Average high °F (°C) 57.4
(14.1)
62.0
(16.7)
69.4
(20.8)
76.5
(24.7)
83.8
(28.8)
89.9
(32.2)
92.1
(33.4)
92.2
(33.4)
87.8
(31.0)
78.3
(25.7)
67.2
(19.6)
59.6
(15.3)
76.4
(24.7)
Daily mean °F (°C) 47.0
(8.3)
50.9
(10.5)
57.9
(14.4)
64.9
(18.3)
72.9
(22.7)
79.6
(26.4)
82.1
(27.8)
81.8
(27.7)
76.9
(24.9)
66.2
(19.0)
55.4
(13.0)
49.1
(9.5)
65.4
(18.6)
Average low °F (°C) 36.6
(2.6)
39.8
(4.3)
46.4
(8.0)
53.3
(11.8)
62.1
(16.7)
69.4
(20.8)
72.2
(22.3)
71.5
(21.9)
66.0
(18.9)
54.2
(12.3)
43.6
(6.4)
38.7
(3.7)
54.5
(12.5)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 19
(−7)
23
(−5)
29
(−2)
37
(3)
47
(8)
59
(15)
65
(18)
64
(18)
52
(11)
37
(3)
27
(−3)
23
(−5)
18
(−8)
Record low °F (°C) −5
(−21)
1
(−17)
15
(−9)
27
(−3)
36
(2)
47
(8)
51
(11)
54
(12)
35
(2)
26
(−3)
15
(−9)
4
(−16)
−5
(−21)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 5.42
(138)
5.10
(130)
5.68
(144)
5.84
(148)
4.36
(111)
4.43
(113)
5.02
(128)
4.69
(119)
3.48
(88)
3.80
(97)
4.40
(112)
5.13
(130)
57.35
(1,457)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.4
(1.0)
0.6
(1.5)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 9.8 9.6 9.9 8.6 8.9 9.8 11.3 10.6 6.6 7.1 8.5 9.8 110.5
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.5
Average relative humidity (%) 76.2 73.2 71.1 71.5 73.8 73.6 76.9 77.0 77.3 74.8 75.9 76.5 74.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 154.5 165.3 223.5 251.1 276.2 298.5 283.4 273.1 232.7 235.2 174.0 152.1 2,719.6
Percent possible sunshine 48 53 60 65 65 70 65 66 63 67 55 49 61
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961–1990)[72][74][75]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18501,881
18603,19169.6%
18704,23432.7%
18805,20422.9%
18905,92013.8%
19007,81632.0%
191021,262172.0%
192022,8177.3%
193048,282111.6%
194062,10728.6%
195098,27158.2%
1960144,42247.0%
1970153,9686.6%
1980202,89531.8%
1990196,637−3.1%
2000184,286−6.3%
2010173,514−5.8%
2020153,701−11.4%
U.S. Decennial Census[76]
2020 census[77]

Jackson remained a small town for much of the 19th century. Before the American Civil War, Jackson's population remained small, particularly in contrast to the river towns along the commerce-laden Mississippi River. Despite the city's status as the state capital, the 1850 census counted only 1,881 residents, and by 1900 the population of Jackson was still less than 8,000. Although it expanded rapidly, during this period Meridian became Mississippi's largest city, based on trade, manufacturing, and access to transportation via railroad and highway.

In the early 20th century, Jackson had its largest rates of growth but ranked second to Meridian in Mississippi. By 1944, Jackson's population had risen to some 70,000 inhabitants, and it became the largest city in the state. It has maintained its position, achieving a peak population in the 1980 census of more than 200,000 residents in the city. Since then, Jackson has steadily declined in population, while its suburbs have boomed. This change has occurred in part due to white flight after the desegregation of public schools in 1970[78] but also demonstrates the national suburbanization trend, in which wealthier residents moved out to newer housing. This decline slowed in the first decade of the 21st century.[79]

Race and ethnicity

Jackson city, Mississippi - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[80] Pop 2020[81] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 31,194 25,424 17.98% 16.54%
Black or African American alone (NH) 137,265 120,727 79.11% 78.55%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 232 237 0.13% 0.15%
Asian alone (NH) 660 751 0.38% 0.49%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 18 30 0.01% 0.02%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 99 362 0.06% 0.24%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 1,323 2,951 0.76% 1.92%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 2,723 3,219 1.57% 2.09%
Total 173,514 153,701 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

 
Map of racial distribution in Jackson, 2010 U.S. census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

According to the 2010 census,[82] the racial and ethnic makeup of the city was predominantly Black and African American, and non-Hispanic white; in 2020, they remained the largest racial and ethnic composition for the city.[81] With white demographic decline and white flight, its non-Hispanic white population has declined; this was also due to the increase in other traditional minorities within the city, state, and nation.[83][84]

Income

According to census statistics in 2000, the median income for a household in the city was $30,414, and the median income for a family was $36,003. Males had a median income of $29,166 versus $23,328 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,116. About 19.6% of families and 23.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 33.7% of those under age 18 and 15.7% of those age 65 or over.[85] At the publication of the 2020 American Community Survey, the city's median household income increased to $35,070; families had a median income of $44,348, married-couple families $74,893, and non-families $22,061.[86]

Crime

In 1993 Jackson had the nation's 12th highest homicide rate among cities with more than 100,000 residents, according to the FBI. The 87 slayings in the city in 1993 gave Jackson a homicide rate of 41.9 per 100,000 residents, the FBI reported, and set a new record for the most violent deaths in one year. 1994 had higher homicides, with 91, and the record was broken again in 1995 with a total of 92.[87][88]

In 2020, the city's homicide rate reached its highest in history with 79.69 homicides per 100,000 residents, with a total of 128 homicides.[89] Of major U.S. cities, only St. Louis surpassed Jackson's homicide rate.[90] The homicide rate in 2020 represented a significant spike after years of declining homicide rates in the early 2000s.[91] Property crime remains much lower than in the 1990s and overall violent crime has not increased as significantly as homicide in recent years and is below the peak in 1994 as of 2020.[92] In 2021, a record number of homicides were recorded - 155 - and at a rate of 101 per 100,000 amongst the highest in the world.[93] In late 2020, Police Chief James Davis along with the Mayor and other city leaders unveiled the virtual policing concept. After months of struggling to move the concept forward Chief Davis began discussions with Eric B. Fox, a veteran Jackson Police Officer to return to the department. Fox returned officially in January 2022 and launched a new concept, the Real Time Command Center.

Economy

Jackson is home to several major industries; these include electrical equipment and machinery, processed food, and primary and fabricated metal products. The surrounding area supports the agricultural development of livestock, soybeans, cotton, and poultry.

According to the city's government, its top three employers are the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson Public Schools, and Nissan North America as of 2020.[94] Other notable corporations with a large presence in the city and area have included or currently include Amazon (in nearby Madison County),[95] Burlington, and Walmart.

The city is home to Cooperation Jackson, which is an economic development vehicle for worker-owned cooperative business.[96] The organization has led to the creation of several businesses including lawn care provider The Green Team, organic farm Freedom Farms, print shop The Center for Community Production, and The Balagoon Center, which is a cooperative business incubator.[97]

Arts and culture

 
Thalia Mara Hall in Jackson, Mississippi

Jackson is home to a number of cultural and artistic attractions, including the following:

Sports

 
Veterans Memorial Stadium is the largest stadium facility in Jackson. Its parking lot often is used by employees of the University of Mississippi Medical Center nearby

The city of Jackson and its metropolitan area are home to collegiate and semi-professional sports teams; Major League Baseball's Atlanta Braves minor affiliate, the Mississippi Braves, plays in the area. Mississippi Brilla of USL League Two also operates in the area.

Government and infrastructure

 
1874 engraving in Scribner's Monthly of the Old Capitol, the seat of Mississippi's legislature from 1839 to 1903.

Municipal government

In 1985, Jackson voters opted to replace the three-person mayor-commissioner system with a city council and mayor. This electoral system enables a wider representation of residents on the city council. City council members are elected from each of the city's seven wards, considered single-member districts. The mayor is elected at-large citywide.

Jackson's mayor is Chokwe Antar Lumumba[117] (D). Who was elected on July 3, 2017.[118]

Jackson's City Council members are:

  • Ward 1: Ashby Foote
  • Ward 2: Melvin Priester, Jr.
  • Ward 3: Kenneth Stokes
  • Ward 4: De'Keither Stamps
  • Ward 5: Charles H. Tillman
  • Ward 6: Aaron Banks
  • Ward 7: Virgi Lindsay[119]

State government

The Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) operates the Jackson Probation & Parole Office in Jackson.[120] The MDOC Central Mississippi Correctional Facility, in unincorporated Rankin County,[121] is located in proximity to Jackson.[122]

Federal representation

The larger portion of Jackson is part of Mississippi's 2nd congressional district. U.S. Representative Bennie Gordon Thompson, a Democrat, has served since 1993. Until 2011 he was Chairman of the Committee on Homeland Security and has been the ranking member since 2011.[1]

The United States Postal Service operates the Jackson Main Post Office[123] and several smaller post offices.

Education

Higher education

 
Jackson State University band "The Sonic Boom"
 
Millsaps College is one of several institutions in and around Jackson established before 1900.

Jackson is home to the most collegiate institutions in Mississippi. Jackson State University is the largest collegiate institution in Jackson, fourth largest in Mississippi, and the only doctoral-granting research institution based in its region.[124][125]

Colleges and universities[126]

Primary and secondary schools

Public schools

Jackson Public School District (JPS) operates 60 public schools. It is one of the largest school districts in the state with about 30,000 students in thirty-eight elementary schools, thirteen middle schools, seven high schools, and two special schools.[127] Jackson Public Schools is the only urban school district in the state.[128]

As of 2017 the public schools have few children who are middle or upper class, as 99% of the students in JPS qualify for free or reduced school lunches. In 2017 Susan Womack, president of the Parents for Public Schools Jackson (PPSJ) from 2000 to 2012, stated that middle to upper-class families in Jackson tended to leave public school after elementary school, with parents who remained in Jackson enrolling their children in private school, and those who wished to continue enrolling their children in public schools moving to Madison County. The PPSJ decided circa the mid-2000s that it was not feasible to encourage middle and upper-class parents to put their children in JPS schools.[129]

The district's high schools include:

While most of Jackson is in Jackson PSD, there are parts in Hinds County that are instead in Hinds County School District.[131] This part is zoned to Terry High School in Terry.[132] The portion of Jackson in Madison County is within the Madison County School District.[133]

There are state-operated K-12 public schools for special purposes;

Private schools

Private secondary schools include:

Some schools are in nearby municipalities:

Private primary schools include:

Public libraries

Jackson/Hinds Library System is the library system of Jackson.

Infrastructure

On March 27, 2015, Jackson Mayor Tony Yarber issued a state of emergency for transportation (potholes) and water infrastructure (breaks in water mains).[137][138] The quality of Jackson's water infrastructure system decreased after the severe winter weather of 2014–2015. Jackson's office estimated the cost to fix the roads and water pipes at $750 million to $1 billion.[138]

After issuing the state of emergency, the City of Jackson filed a letter of intent to Department of Health to borrow $2.5 million to repair broken water pipes. The Jackson City Council must approve the mayor's proposal.[137] Additionally, Mayor Yarber asked for help from both FEMA and the state Governor's office.[139]

Calling for a state of emergency increases the likelihood that the U.S. Department of Transportation would give the city money from a "quick release" funding account.[140]

In late August 2022, the Pearl River overflowed, flooding much of the city and contaminating the water supply. Mayor Lumumba declared a state of emergency and shut down all businesses and schools.[141]

Transportation

In 2015, 11 percent of the city of Jackson households lacked a car, which decreased to 7.6 percent in 2016. The national average was 8.7 percent in 2016. Jackson averaged 1.68 cars per household in 2016, compared to a national average of 1.8.[142]

Jackson has an increasing number of bicycle lanes.[143][144]

Jackson–Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport is located east of city in Rankin County.

In popular culture

In 2011, the United States Navy named the USS Jackson (LCS-6) in honor of the city.[145]

In 2002, the Subway Lounge (of the Summers Hotel on the Gold Coast) was featured as the subject of the film documentary entitled Last of the Mississippi Jukes.[146][147]

The popular film The Help (2011), based on the bestselling novel by the same name by Kathryn Stockett, was filmed in Jackson. The city has a two-part, self-guided tour of areas featured in the film and the book.[148]

In the song "Uptown Funk" by Mark Ronson and featuring Bruno Mars Jackson is mentioned in the lines "Julio! Get the Stretch! Ride to Harlem; Hollywood, Jackson, Mississippi."

Get on Up, a movie released in August 2014, had some scenes filmed in Jackson,[149] and nearby Natchez.[150] The movie is based on the life of James Brown.[151]

The movie Speech & Debate, an adaptation of the stage play of the same name of Broadway theatre,[152] was filmed entirely in Jackson.[153]

Notable people

See: List of people from Mississippi

Further reading

  • Jackson Rising: The Struggle for Economic Democracy and Black Self-Determination in Jackson, Mississippi, edited by Kali Akuno and Ajamu Nangwaya. (2017) Daraja Press. ISBN 978-0-9953474-5-8.

Notes

  1. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  2. ^ Official records for Jackson have been kept at the international airport since July 8, 1963. For more information, see Threadex

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Bibliography

External links

  • Official website  
  • Jackson Convention & Visitors Bureau
  • Metro Jackson Chamber of Commerce

jackson, mississippi, this, article, about, city, related, subjects, within, city, jackson, metro, area, jackson, metropolitan, area, mississippi, county, mississippi, gulf, coast, jackson, county, mississippi, rock, song, song, other, uses, jackson, disambigu. This article is about the city and related subjects within the city For the Jackson metro area see Jackson metropolitan area Mississippi For the county on the Mississippi Gulf Coast see Jackson County Mississippi For the Kid Rock song see Jackson Mississippi song For other uses see Jackson disambiguation Jackson officially the City of Jackson is the capital of and the most populous city in the U S state of Mississippi The city is also one of two county seats of Hinds County along with Raymond The city had a population of 153 701 at the 2020 census down from 173 514 at the 2010 census Jackson s population declined more between 2010 and 2020 11 42 than any major city in the United States 3 Jackson is the anchor for the Jackson metropolitan statistical area the largest metropolitan area completely within the state With a 2020 population estimated around 600 000 metropolitan Jackson is home to over one fifth of Mississippi s population The city sits on the Pearl River and is located in the greater Jackson Prairie region of Mississippi Jackson MississippiState capital cityFrom top left to right Downtown Jackson Mississippi State Capitol Mississippi Governor s Mansion Lamar Life Building Mississippi Veterans Memorial StadiumFlagSealNickname s Crossroads of the South Jack town The 601Motto The City with SoulLocation of Jackson within Hinds County MississippiJacksonLocation within MississippiShow map of MississippiJacksonLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 32 17 56 N 90 11 05 W 32 29889 N 90 18472 W 32 29889 90 18472 Coordinates 32 17 56 N 90 11 05 W 32 29889 N 90 18472 W 32 29889 90 18472Country United StatesState MississippiCountiesHinds Madison RankinIncorporated1822Named forAndrew JacksonGovernment TypeMayor Council MayorChokwe Antar Lumumba D CouncilMembers Ward 1 Ashby FooteWard 2 Melvin Priester Jr Ward 3 Kenneth StokesWard 4 De Keither StampsWard 5 Charles H TillmanWard 6 Aaron BanksWard 7 Virgi LindseyArea 1 State capital city113 85 sq mi 294 88 km2 Land111 72 sq mi 289 34 km2 Water2 14 sq mi 5 53 km2 Elevation279 ft 85 m Population 2020 State capital city153 701 RankUS 149th Density1 375 82 sq mi 531 21 km2 Urban347 693 US 118th Urban density1 466 1 sq mi 566 1 km2 Metro591 978 US 99th DemonymJacksonianTime zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT ZIP codes39200 39299Area codes601 769FIPS code28 36000GNIS feature ID0711543 2 Websitewww wbr jacksonms wbr govFor additional city data see City DataFounded in 1821 as the site for a new state capital the city is named after General Andrew Jackson who was honored for his role in the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812 and later served as U S president Following the nearby Battle of Vicksburg in 1863 during the American Civil War Union forces under the command of General William Tecumseh Sherman began the siege of Jackson and the city was subsequently burned 4 During the 1920s Jackson surpassed Meridian to become the most populous city in the state following a speculative natural gas boom in the region The current slogan for the city is The City with Soul 5 It has had numerous musicians prominent in blues gospel folk and jazz The city is located in the deep south halfway between Memphis and New Orleans on Interstate 55 and Dallas and Atlanta on Interstate 20 Being at this location has given the city the nickname the crossroads of the south The city has a number of museums and cultural institutions including the Mississippi Children s Museum Mississippi Museum of Natural Science Mississippi Civil Rights Museum Mississippi Museum of Art Old Capital Museum Museum of Mississippi History Other notable locations are the Mississippi Coliseum and the Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium home of the Jackson State Tigers Football Team The Jackson metropolitan statistical area is the state s second largest metropolitan area overall due to four counties in northern Mississippi being part of the Memphis Tennessee metropolitan area 6 In 2020 the Jackson metropolitan area held a GDP of 30 billion dollars accounting for 29 of the state s total GDP of 104 1 billion dollars Contents 1 History 1 1 Native Americans 1 2 Founding and antebellum period to 1860 1 3 American Civil War 1 4 Reconstruction 1 5 Post Reconstruction 1 6 Early 20th century 1901 1960 1 6 1 Jackson s Gold Coast 1 6 2 World War II and later development 1 7 Civil rights movement in Jackson 1 8 Mid 1960s to present 2 Geography 2 1 Cityscape 2 2 Major highways 2 3 Geology 2 4 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Race and ethnicity 3 2 Income 4 Crime 5 Economy 6 Arts and culture 7 Sports 8 Government and infrastructure 8 1 Municipal government 8 2 State government 8 3 Federal representation 9 Education 9 1 Higher education 9 1 1 Colleges and universities 126 9 2 Primary and secondary schools 9 2 1 Public schools 9 2 2 Private schools 9 3 Public libraries 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Transportation 11 In popular culture 12 Notable people 13 Further reading 14 Notes 15 References 16 Bibliography 17 External linksHistory EditSee also Timeline of Jackson Mississippi The entire Choctaw Nation s location and size compared to the U S state of Mississippi Native Americans Edit The region that is now the city of Jackson was historically part of the large territory occupied by the Choctaw Nation The Choctaw name for the locale was Chisha Foka 7 The area now called Jackson was obtained by the United States under the terms of the Treaty of Doak s Stand in 1820 by which the United States acquired the land owned by the Choctaw Native Americans After the treaty was ratified American settlers moved into the area encroaching on remaining Choctaw communal lands One of the original Choctaw members in 1849 described what he and his people experienced during this turbulent time when the Europeans had come to take their land We have had our habitations torn down and burned as well as their fences burned while they constantly faced personal abuse and have been scoured manacled and fettered 8 Under pressure from the U S government the Choctaw Native Americans agreed to removal after 1830 from all of their lands east of the Mississippi River under the terms of several treaties 9 Although most of the Choctaw moved to Indian Territory in present day Oklahoma along with the other of the Five Civilized Tribes a significant number chose to stay in their homeland citing Article XIV of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek They gave up their tribal membership and became state and United States citizens at the time 10 Today most Choctaw in Mississippi have reorganized and are part of the federally recognized Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians They live in several majority Indian communities located throughout the state The largest community is located in Choctaw 100 miles 160 km northeast of Jackson Founding and antebellum period to 1860 Edit Andrew Jackson the 7th President of the United States and the city s namesake Located on the historic Natchez Trace trade route created by Native Americans and used by European American settlers and on the Pearl River the city s first European American settler was Louis LeFleur a French Canadian trader The village became known as LeFleur s Bluff 11 During the late 18th century and early 19th century this site had a trading post It was connected to markets in Tennessee Soldiers returning to Tennessee from the military campaigns near New Orleans in 1815 built a public road that connected Lake Pontchartrain in Louisiana to this district 12 A United States treaty with the Choctaw the Treaty of Doak s Stand in 1820 formally opened the area for non Native American settlers LeFleur s Bluff was developed when it was chosen as the site for the new state s capital city The Mississippi General Assembly decided in 1821 that the state needed a centrally located capital the legislature was then located in Natchez They commissioned Thomas Hinds James Patton and William Lattimore to look for a suitable site The absolute center of the state was a swamp so the group had to widen their search After surveying areas north and east of Jackson they proceeded southwest along with the Pearl River until they reached LeFleur s Bluff in today s Hinds County 11 Their report to the General Assembly stated that this location had beautiful and healthful surroundings good water abundant timber navigable waters and proximity to the Natchez Trace The Assembly passed an act on November 28 1821 authorizing the site as the permanent seat of the government of the state of Mississippi 11 On the same day it passed a resolution to instruct the Washington delegation to press Congress for a donation of public lands on the river for improved navigation to the Gulf of Mexico 13 One Whig politician lamented the new capital as a serious violation of principle because it was not at the absolute center of the state 14 The capital was named for General Andrew Jackson to honor his January 1815 victory at the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812 He was later elected as the seventh president of the United States The city of Jackson was originally planned in April 1822 by Peter Aaron Van Dorn in a checkerboard pattern advocated by Thomas Jefferson 15 City blocks alternated with parks and other open spaces Over time many of the park squares have been developed rather than maintained as green space The state legislature first met in Jackson on December 23 1822 In 1839 the Mississippi Legislature passed the first state law in the U S to permit married women to own and administer their own property 16 Jackson was connected by public road to Vicksburg and Clinton in 1826 17 Jackson was first connected by railroad to other cities in 1840 An 1844 map shows Jackson linked by an east west rail line running between Vicksburg Raymond and Brandon Unlike Vicksburg Greenville and Natchez Jackson is not located on the Mississippi River and it did not develop during the antebellum era as those cities did from major river commerce The construction of railroad lines to the city sparked its growth in the decades following the American Civil War American Civil War Edit Raising the Stars and Stripes Over the Capitol of the State of Mississippi engraving from Harper s Weekly June 20 1863 after the capture of Jackson by Union forces during the American Civil War September 1863 map of the siege of Jackson Despite its small population during the Civil War Jackson became a strategic center of manufacturing for the Confederacy In 1863 during the military campaign which ended in the capture of Vicksburg Union forces captured Jackson during two battles once before the fall of Vicksburg and once after the fall of Vicksburg On May 13 1863 Union forces won the first Battle of Jackson forcing Confederate forces to flee northward towards Canton On May 14 Union troops under the command of William Tecumseh Sherman burned and looted key facilities in Jackson a strategic manufacturing and railroad center for the Confederacy 18 19 After driving the Confederate forces out of Jackson Union forces turned west and engaged the Vicksburg defenders at the Battle of Champion Hill in nearby Edwards The Union forces began their siege of Vicksburg soon after their victory at Champion Hill Confederate forces began to reassemble in Jackson in preparation for an attempt to break through the Union lines surrounding Vicksburg and end the siege The Confederate forces in Jackson built defensive fortifications encircling the city while preparing to march west to Vicksburg Confederate forces marched out of Jackson in early July 1863 to break the siege of Vicksburg But unknown to them Vicksburg had already surrendered on July 4 1863 General Ulysses S Grant dispatched General Sherman to meet the Confederate forces heading west from Jackson Upon learning that Vicksburg had already surrendered the Confederates retreated into Jackson Union forces began the siege of Jackson which lasted for approximately one week Union forces encircled the city and began an artillery bombardment One of the Union artillery emplacements has been preserved on the grounds of the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson Another Federal position is preserved on the campus of Millsaps College John C Breckinridge former United States vice president served as one of the Confederate generals defending Jackson On July 16 1863 Confederate forces slipped out of Jackson during the night and retreated across the Pearl River Union forces completely burned the city after its capture this second time The city was called Chimneyville because only the chimneys of houses were left standing 18 The northern line of Confederate defenses in Jackson during the siege was located along a road near downtown Jackson now known as Fortification Street Mississippi Old Capitol downtown Jackson Because of the siege and following destruction few antebellum structures have survived in Jackson The Governor s Mansion built in 1842 served as Sherman s headquarters and has been preserved Another is the Old Capitol building which served as the home of the Mississippi state legislature from 1839 to 1903 The Mississippi legislature passed the ordinance of secession from the Union on January 9 1861 there becoming the second state to secede from the United States The Jackson City Hall built in 1846 for less than 8 000 also survived It is said that Sherman a Mason spared it because it housed a Masonic Lodge though a more likely reason is that it housed an army hospital 20 Reconstruction Edit During Reconstruction Republicans granted African Americans civil rights Schools were established and African Americans held political offices Eugene Welborne Charles Reese Weldon Hicks and George Caldwell Granberry were among the legislators who represented Hinds County in the legislature African Americans also served in local offices as judges and as marshalls Mississippi had considerable insurgent action as whites struggled to maintain white supremacy Jackson s appointed mayor Joseph G Crane was stabbed to death in 1869 The assailant Edward M Yerger was arrested by military authorities but after a U S Supreme Court case Ex parte Yerger he was bonded out moved to Baltimore and was never tried The economic recovery from the Civil War was slow through the start of the 20th century but there were some developments in transportation In 1871 the city introduced mule drawn streetcars which ran on State Street which were replaced by electric ones in 1899 21 In 1875 the Red Shirts were formed one of the second waves of insurgent paramilitary organizations that essentially operated as the military arm of the Democratic Party to take back political power from the Republicans and to drive black people from the polls Mississippi Plan 22 Post Reconstruction Edit Democrats regained control of the state legislature in 1876 The constitutional convention of 1890 which produced Mississippi s Constitution of 1890 was held at the capitol 23 This was the first of new constitutions or amendments ratified in each Southern state through 1908 that effectively disenfranchised most African Americans and many poor whites through provisions making voter registration more difficult such as poll taxes residency requirements and literacy tests These provisions survived a Supreme Court challenge in 1898 24 25 As 20th century Supreme Court decisions later ruled such provisions were unconstitutional Mississippi and other Southern states rapidly devised new methods to continue disfranchisement of most black people who comprised a majority in the state until the 1930s Their exclusion from politics was maintained into the late 1960s The so called New Capitol replaced the older structure upon its completion in 1903 Today the Old Capitol is operated as a historical museum 23 Early 20th century 1901 1960 Edit Panorama of downtown Jackson in 1910 The Old Capitol and Capitol Street can be seen at the center of the photo The New Capital is at the left Map of Jackson in 1919 April 16 1921 flood on Town Creek a tributary of the Pearl River in Jackson The photo is a view of East Capitol Street looking east from North Farish Street Standard Life Building at night downtown Jackson Author Eudora Welty was born in Jackson in 1909 lived most of her life in the Belhaven section of the city and died there in 2001 Her memoir of development as a writer One Writer s Beginnings 1984 presented a picture of the city in the early 20th century She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973 for her novel The Optimist s Daughter and is best known for her novels and short stories The main library of the Jackson Hinds Library System was named in her honor 26 and her home has been designated as a National Historic Landmark Richard Wright a highly acclaimed African American author lived in Jackson as an adolescent and young man in the 1910s and 1920s He related his experience in his memoir Black Boy 1945 He described the harsh and largely terror filled life most African Americans experienced in the South and Northern ghettos such as Chicago under segregation in the early 20th century Jackson had significant growth in the early 20th century which produced dramatic changes in the city s skyline Jackson s new Union Station downtown reflected the city s service by multiple rail lines including the Illinois Central Across the street the new luxurious King Edward Hotel opened its doors in 1923 having been built according to a design by New Orleans architect William T Nolan It became a center for prestigious events held by Jackson society and Mississippi politicians Nearby the 18 story Standard Life Building designed in 1929 by Claude Lindsley was the largest reinforced concrete structure in the world upon its completion Jackson s economic growth was further stimulated in the 1930s by the discovery of natural gas fields nearby Speculators had begun searching for oil and natural gas in Jackson beginning in 1920 The initial drilling attempts came up empty This failure did not stop Ella Render from obtaining a lease from the state s insane asylum to begin a well on its grounds in 1924 where he found natural gas Render eventually lost the rights when courts determined that the asylum did not have the right to lease the state s property Businessmen jumped on the opportunity and dug wells in the Jackson area The continued success of these ventures attracted further investment By 1930 there were 14 derricks in the Jackson skyline Mississippi Governor Theodore Bilbo stated It is no idle dream to prophesy that the state s share of the oil and natural gas profits properly safe guarded would soon pay the state s entire bonded indebtedness and even be great enough to defray all the state s expenses and make our state tax free so long as obligations are concerned This enthusiasm was subdued when the first wells failed to produce oil of a sufficiently high gravity for commercial success The barrels of oil had considerable amounts of saltwater which lessened the quality The governor s prediction was wrong in hindsight but the oil and natural gas industry did provide an economic boost for the city and state The effects of the Great Depression were mitigated by the industry s success At its height in 1934 there were 113 producing wells in the state The overwhelming majority were closed by 1955 27 Due to provisions in the federal Rivers and Harbors Act on October 25 1930 city leaders met with U S Army engineers to ask for federal help to alleviate Jackson flooding 28 J J Halbert city engineer proposed a straightening and dredging of the Pearl River below Jackson 29 Jackson s Gold Coast Edit During Mississippi s extended Prohibition period from the 1920s until the 1960s illegal drinking and gambling casinos flourished on the east side of the Pearl River in Flowood along with the original U S Route 80 just across from the city of Jackson Those illegal casinos bootleg liquor stores and nightclubs made up the Gold Coast a strip of mostly black market businesses that operated for decades along Flowood Road Although outside the law the Gold Coast was a thriving center of nightlife and music with many local blues musicians appearing regularly in the clubs The Gold Coast declined and businesses disappeared after Mississippi s prohibition laws were repealed in 1966 allowing Hinds County including Jackson to go wet 30 In addition integration drew off business from establishments that earlier had catered to African Americans such as the Summers Hotel When it opened in 1943 on Pearl Street it was one of two hotels in the city that served black clients For years its Subway Lounge was a prime performance spot for black musicians playing jazz and blues In another major change in 1990 the state approved gaming on riverboats 31 Numerous casinos have been developed on riverboats mostly in Mississippi Delta towns such as Tunica Resorts Greenville and Vicksburg as well as Biloxi on the Gulf Coast Before the damage and losses due to Hurricane Katrina in 2005 the state ranked second nationally in gambling revenues World War II and later development Edit During World War II Hawkins Field at that time also known as the Jackson Army Airbase the American 21st 309th and 310th Bomber Groups that were stationed at the base were re deployed for combat 32 Following the German invasion of the Netherlands and the Japanese invasion of the Dutch East Indies between 688 and 800 members of the Dutch Airforce escaped to the UK or Australia for training and out of necessity were eventually given permission by the United States to make use of Hawkins Field 33 From May 1942 until the end of the war all Dutch military aircrews trained at the base and went on to serve in either the British or Australian Air Forces 34 In 1949 the poet Margaret Walker began teaching at Jackson State University a historically black college She taught there until 1979 and founded the university s Center for African American Studies Her poetry collection won a Yale Younger Poets Prize Her second novel Jubilee 1966 is considered a major work of African American literature She has influenced many younger writers Civil rights movement in Jackson Edit The civil rights movement had been active for decades particularly mounting legal challenges to Mississippi s constitution and laws that disfranchised black people Beginning in 1960 Jackson as the state capital became the site for dramatic non violent protests in a new phase of activism that brought in a wide variety of participants in the performance of mass demonstrations In 1960 the U S Census Bureau reported Jackson s population as 64 3 white and 35 7 black 35 At the time public facilities were segregated and Jim Crow was in effect Efforts to desegregate Jackson facilities began when nine Tougaloo College students tried to read books in the white only public library and were arrested Founded as a historically black college HBCU by the American Missionary Association after the Civil War Tougaloo College helped organize both black and white students of the region to work together for civil rights It created partnerships with the neighboring mostly white Millsaps College to work with student activists It has been recognized as a site on the Civil Rights Trail by the National Park Service 36 Old Greyhound Bus Station The mass demonstrations of the 1960s were initiated with the arrival of more than 300 Freedom Riders on May 24 1961 They were arrested in Jackson for disturbing the peace after they disembarked from their interstate buses The interracial teams rode the buses from Washington D C and sat together to demonstrate against segregation on public transportation as the Constitution provides for unrestricted public transportation 37 Although the Freedom Riders had intended New Orleans as their final destination Jackson was the farthest that any managed to travel New participants kept joining the movement as they intended to fill the jails in Jackson with their protest The riders had encountered extreme violence along the way including a bus burning and physical assaults They attracted national media attention to the struggle for constitutional rights After the Freedom Rides students and activists of the Freedom Movement launched a series of merchant boycotts 38 sit ins and protest marches 39 from 1961 to 1963 Businesses discriminated against black customers For instance at the time department stores did not hire black salesclerks or allow black customers to use their fitting rooms to try on clothes or lunch counters for meals while in the store but they wanted them to shop in their stores In Jackson shortly after midnight on June 12 1963 Medgar Evers civil rights activist and leader of the Mississippi chapter of the NAACP was assassinated by Byron De La Beckwith a white supremacist associated with the White Citizens Council Thousands marched in Evers funeral procession to protest the killing 40 Two trials at the time both resulted in hung juries A portion of U S Highway 49 all of Delta Drive a library the central post office for the city and Jackson Evers International Airport were named in honor of Medgar Evers In 1994 prosecutors Ed Peters and Bobby DeLaughter finally obtained a murder conviction in a state trial of De La Beckwith based on new evidence 41 During 1963 and 1964 civil rights organizers gathered residents for voter education and voter registration Black people had been essentially disfranchised since 1890 In a pilot project in 1963 activists rapidly registered 80 000 voters across the state demonstrating the desire of African Americans to vote In 1964 they created the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party as an alternative to the all white state Democratic Party and sent an alternate slate of candidates to the national Democratic Party convention in Atlantic City New Jersey that year Segregation and the disfranchisement of African Americans gradually ended after the Civil Rights Movement gained Congressional passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 In June 1966 Jackson was the terminus of the James Meredith March organized by James Meredith the first African American to enroll at the University of Mississippi The march which began in Memphis Tennessee was an attempt to garner support for full implementation of civil rights in practice following the legislation It was accompanied by a new drive to register African Americans to vote in Mississippi In this latter goal it succeeded in registering between 2 500 and 3 000 black Mississippians to vote The march ended on June 26 after Meredith who had been wounded by a sniper s bullet earlier on the march addressed a large rally of some 15 000 people in Jackson In September 1967 a Ku Klux Klan chapter bombed the synagogue of the Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson and in November bombed the house of its rabbi Dr Perry Nussbaum 42 He and his congregation had supported civil rights Gradually the old barriers came down Since that period both whites and African Americans in the state have had a consistently high rate of voter registration and turnout Following the decades of the Great Migration when more than one million black people left the rural South since the 1930s the state has been majority white in total population African Americans are a majority in the city of Jackson although the metropolitan area is majority white African Americans are also a majority in several cities and counties of the Mississippi Delta which are included in the 2nd congressional district 43 The other three congressional districts are majority white Mid 1960s to present Edit The first successful cadaveric lung transplant was performed at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson in June 1963 by Dr James Hardy Hardy transplanted the cadaveric lung into a patient suffering from lung cancer The patient survived for eighteen days before dying of kidney failure 44 In 1966 it was estimated that recurring flood damage at Jackson from the Pearl River averaged nearly a million dollars per year The U S Army Corps of Engineers spent 6 8 million on levees and a new channel in 1966 before the project completion to prevent a flood equal to the December 1961 event plus an additional foot 45 Since 1968 Jackson has been the home of Malaco Records one of the leading record companies for gospel blues and soul music in the United States In January 1973 Paul Simon recorded the songs Learn How to Fall and Take Me to the Mardi Gras found on the album There Goes Rhymin Simon in Jackson at the Malaco Recording Studios Many well known Southern artists recorded on the album including the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section David Hood Jimmy Johnson Roger Hawkins Barry Beckett Carson Whitsett the Onward Brass Band from New Orleans and others The label has recorded many leading soul and blues artists including Bobby Bland ZZ Hill Latimore Shirley Brown Denise LaSalle and Tyrone Davis On May 15 1970 Jackson police killed two students and wounded twelve at Jackson State College after a protest of the Vietnam War included students overturning and burning some cars These killings occurred eleven days after the National Guard killed four students in an anti war protest at Kent State University in Ohio and were part of national social unrest 46 Newsweek cited the Jackson State killings in its issue of May 18 when it suggested that U S President Richard Nixon faced a new home front The influx of illegal drugs occurred nationally as smugglers used the highways seaports and airports of the Gulf region 47 48 The 1980s in Jackson were dominated by Mayor Dale Danks Jr until he was unseated by lawyer and legislator J Kane Ditto who criticized the deficit funding and the politicized police department of the city 49 Federal investigations of drug trafficking at Jackson s Hawkins Field airport were a part of the Kerry Report the 1986 U S Senate investigation of public corruption and foreign relations 50 As Jackson has become the medical and legal center of the state it has attracted Jewish professionals in both fields Since the late 20th century it has developed the largest Jewish community in the state 51 In 1997 Harvey Johnson Jr was elected as Jackson s first African American mayor During his term he proposed the development of a convention center to attract more business to the city In 2004 during his second term 66 percent of the voters passed a referendum for a tax to build the Convention Center 52 Mayor Johnson was replaced by Frank Melton on July 4 2005 Melton generated controversy through his unconventional behavior which included acting as a law enforcement officer A dramatic spike in crime ensued during his term despite Melton s efforts to reduce crime The lack of jobs contributed to crime 53 In 2006 a young African American businessman Starsky Darnell Redd was convicted of money laundering in federal court along with his mother other associates and Billy Tucker the former airport security chief 54 In 2007 Hinds County sheriff Malcolm McMillin was appointed as the new police chief in Jackson setting a historic precedent McMillin was both the county sheriff and city police chief until 2009 when he stepped down due to disagreements with the mayor Mayor Frank Melton died in May 2009 and City Councilman Leslie McLemore served as acting mayor of Jackson until July 2009 when former Mayor Harvey Johnson was elected and assumed the position 55 On June 26 2011 49 year old James Craig Anderson was killed in Jackson after being beaten robbed and run over by a group of white teenagers The district attorney described it as a hate crime and the FBI investigated it as a civil rights violation 56 57 58 On March 18 2013 a severe hailstorm hit the Jackson metro area The hail caused major damage to roofs vehicles and building siding Hail ranged in size from golfball to softball There were more than 40 000 hailstorm claims of homeowner and automobile damage 59 60 In 2013 Jackson was named as one of the top 10 friendliest cities in the United States by CN Traveler The capital city was tied with Natchez as Number 7 The city was noticed for friendly people great food and green and pretty public places 61 On July 1 2013 Chokwe Lumumba was sworn into office as mayor of the city After eight months in office Lumumba died on February 25 2014 Lumumba was a popular yet controversial figure due to his prior membership in the Republic of New Afrika as well as being a co founder of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America Lumumba s son Chokwe Antar Lumumba ran for the mayoral seat following his father s death but lost to Councillor Tony Yarber on April 22 2014 62 In 2017 however Chokwe Antar Lumumba ran for mayor again and won Following his victory on June 26 he was interviewed by Amy Goodman on Democracy Now 63 at which time he declared a commitment to make Jackson the Most Radical City on the Planet For several years the city water supply failed to meet federal drinking water standards and was subject to many boil water orders in 2021 and 2022 Due to deteriorating water infrastructure some parts of the city experienced low water pressure and in some neighborhoods residents reported untreated sewage flowing in city streets 64 In August 2022 Jackson lost access to water when its largest water treatment plant failed leaving tap water untreated 65 Geography Edit Photograph of Jackson Mississippi taken from the International Space Station Jackson is located primarily in northeastern Hinds County with small portions in Madison and Rankin counties The city of Jackson also includes around 3 000 acres 12 1 km2 comprising Jackson Medgar Evers International Airport in Rankin County and a small portion of Madison County The Pearl River forms most of the eastern border of the city A small portion of the city containing Tougaloo College is the portion of Jackson that lies in Madison County bounded on the west by Interstate 220 and on the east by the U S Route 51 and Interstate 55 In the 2010 census only 622 of the city s residents lived in Madison County 66 and only 1 lived within the city limits in Rankin County 67 The city is bordered to the north by Ridgeland in Madison County to the northeast by Ross Barnett Reservoir on the Pearl River to the east by Flowood and Richland in Rankin County to the south by Byram in Hinds County and to the west by Clinton in Hinds County According to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 113 2 square miles 293 3 km2 of which 111 0 square miles 287 6 km2 are land and 2 2 square miles 5 7 km2 or 1 94 of the total are water 68 Cityscape Edit Downtown Jackson from Mississippi Baptist Hospital in June of 2020 Downtown Jackson is situated directly on the banks of the Pearl River The downtown district has direct connections to both Interstate 55 via Pearl Street and Pasagoula Street and Interstate 20 via State Street US 51 Much of the downtown was constructed before the 1980s and only small additions to the skyline have been made since then Major highways Edit Interstate 55 Interstate 20 Interstate 220 US 51 US 49 US 80Geology Edit For the most part Jackson is built on acidic variably drained silt loam soil Loess forms the topsoil in western sections where the Loring soil series is common The Tippo series also a silt loam is found in the central flood plain Farther east common soil series include Guyton silt loam Providence silt loam and Smithdale fine sandy loam 69 Jackson structure map Jackson sits atop the extinct Jackson Volcano located 2 900 feet 880 m underground It is the only capital city in the United States to have this feature The buried peak of the volcano is located directly below the Mississippi Coliseum 70 The municipality is drained on the west by tributaries of the Big Black River and on the east by the Pearl River which is 150 feet 46 m higher than the Big Black near Canton The artesian groundwater flow is not as extensive in Jackson for this reason The first large scale well was drilled in the city in 1896 and the city water supply has relied on surface water resources 71 Climate Edit Jackson is located in the humid subtropical climate zone Koppen Cfa Rain occurs throughout the year though the winter and spring are the wettest seasons while September and October are usually the driest months Snow is rare and accumulation very seldom lasts more than a day 72 Average annual precipitation is 57 35 inches 1 457 mm see climate table 73 Much of Jackson s rainfall occurs during thunderstorms Thunder is heard on roughly 70 days each year Jackson lies in a region prone to severe thunderstorms which can produce large hail damaging winds and tornadoes Among the most notable tornado events was the F5 Candlestick Park tornado on March 3 1966 which destroyed the shopping center of the same name and surrounding businesses and residential areas killing 19 in South Jackson The record low temperature is 5 F 21 C set on January 27 1940 74 and the record high is 107 F 42 C last recorded August 30 2000 74 Climate data for Jackson Evers International Airport Mississippi 1991 2020 normals a extremes 1896 present b Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 85 29 89 32 95 35 94 34 100 38 105 41 107 42 107 42 107 42 98 37 89 32 84 29 107 42 Mean maximum F C 75 24 79 26 84 29 87 31 92 33 96 36 98 37 96 36 96 36 90 32 82 28 77 25 100 38 Average high F C 57 4 14 1 62 0 16 7 69 4 20 8 76 5 24 7 83 8 28 8 89 9 32 2 92 1 33 4 92 2 33 4 87 8 31 0 78 3 25 7 67 2 19 6 59 6 15 3 76 4 24 7 Daily mean F C 47 0 8 3 50 9 10 5 57 9 14 4 64 9 18 3 72 9 22 7 79 6 26 4 82 1 27 8 81 8 27 7 76 9 24 9 66 2 19 0 55 4 13 0 49 1 9 5 65 4 18 6 Average low F C 36 6 2 6 39 8 4 3 46 4 8 0 53 3 11 8 62 1 16 7 69 4 20 8 72 2 22 3 71 5 21 9 66 0 18 9 54 2 12 3 43 6 6 4 38 7 3 7 54 5 12 5 Mean minimum F C 19 7 23 5 29 2 37 3 47 8 59 15 65 18 64 18 52 11 37 3 27 3 23 5 18 8 Record low F C 5 21 1 17 15 9 27 3 36 2 47 8 51 11 54 12 35 2 26 3 15 9 4 16 5 21 Average precipitation inches mm 5 42 138 5 10 130 5 68 144 5 84 148 4 36 111 4 43 113 5 02 128 4 69 119 3 48 88 3 80 97 4 40 112 5 13 130 57 35 1 457 Average snowfall inches cm 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 6 1 5 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 9 8 9 6 9 9 8 6 8 9 9 8 11 3 10 6 6 6 7 1 8 5 9 8 110 5Average snowy days 0 1 in 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 5Average relative humidity 76 2 73 2 71 1 71 5 73 8 73 6 76 9 77 0 77 3 74 8 75 9 76 5 74 8Mean monthly sunshine hours 154 5 165 3 223 5 251 1 276 2 298 5 283 4 273 1 232 7 235 2 174 0 152 1 2 719 6Percent possible sunshine 48 53 60 65 65 70 65 66 63 67 55 49 61Source NOAA relative humidity and sun 1961 1990 72 74 75 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18501 881 18603 19169 6 18704 23432 7 18805 20422 9 18905 92013 8 19007 81632 0 191021 262172 0 192022 8177 3 193048 282111 6 194062 10728 6 195098 27158 2 1960144 42247 0 1970153 9686 6 1980202 89531 8 1990196 637 3 1 2000184 286 6 3 2010173 514 5 8 2020153 701 11 4 U S Decennial Census 76 2020 census 77 Jackson remained a small town for much of the 19th century Before the American Civil War Jackson s population remained small particularly in contrast to the river towns along the commerce laden Mississippi River Despite the city s status as the state capital the 1850 census counted only 1 881 residents and by 1900 the population of Jackson was still less than 8 000 Although it expanded rapidly during this period Meridian became Mississippi s largest city based on trade manufacturing and access to transportation via railroad and highway In the early 20th century Jackson had its largest rates of growth but ranked second to Meridian in Mississippi By 1944 Jackson s population had risen to some 70 000 inhabitants and it became the largest city in the state It has maintained its position achieving a peak population in the 1980 census of more than 200 000 residents in the city Since then Jackson has steadily declined in population while its suburbs have boomed This change has occurred in part due to white flight after the desegregation of public schools in 1970 78 but also demonstrates the national suburbanization trend in which wealthier residents moved out to newer housing This decline slowed in the first decade of the 21st century 79 Race and ethnicity Edit Jackson city Mississippi Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 80 Pop 2020 81 2010 2020White alone NH 31 194 25 424 17 98 16 54 Black or African American alone NH 137 265 120 727 79 11 78 55 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 232 237 0 13 0 15 Asian alone NH 660 751 0 38 0 49 Pacific Islander alone NH 18 30 0 01 0 02 Some Other Race alone NH 99 362 0 06 0 24 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 1 323 2 951 0 76 1 92 Hispanic or Latino any race 2 723 3 219 1 57 2 09 Total 173 514 153 701 100 00 100 00 Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race Map of racial distribution in Jackson 2010 U S census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic OtherAccording to the 2010 census 82 the racial and ethnic makeup of the city was predominantly Black and African American and non Hispanic white in 2020 they remained the largest racial and ethnic composition for the city 81 With white demographic decline and white flight its non Hispanic white population has declined this was also due to the increase in other traditional minorities within the city state and nation 83 84 Income Edit According to census statistics in 2000 the median income for a household in the city was 30 414 and the median income for a family was 36 003 Males had a median income of 29 166 versus 23 328 for females The per capita income for the city was 17 116 About 19 6 of families and 23 5 of the population were below the poverty line including 33 7 of those under age 18 and 15 7 of those age 65 or over 85 At the publication of the 2020 American Community Survey the city s median household income increased to 35 070 families had a median income of 44 348 married couple families 74 893 and non families 22 061 86 Crime EditIn 1993 Jackson had the nation s 12th highest homicide rate among cities with more than 100 000 residents according to the FBI The 87 slayings in the city in 1993 gave Jackson a homicide rate of 41 9 per 100 000 residents the FBI reported and set a new record for the most violent deaths in one year 1994 had higher homicides with 91 and the record was broken again in 1995 with a total of 92 87 88 In 2020 the city s homicide rate reached its highest in history with 79 69 homicides per 100 000 residents with a total of 128 homicides 89 Of major U S cities only St Louis surpassed Jackson s homicide rate 90 The homicide rate in 2020 represented a significant spike after years of declining homicide rates in the early 2000s 91 Property crime remains much lower than in the 1990s and overall violent crime has not increased as significantly as homicide in recent years and is below the peak in 1994 as of 2020 92 In 2021 a record number of homicides were recorded 155 and at a rate of 101 per 100 000 amongst the highest in the world 93 In late 2020 Police Chief James Davis along with the Mayor and other city leaders unveiled the virtual policing concept After months of struggling to move the concept forward Chief Davis began discussions with Eric B Fox a veteran Jackson Police Officer to return to the department Fox returned officially in January 2022 and launched a new concept the Real Time Command Center Economy EditJackson is home to several major industries these include electrical equipment and machinery processed food and primary and fabricated metal products The surrounding area supports the agricultural development of livestock soybeans cotton and poultry According to the city s government its top three employers are the University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson Public Schools and Nissan North America as of 2020 94 Other notable corporations with a large presence in the city and area have included or currently include Amazon in nearby Madison County 95 Burlington and Walmart The city is home to Cooperation Jackson which is an economic development vehicle for worker owned cooperative business 96 The organization has led to the creation of several businesses including lawn care provider The Green Team organic farm Freedom Farms print shop The Center for Community Production and The Balagoon Center which is a cooperative business incubator 97 Arts and culture Edit Thalia Mara Hall in Jackson MississippiJackson is home to a number of cultural and artistic attractions including the following Ballet Mississippi 98 Celtic Heritage Society of Mississippi 99 Crossroads Film Society and its annual Film Festival 100 International Museum of Muslim Cultures 101 Jackson State University Botanical Garden Jackson Zoo Light and Glass Studio 102 Margaret Walker Center Mississippi Agriculture and Forestry Museum 103 Mississippi Arts Center 104 Mississippi Chorus 105 Mississippi Civil Rights Museum 106 Mississippi Department of Archives and History 107 which contains the state archives and records Mississippi Heritage Trust 108 Mississippi Hispanic Association 109 Mississippi Metropolitan Ballet 110 Mississippi Museum of Art 111 Mississippi Opera Mississippi Symphony Orchestra MSO formerly the Jackson Symphony Orchestra founded in 1944 Municipal Art Gallery 112 Museum of Mississippi History Mynelle Gardens New Stage Theatre 113 Russell C Davis Planetarium 114 Smith Robertson Museum and Cultural Center 115 USA International Ballet Competition 116 Sports Edit Veterans Memorial Stadium is the largest stadium facility in Jackson Its parking lot often is used by employees of the University of Mississippi Medical Center nearbyThe city of Jackson and its metropolitan area are home to collegiate and semi professional sports teams Major League Baseball s Atlanta Braves minor affiliate the Mississippi Braves plays in the area Mississippi Brilla of USL League Two also operates in the area Government and infrastructure Edit 1874 engraving in Scribner s Monthly of the Old Capitol the seat of Mississippi s legislature from 1839 to 1903 Municipal government Edit In 1985 Jackson voters opted to replace the three person mayor commissioner system with a city council and mayor This electoral system enables a wider representation of residents on the city council City council members are elected from each of the city s seven wards considered single member districts The mayor is elected at large citywide Jackson s mayor is Chokwe Antar Lumumba 117 D Who was elected on July 3 2017 118 For former mayors see Mayor of Jackson MS Jackson s City Council members are Ward 1 Ashby Foote Ward 2 Melvin Priester Jr Ward 3 Kenneth Stokes Ward 4 De Keither Stamps Ward 5 Charles H Tillman Ward 6 Aaron Banks Ward 7 Virgi Lindsay 119 State government Edit The Mississippi Department of Corrections MDOC operates the Jackson Probation amp Parole Office in Jackson 120 The MDOC Central Mississippi Correctional Facility in unincorporated Rankin County 121 is located in proximity to Jackson 122 Federal representation Edit The larger portion of Jackson is part of Mississippi s 2nd congressional district U S Representative Bennie Gordon Thompson a Democrat has served since 1993 Until 2011 he was Chairman of the Committee on Homeland Security and has been the ranking member since 2011 1 The United States Postal Service operates the Jackson Main Post Office 123 and several smaller post offices Education EditHigher education Edit Jackson State University band The Sonic Boom Millsaps College is one of several institutions in and around Jackson established before 1900 Jackson is home to the most collegiate institutions in Mississippi Jackson State University is the largest collegiate institution in Jackson fourth largest in Mississippi and the only doctoral granting research institution based in its region 124 125 Colleges and universities 126 Edit Jackson State University Tougaloo College Millsaps College Belhaven University University of Mississippi Medical Center Mississippi College School of Law Hinds Community CollegePrimary and secondary schools Edit Public schools Edit Jackson Public School District JPS operates 60 public schools It is one of the largest school districts in the state with about 30 000 students in thirty eight elementary schools thirteen middle schools seven high schools and two special schools 127 Jackson Public Schools is the only urban school district in the state 128 As of 2017 update the public schools have few children who are middle or upper class as 99 of the students in JPS qualify for free or reduced school lunches In 2017 Susan Womack president of the Parents for Public Schools Jackson PPSJ from 2000 to 2012 stated that middle to upper class families in Jackson tended to leave public school after elementary school with parents who remained in Jackson enrolling their children in private school and those who wished to continue enrolling their children in public schools moving to Madison County The PPSJ decided circa the mid 2000s that it was not feasible to encourage middle and upper class parents to put their children in JPS schools 129 The district s high schools include Callaway High School Capital City Alternative School Career Development Center 130 Forest Hill High School Jim Hill High School Lanier High School Murrah High School Provine High School Wingfield High School While most of Jackson is in Jackson PSD there are parts in Hinds County that are instead in Hinds County School District 131 This part is zoned to Terry High School in Terry 132 The portion of Jackson in Madison County is within the Madison County School District 133 There are state operated K 12 public schools for special purposes Mississippi School for the Blind Mississippi School for the DeafPrivate schools Edit Private secondary schools include Christ Missionary amp Industrial CM amp I College High School Hillcrest Christian School Jackson Academy Woodland Hills Academy closed Some schools are in nearby municipalities St Andrew s Episcopal School the elementary school is in Jackson but the secondary school campus is in Ridgeland Jackson Preparatory School Flowood The Veritas School Ridgeland St Joseph Catholic School Madison of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson Hartfield Academy Flowood Canton Academy Canton Tri County Academy Flora Private primary schools include Jackson Academy First Presbyterian Day School 134 Magnolia Speech School 135 St Andrew s Episcopal Lower School South Campus St Richard Catholic School 136 St Therese Catholic School Public libraries Edit Jackson Hinds Library System is the library system of Jackson Infrastructure EditOn March 27 2015 Jackson Mayor Tony Yarber issued a state of emergency for transportation potholes and water infrastructure breaks in water mains 137 138 The quality of Jackson s water infrastructure system decreased after the severe winter weather of 2014 2015 Jackson s office estimated the cost to fix the roads and water pipes at 750 million to 1 billion 138 After issuing the state of emergency the City of Jackson filed a letter of intent to Department of Health to borrow 2 5 million to repair broken water pipes The Jackson City Council must approve the mayor s proposal 137 Additionally Mayor Yarber asked for help from both FEMA and the state Governor s office 139 Calling for a state of emergency increases the likelihood that the U S Department of Transportation would give the city money from a quick release funding account 140 In late August 2022 the Pearl River overflowed flooding much of the city and contaminating the water supply Mayor Lumumba declared a state of emergency and shut down all businesses and schools 141 Transportation Edit In 2015 11 percent of the city of Jackson households lacked a car which decreased to 7 6 percent in 2016 The national average was 8 7 percent in 2016 Jackson averaged 1 68 cars per household in 2016 compared to a national average of 1 8 142 Jackson has an increasing number of bicycle lanes 143 144 Jackson Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport is located east of city in Rankin County In popular culture EditIn 2011 the United States Navy named the USS Jackson LCS 6 in honor of the city 145 In 2002 the Subway Lounge of the Summers Hotel on the Gold Coast was featured as the subject of the film documentary entitled Last of the Mississippi Jukes 146 147 The popular film The Help 2011 based on the bestselling novel by the same name by Kathryn Stockett was filmed in Jackson The city has a two part self guided tour of areas featured in the film and the book 148 In the song Uptown Funk by Mark Ronson and featuring Bruno Mars Jackson is mentioned in the lines Julio Get the Stretch Ride to Harlem Hollywood Jackson Mississippi Get on Up a movie released in August 2014 had some scenes filmed in Jackson 149 and nearby Natchez 150 The movie is based on the life of James Brown 151 The movie Speech amp Debate an adaptation of the stage play of the same name of Broadway theatre 152 was filmed entirely in Jackson 153 Notable people EditSee List of people from MississippiFurther reading EditJackson Rising The Struggle for Economic Democracy and Black Self Determination in Jackson Mississippi edited by Kali Akuno and Ajamu Nangwaya 2017 Daraja Press ISBN 978 0 9953474 5 8 Notes Edit Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for Jackson have been kept at the international airport since July 8 1963 For more information see ThreadexReferences Edit 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 24 2022 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Archived from the original on February 12 2012 Retrieved January 31 2008 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Jackson city Mississippi Census Bureau QuickFacts Archived from the original on February 2 2019 Retrieved July 4 2018 Official City of Jackson Mississippi Website History of Jackson May 10 2010 Archived from the original on May 10 2010 Retrieved July 4 2018 Jackson Mississippi City With Soul Jacksoncitywithsoul com Archived from the original on February 4 2010 Retrieved January 31 2010 Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas Population Totals and Components of Change 2010 2019 Retrieved May 13 2020 Swanton John R The Indian Tribes of North America Smithsonian Institution U S Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 145 Washington DC Government Printing Office 1953 p 183 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek PDF Archived PDF from the original on February 12 2017 Retrieved September 18 2018 History of Meridian MS Official website of Meridian MeridianMS org Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved June 7 2008 Ferguson Bob 2004 Choctaw Treaties Dancing Rabbit Creek Choctaw Museum of the Southern Indian Archived from the original on May 15 2008 Retrieved June 7 2008 a b c Official City of Jackson Mississippi Website Jackson s History Jacksonms gov Archived from the original on May 10 2010 Retrieved January 31 2010 Izard E Ray January 30 1974 Carroll s Trace took Tennessee Boys Home Jackson Clarion Ledger Laws of the State of Mississippi passed at the 4th session of the general assembly held in the City of Natchez 1821 Natchez A Marschalk and Evens amp Co State printers p 158 William C Davis A Way Through the Wilderness The Natchez Trace and Civilization of the Southern Frontier New York Harper Collins 1995 p 30 Claiborne County MSGenWeb ancestry com Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved October 19 2014 Gilmer Robert November 21 2003 Chickasaws Tribal Laws and the Mississippi Married Women s Property Act of 1839 PDF www unca edu Retrieved January 23 2021 Brough Charles H 1903 Historic Clinton Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society v 7 p 285 a b Johnson Brian Johnson When Jackson Burned www jacksonfreepress com Retrieved January 23 2021 Vicksburg Mailing Address 3201 Clay Street Us MS 39183 Phone 636 0583 Contact Battle of Jackson May 14 Vicksburg National Military Park U S National Park Service www NPS gov Retrieved January 23 2021 Thompson Bennie Gordon June 19 2014 HONORING THE CITY OF JACKSON MISSISSIPPI Congressional Record 160 97 E1029 via Congress gov Todd Sanders Images of America Jackson s North State Street Charleston Arcadia Publishing 2009 58 and 40 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 a b Old Capitol Museum Mississippi Department of Archives amp History www mdah ms gov Retrieved January 23 2021 Richard H Pildes Democracy Anti Democracy and the Canon Constitutional Commentary Vol 17 2000 pp 12 13 Archived July 23 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 10 2008 Michael Perman Struggle for Mastery Disfranchisement in the South 1888 1908 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2001 Vicory Justin Jackson libraries face an existential crisis that includes black mold When will the city help The Clarion Ledger Retrieved January 23 2021 Dudley J Hughes Oil in the Deep South A History of the Oil Business in Mississippi Alabama and Florida 1859 1945 Jackson University of Mississippi Press 1993 67 86 River and Harbor Act of 1930 July 3 1930 ch 847 46 Stat 918 Retrieved September 10 2015 Watercases org website Archived October 16 2015 at the Wayback Machine Dredging of Pearl Urged October 26 1930 Clarion Ledger Jackson p 1 Gold Coast Archived July 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine Blues website Tribune Daniel Egler Chicago GAMBLING BOAT LAW GETS THOMPSON OK chicagotribune com Retrieved January 23 2021 Lyons Amanda Morgan Will May 1 2018 Patriots without a Country Dutch Wings over Jackson PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 21 2018 Retrieved February 24 2020 Samuel Howard Well August 2018 Jackson s Flying Dutchmen The Significance of the Royal Netherlands Military Flying School University of Mississippi Retrieved February 24 2020 Remembering the fallen airmen of the Royal Netherlands Flying School in Mississippi May 22 2018 Retrieved February 24 2020 Mississippi Race and Hispanic Origin for Selected Cities and Other Places Earliest Census to 1990 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved May 1 2012 Tougaloo 9 Civil Rights Movement Archive Archived from the original on July 7 2010 Retrieved December 21 2007 Freedom Rides Civil Rights Movement Archive Archived from the original on July 7 2010 Retrieved December 21 2007 Jackson MS Boycotts Civil Rights Movement Archive Archived from the original on October 4 2006 Retrieved December 21 2007 Jackson Sit in amp Protests Civil Rights Movement Archive Archived from the original on June 15 2009 Retrieved December 21 2007 Veterans of the Civil Rights Movement History amp Timeline 1963 Jan June crmvet org Archived from the original on June 15 2009 Retrieved December 21 2007 Stout David January 23 2001 Byron De La Beckwith Dies Killer of Medgar Evers Was 80 Published 2001 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 23 2021 History of Beth Israel Jackson Mississippi Archived October 5 2007 at the Wayback Machine Goldring Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life website History Department Digital Archive Mississippi Jackson Beth Israel Retrieved August 17 2008 Edward Blum and Abigail Thernstrom Executive Summary of the Bullock Gaddie Expert Report on Mississippi Apr 17 2006 Archived April 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine American Enterprise Institute Retrieved March 21 2008 Eckl K August 2 2011 The University of Mississippi Pioneers in Transplant Thoracic Surgery Retrieved January 23 2021 May 19 1966 Pearl Flood Project finished by June 1967 Jackson Daily News Jackson Tim Spofford Lynch Street The May 1970 Slayings at Jackson State College Kent OH Kent State University Press 1988 pp 17 and 19 Campbell Don July 27 1982 Governors hear call for drug task force Clarion Ledger Jackson Mississippi p 4A Clipping from Newspapers com Editors October 18 1982 Escalating war plan beefs up drug enforcement Clarion Ledger Jackson p 10A Clipping from Newspapers com Eubank Jay May 13 1989 More issues discussed during cliche free round two Clarion Ledger Jackson Drugs Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy a Report PDF United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Terrorism Narcotics and International Operations December 1988 pp 278 295 Archived PDF from the original on April 11 2016 Retrieved September 3 2015 Appendix Customs Report Guy Penilton Owen May 9 1983 Stuart Rockoff The Disappearing Southern Jew Archived July 14 2015 at the Wayback Machine April 30 2013 Southern and Jewish blog at My Jewish Learning ISTL Jackson Mississippi Tourism City of Jackson Travel MS Vacations Event Planning Visitjackson com Archived from the original on December 21 2007 Retrieved January 31 2010 Mayor of U S city failing the hard test of crime prevention The Taipei Times Associated Press July 27 2006 Archived from the original on August 24 2006 Retrieved March 9 2007 Associated Press December 2 2008 Drug kingpin cohorts appeal convictions Desoto Times Hernando Miss Retrieved September 3 2015 Desoto Times website Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Mayor appoints sheriff who arrested him twice as police chief USA Today November 16 2007 Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved November 19 2007 Sperling Nicole August 15 2011 March aims to draw attention to slaying of black Mississippi man Sacramento Bee Retrieved August 22 2011 permanent dead link Severson Kimberly August 22 2011 Killing of Black Man Prompts Reflection on Race in Mississippi The New York Times Archived from the original on June 12 2015 Retrieved August 22 2011 James Craig Anderson s Death FBI Investigates Fatal Rundown of Black Man in Mississippi Associated Press August 18 2011 Archived from the original on February 7 2012 Retrieved August 22 2011 March 18 2013 Severe Weather Event Archived October 18 2018 at the Wayback Machine NOAA Insurers see more than 40 000 hailstorm claims Archived September 27 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi Business blog April 3 2013 The Friendliest and Unfriendliest Cities in the U S Archived August 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine CN Traveler Barnes Dustin April 24 2014 Mayor Tony Yarber Preaches Plans for Jackson Clarion Ledger Jackson Miss Mayor elect Chokwe Lumumba I Plan to Build the Most Radical City on the Planet Democracy Now Archived from the original on June 26 2017 Retrieved June 27 2017 Amir Vera Jason Hanna Nouran Salahieh August 31 2022 The water crisis in Jackson Mississippi has gotten so bad the city temporarily ran out of bottled water to give to residents CNN Rojas Rick August 30 2022 Mississippi s Capital Loses Water as a Troubled System Faces a Fresh Crisis The New York Times Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 G001 Jackson city part Madison County Mississippi American Factfinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved August 16 2017 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 G001 Jackson city part Rankin County Mississippi American Factfinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved August 16 2017 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 G001 Jackson city Mississippi American Factfinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved August 16 2017 https casoilresource lawr ucdavis edu gmap SoilWeb Jackson MS Mississippi University of December 12 2003 The Geology of 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Retrieved January 30 2022 Top Employers in Jackson MSA Jackson MS Retrieved November 26 2022 Jackson Courtney Ann Amazon opens first robotics sortable center in Mississippi in Madison County WLBT Retrieved November 26 2022 Moskowitz P E April 24 2017 Meet the Radical Workers Cooperative Growing in the Heart of the Deep South The Nation ISSN 0027 8378 Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved December 17 2021 Franco Cheree October 2 2019 Building a Solidarity Economy in Jackson Mississippi The Indypendent Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved October 30 2019 Ballet Mississippi Jackson s Premier Ballet Company Ballet Mississippi Archived from the original on March 22 2019 Retrieved December 29 2016 CelticFest Mississippi Celticfestms org Archived from the original on August 6 2002 Retrieved December 29 2016 The Crossroads Film Society Jackson Miss Crossroadsfilmfestival com Archived from the original on July 23 2019 Retrieved December 29 2016 International Museum of Muslim Cultures Muslimmuseum org Archived from the original on October 4 2006 Retrieved December 29 2016 Williams Joseph Blurring the lines between Light and Glass Oxford Enterprise Oxford Mississippi 18 April 2010 Mississippi Agriculture amp Forestry Museum National Agricultural Aviation Museum Archived from the original on November 8 2005 Retrieved November 9 2005 MISSISSIPPI ARTS CENTER January 16 2009 Archived from the original on January 16 2009 Retrieved August 27 2017 The Mississippi Chorus Mschorus org Archived from the original on December 30 2016 Retrieved December 29 2016 Waibel Elizabeth Museum Needs Civil Rights Stories Jackson Free Press January 27 2012 Archived from the original on January 30 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 Mississippi Department of Archives and History Archived from the original on November 30 2005 Retrieved December 29 2016 Mississippi Heritage Trust Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved December 29 2016 Asociacion Hispana de 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from the original on September 25 2007 Retrieved September 23 2007 MPB Mississippi Public Broadcasting Mpbonline org Archived from the original on August 27 2017 Retrieved August 27 2017 The Final Hours Out going Mayor Tony Yarber reflects on time in office Wjtv com June 30 2017 Archived from the original on August 27 2017 Retrieved August 27 2017 City Council City of Jackson Mississippi Archived from the original on April 26 2014 Retrieved April 24 2014 Hinds County Archived October 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi Department of Corrections Retrieved September 24 2011 MDOC QUICK REFERENCE Archived September 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi Department of Corrections Retrieved May 21 2010 3794 Hwy 468 Pearl MS 39208 GARRISON COULD BE BACK IN JAIL SOON Archived October 26 2012 at the Wayback Machine Biloxi Sun Herald February 15 1995 C2 Coast and State Retrieved September 24 2011 County jail to the central Mississippi prison near Jackson in mid 1994 Post Office Location JACKSON Archived February 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine United States Postal Service Retrieved September 24 2011 Jackson State Becomes the 4th Largest HBCU by Enrollment Hbculifestyle com December 19 2016 Archived from the original on October 4 2015 Retrieved December 29 2016 Jackson State University Mississippi Urban Research Center Jsums edu October 21 2016 Archived from the original on December 20 2015 Retrieved December 29 2016 List of 21 Mississippi Colleges and Universities About Jackson Public Schools Archived September 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine Jackson k12 ms us January 22 2014 Retrieved on 2014 04 30 Jackson State University Institutional Partners Archived September 25 2013 at the Wayback Machine Jsums edu Retrieved on April 30 2014 Dreher Arielle November 15 2017 How Integration Failed in Jackson s Public Schools from 1969 to 2017 Jackson Free Press Archived from the original on August 12 2019 Retrieved November 17 2019 In JPS 99 percent of students are eligible for free and reduced lunch as determined by federal poverty guidelines Career Development Center Home Archived from the original on December 28 2005 Retrieved December 12 2005 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Hinds County MS PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2021 attendance zone jpg Hinds County School District July 21 2011 Retrieved on December 29 2018 Compare with Hinds County district map 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Madison County MS PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved June 30 2021 A Christian Day School in Jackson Mississippi First Presbyterian Day School fpds org Archived from the original on August 28 2009 Retrieved October 9 2009 Home Magnolia Speech School magnoliaspeechschool org Archived from the original on May 14 2008 Retrieved June 5 2008 Message missing possible session timeout Strichardschool com Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved December 29 2016 a b Simmons Scott April 14 2015 Jackson mayor seeks emergency loan to pay for water repairs 16 WAPT News Archived from the original on April 17 2015 Retrieved April 17 2015 a b Jackson Miss mayor declares infrastructure emergency TI News Daily March 27 2015 Archived from the original on April 17 2015 Retrieved April 17 2015 Aldridge Donesha April 13 2015 Mayor Yarber discusses city s infrastructure with state staff members WJTV com Archived from the original on April 17 2015 Retrieved April 17 2015 Quick Release Emergency Relief Grant www transportation gov September 19 2017 Retrieved January 22 2022 Jackson Mississippi has no water to drink or flush toilets BBC News BBC Car Ownership in U S Cities Data and Map Governing Archived from the original on May 11 2018 Retrieved May 4 2018 Mississippians for Complete Streets Bike Walk Mississippi Retrieved January 7 2022 Complete Street Policy The City of Jackson Mississippi City of Jackson MS November 5 2015 Retrieved January 7 2022 Navy Names Littoral Combat Ships Jackson and Montgomery Archived July 9 2015 at the Wayback Machine DOD press release March 25 2011 Jackson To Honor Fallen Juke Joint with Mississippi Blues Trail Marker PDF Mississippi Development Authority Archived from the original PDF on October 4 2007 Retrieved June 1 2008 Last of the Mississippi Jukes Photo Album robertmugge com Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved June 1 2008 The Help in Belhaven Neighborhood Tour Archived March 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine Jackson Convention and Visitors Bureau The Clarion Ledger clarionledger com Retrieved July 31 2014 Get On Up the James Brown biopic filming in Natchez Mississippi and still looking for extras Onlocationvacations com Archived from the original on December 24 2013 Retrieved July 31 2014 Fleming Mike October 22 2012 James Brown Movie The Help s Tate Taylor And Mick Jagger Aboard Deadline com Archived from the original on May 2 2014 Retrieved July 31 2014 Speech amp Debate Film Will Feature Spencer Liff Choreo www broadway com December 10 2015 Archived from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Gerard Jeremy July 9 2015 Liam James amp Sarah Steele Topline Speech amp Debate For Sycamore Pictures Dan Harris Directing deadline com Archived from the original on August 11 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of Jackson MississippiExternal links EditJackson Mississippi at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Official website Jackson Convention amp Visitors Bureau Metro Jackson Chamber of Commerce Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jackson Mississippi amp oldid 1132602725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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