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Memphis, Tennessee

Memphis is a city in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is the seat of Shelby County in the southwest part of the state; it is situated along the Mississippi River. With a population of 633,104 at the 2020 U.S. census,[6] Memphis is the second-most populous city in Tennessee, after Nashville.

Memphis
From top to bottom and left to right: Downtown Memphis skyline, Beale Street, University of Memphis, Graceland and Memphis Pyramid
Nickname(s): 
Bluff City, Home of the Blues, Grind City
Interactive map of Memphis
Coordinates: 35°07′03″N 89°58′16″W / 35.11750°N 89.97111°W / 35.11750; -89.97111Coordinates: 35°07′03″N 89°58′16″W / 35.11750°N 89.97111°W / 35.11750; -89.97111
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
CountyShelby
FoundedMay 22, 1819 (1819-05-22)
IncorporatedDecember 19, 1826 (1826-12-19)
Named forMemphis, Egypt
Government
 • MayorJim Strickland (D)
Area
 • City302.55 sq mi (783.60 km2)
 • Land294.92 sq mi (763.83 km2)
 • Water7.63 sq mi (19.77 km2)
Elevation
337 ft (103 m)
Population
 • City633,104
 • Rank28th in the United States
2nd in Tennessee
 • Density2,146.71/sq mi (828.85/km2)
 • Urban
1,056,190 (US: 45th)
 • Urban density2,149.9/sq mi (830.1/km2)
 • Metro1,337,779 (US: 43rd)
DemonymMemphian
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
ZIP Codes
ZIP Codes[4]
Area code901
FIPS code47-48000[5]
WebsiteCity of Memphis

Memphis is the fifth-most populous city in the Southeast, the nation's 28th-largest overall, as well as the largest city bordering the Mississippi River and third largest Metropolitan statistical area behind Saint Louis, MO and the Twin Cities on the Mississippi River.[7] The Memphis metropolitan area includes West Tennessee and the greater Mid-South region, which includes portions of neighboring Arkansas, Mississippi and the Missouri Bootheel. One of the more historic and culturally significant cities of the Southern United States, Memphis has a wide variety of landscapes and distinct neighborhoods.

The first European explorer to visit the area of present-day Memphis was Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto in 1541. The high Chickasaw Bluffs protecting the location from the waters of the Mississippi was contested by Spanish, French, and English colonizers as Memphis developed. By 1819, when modern Memphis was founded, it was part of the United States territory. John Overton, James Winchester, and Andrew Jackson founded the city.[8] Based on the wealth of cotton plantations and river traffic along the Mississippi, Memphis grew into one of the largest cities of the Antebellum South. After the American Civil War and the end of slavery, the city continued to grow into the 20th century. It became among the largest world markets for cotton and lumber.[9]

Home to Tennessee's largest African-American population, Memphis played a prominent role in the American Civil Rights Movement. Leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated there in 1968 after activities supporting a strike by the city's maintenance workers. The National Civil Rights Museum was established there and is a Smithsonian affiliate institution.

Since the civil rights era, Memphis has become one of the nation's leading commercial centers in transportation and logistics.[10] The largest employer is FedEx, which maintains its global air hub at Memphis International Airport. In 2021, Memphis was the world's second-busiest cargo airport. The International Port of Memphis also hosts the fifth-busiest inland water port in the U.S.[11] The Globalization and World Cities Research Network considers Memphis a "Sufficiency" level global city as of 2020.[12]

Memphis is a center for media and entertainment, notably a historic music scene.[13] With blues clubs on Beale Street originating the unique Memphis blues sound, the city has been nicknamed the "Home of the Blues". Its music has continued to be shaped by a multicultural mix of influences: country, rock and roll, soul, and hip-hop.

The city is home to a major professional sports team, the Grizzlies of the NBA. Other attractions include Graceland, the Memphis Pyramid, Sun Studio, the Blues Hall of Fame and Stax Museum of American Soul Music. Memphis-style barbecue has achieved international prominence, and the city hosts the annual World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, which attracts more than 100,000 visitors each year. Higher-level educational institutions include the University of Memphis and Rhodes College.

History

Early history

Occupying a substantial bluff rising from the Mississippi River, the site of Memphis has been a natural location for human settlement by varying indigenous cultures over thousands of years.[14] In the first millennium A.D. people of the Mississippian culture were prominent; the culture influenced a network of communities throughout the Mississippi River Valley and its tributaries. The hierarchical societies built complexes with large earthwork ceremonial and burial mounds as expressions of their sophisticated culture.[15] The Chickasaw people, believed to be their descendants, later inhabited this site and a large territory in the Southeast.[16]

French explorers led by René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle,[17] and Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto[18][19] encountered the historic Chickasaw in this area in the 16th century.

J. D. L. Holmes, writing in Hudson's Four Centuries of Southern Indians (2007), notes that this site was a third strategic point in the late 18th century through which European powers could control United States encroachment beyond the Appalachians and their interference with Indian matters—after Fort Nogales (present-day Vicksburg) and Fort Confederación (present-day Epes, Alabama): "Chickasaw Bluffs, located on the Mississippi River at the present-day location of Memphis. Spain and the United States vied for control of this site, which was a favorite of the Chickasaws."[20]: 71 

In 1795 the Spanish Governor-General of Louisiana, Francisco Luis Héctor de Carondelet, sent his lieutenant governor, Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, to negotiate and secure consent from the local Chickasaw so that a Spanish fort could be erected on the bluff; Fort San Fernando De Las Barrancas was the result.[20]: 71 [21] Holmes notes that consent was reached despite opposition from "disappointed Americans and a pro-American faction of the Chickasaws" when the "pro-Spanish faction signed the Chickasaw Bluffs Cession and Spain provided the Chickasaws with a trading post".[20]: 71 

Fort San Fernando de las Barrancas remained a focal point of Spanish activity until, as Holmes summarizes:

[T]he Treaty of San Lorenzo or Pinckney's Treaty of 1795 [implemented in March 1797], [had as its result that] all of the careful, diplomatic work by Spanish officials in Louisiana and West Florida, which has succeeded for a decade in controlling the Indians [e.g., the Choctaws], was undone. The United States gained the right to navigate the Mississippi River and won control over the Yazoo Strip north of the thirty-first parallel.[20]: 75, 71 

The Spanish dismantled the fort, shipping its lumber and iron to their locations in Arkansas.[22]

In 1796, the site became the westernmost point of the newly admitted state of Tennessee, in what was then called the Southwest United States. The area was still largely occupied and controlled by the Chickasaw nation. Captain Isaac Guion led an American force down the Ohio River to claim the land, arriving on July 20, 1797. By this time, the Spanish had departed.[23] The fort's ruins went unnoticed 20 years later when Memphis was laid out as a city after the United States government paid the Chickasaw for land.[24]

19th century

 
Memphis in the mid-1850s

At the beginning of the century, as recognized by the United States in 1786 Treaty of Hopewell, the land still belonged to the Chickasaw Nation. In the Treaty of Tuscaloosa, signed on October 1818 and ratified by Congress on January 7, 1819, the Chickasaw ceded their territory in Western Tennessee to the United States.

The city of Memphis was founded less than five months after the U.S. takeover of the territory, on May 22, 1819 (incorporated December 19, 1826), by John Overton, James Winchester and Andrew Jackson.[25][26] They named it after the ancient capital of Egypt on the Nile River.[27]

The city had a high proportion of African Americans, some of whom were free people of color and others enslaved in service to whites, predominately white Protestants of British ethnicity. Many African Americans worked along the river, and even more on the outlying cotton plantations of the Delta. The city's demographics changed dramatically in the 1850s and 1860s under waves of immigration and domestic migration. Due to increased immigration since the 1840s and the Great Famine, ethnic Irish made up 9.9% of the population in 1850, but 23.2% by 1860, when the total population was 22,623.[28][29][30]

 
Attack on Irving Block by General Forrest in 1864

Tennessee seceded from the Union in June 1861, and Memphis briefly became a Confederate stronghold. Union ironclad gunboats captured it in the naval Battle of Memphis on June 6, 1862, and the city and state were occupied by the Union Army for the duration of the war. Union Army commanders allowed the city to maintain its civil government during most of this period but excluded Confederate veterans from office. This shifted political dynamics in the city as the war went on.[31]

The war years contributed to additional dramatic changes in the city population. The Union Army's presence attracted many fugitive slaves who had escaped from surrounding rural plantations. So many sought protection behind Union lines that the Army set up contraband camps to accommodate them. Memphis's black population increased from 3,000 in 1860, when the total population was 22,623, to nearly 20,000 in 1865, with most settling south of the city limits.[32]

Postwar years, Reconstruction and Democratic control

The rapid demographic changes added to the stress of war and occupation and uncertainty about who was in charge, increasing tensions between the city's ethnic Irish policemen and black Union soldiers after the war.[31] In three days of rioting in early May 1866, the Memphis Riots erupted, in which white mobs made up of policemen, firemen, and other mostly ethnic Irish Americans attacked and killed 46 blacks, wounding 75 and injuring 100; raped several women; and destroyed nearly 100 houses while severely damaging churches and schools in South Memphis. Much of the black settlement was left in ruins. Two whites were killed in the riot.[32] Many blacks permanently fled Memphis afterward, especially as the Freedmen's Bureau continued to have difficulty in protecting them. Their population fell to about 15,000 by 1870,[31] 37.4% of the total population of 40,226.

 
Historic aerial view of Memphis, 1870

Historian Barrington Walker suggests that the Irish rioted against blacks because of their relatively recent arrival as immigrants and the uncertain nature of their own claim to "whiteness"; they were trying to distinguish themselves from blacks in the underclass. The main fighting participants were ethnic Irish, decommissioned black Union soldiers, and newly emancipated African-American freedmen. Walker suggests that most of the mob was not in direct economic conflict with the blacks, as by then the Irish had attained better jobs, but were establishing social and political dominance over the freedmen.[30]

In Memphis, unlike disturbances in some other cities, ex-Confederate veterans were generally not part of the attacks against blacks. The outrages of the riots in Memphis and a similar one in New Orleans, Louisiana in September (the latter did include Confederate veterans) resulted in Congress's passing the Reconstruction Act and the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[32]

Yellow Jack

In the 1870s, a series of yellow fever epidemics devastated Memphis, with the disease carried by river passengers traveling by ships along the waterways. During the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1878, more than 5,000 people were listed in the official register of deaths between July 26 and November 27. The vast majority died of yellow fever, making the epidemic in the city of 40,000 one of the most traumatic and severe in urban U.S. history. Within four days of the Memphis Board of Health's declaration of a yellow fever outbreak, 20,000 residents fled the city. The ensuing panic left the poverty-stricken, the working classes, and the African-American community at the most risk from the epidemic. Those who remained relied on volunteers from religious and physician organizations to tend to the sick. By the end of the year, more than 5,000 were confirmed dead in Memphis. The New Orleans health board listed "not less than 4,600" dead. The Mississippi Valley recorded 120,000 cases of yellow fever, with 20,000 deaths. The $15 million in losses caused by the epidemic bankrupted Memphis, and as a result, its charter was revoked by the state legislature.

 
Woodcut representing the waterfront of Memphis, c. 1879

By 1870, Memphis's population of 40,000 was almost double that of Nashville and Atlanta, and it was the second-largest city in the South after New Orleans.[33] Its population continued to grow after 1870, even when the Panic of 1873 hit the US hard, particularly in the South. The Panic of 1873 resulted in expanding Memphis's underclasses amid the poverty and hardship it wrought, giving further credence to Memphis as a rough, shiftless city. Leading up to the outbreak in 1878, it had suffered two yellow fever epidemics, cholera, and malaria, giving it a reputation as sickly and filthy. It was unheard of for a city with a population as large as Memphis's not to have any waterworks; the city still relied for supplies entirely on collecting water from the river and rain cisterns, and had no way to remove sewage.[33] The combination of a swelling population, especially of lower and working classes, and abysmal health and sanitary conditions made Memphis ripe for a serious epidemic.

Kate Bionda, an owner of an Italian "snack house", died of a fever on August 13, 1878.[33] Hers was officially reported by the Board of Health, on August 14, as the first case of yellow fever in the city.[33] A massive panic ensued. The same trains and steamboats that had brought thousands into Memphis, in five days carried away more than 25,000 refugees, more than half of the city's population.[33] On August 23, the Board of Health finally declared a yellow fever epidemic in Memphis, and the city collapsed, hemorrhaging its population. In July of that year, the city had a population of 47,000; by September, 19,000 remained, and 17,000 of them had yellow fever.[33] The only people left in the city were the lower classes, such as German and Irish immigrant workers and African Americans. None had the means to flee the city, as did the middle and upper-class whites of Memphis, and thus they were subjected to a city of death.

Immediately following the Board of Health's declaration, a Citizen's Relief Committee was formed by Charles G. Fisher. It organized the city into refugee camps. The committee's main priority was to separate the poor from the city and isolate them in refugee camps.[33] The Howard Association, formed specifically for yellow fever epidemics in New Orleans and Memphis, organized nurses and doctors in Memphis and throughout the country.[34] They stayed at the Peabody Hotel, the only hotel to keep its doors open during the epidemic. From there they were assigned to their respective districts. Physicians of the epidemic reported seeing as many as 100 to 150 patients daily.[33]

The Catholic sisters of St. Mary's Hospital played an important role during the epidemic in caring for the lower classes. Already supporting a girls' school and church orphanage, the sisters of St. Mary's also sought to provide care for the Canfield Asylum, a home for black children. Each day, they alternated caring for the orphans at St. Mary's, delivering children to the Canfield Asylum, and taking soup and medicine on house calls to patients.[33] Between September 9 and October 4, Sister Constance and three other nuns fell victim to the epidemic and died. They later became known as the Martyrs of Memphis.[35]

At long last, on October 28, a killing frost struck. The city sent out word to Memphians scattered all over the country to come home. Though yellow fever cases were recorded in the pages of Elmwood Cemetery's burial record as late as February 29, 1874, the epidemic seemed quieted.[33] The Board of Health declared the epidemic at an end after it had caused over 20,000 deaths and financial losses of nearly $200 million.[36] On November 27, a general citizen's meeting was called at the Greenlaw Opera House to offer thanks to those who had stayed behind to serve, of whom many had died. Over the next year property tax revenues collapsed, and the city could not make payments on its municipal debts. As a result, Memphis temporarily lost its city charter and was reclassified by the state legislature as a Taxing District from 1878 to 1893.[34] But a new era of sanitation was developed in the city, a new municipal government in 1879 helped form the first regional health organization, and during the 1880s Memphis led the nation in sanitary reform and improvements.[36]

Perhaps the most significant effect of yellow fever on Memphis was in demographic changes. Nearly all of Memphis's upper and middle classes vanished, depriving the city of its general leadership and class structure that dictated everyday life, similar to that in other large Southern cities, such as New Orleans, Charleston, South Carolina, and Atlanta, Georgia. In Memphis, the poorer whites and blacks fundamentally made up the city and played the greatest role in rebuilding it. The epidemic had resulted in Memphis being a less cosmopolitan place, with an economy that served the cotton trade and a population drawn increasingly from poor white and black Southerners.[37]

Late 19th century

The 1890 election was strongly contested, resulting in white opponents of the D. P. Hadden faction working to deprive them of votes by disenfranchising blacks. The state had enacted several laws, including the requirement of poll taxes, that made it more difficult for them to register to vote and served to disenfranchise many blacks. Although political party factions in the future sometimes paid poll taxes to enable blacks to vote, African Americans lost their last positions on the city council in this election and were forced out of the police force. (They did not recover the ability to exercise the franchise until after the passage of civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s.) Historian L. B. Wrenn suggests the heightened political hostility of the Democratic contest and related social tensions contributed to a white mob lynching three black grocers in Memphis in 1892.[38]: 124, 131 

Journalist Ida B. Wells of Memphis investigated the lynchings, as one of the men killed was a friend of hers. She demonstrated that these and other lynchings were more often due to economic and social competition than any criminal offenses by black men. Her findings were considered so controversial and aroused so much anger that she was forced to move away from the city. But she continued to investigate and publish the abuses of lynching.[38]: 131 

Businessmen were eager to increase the city population after the losses of 1878–79, and supported the annexation of new areas; this measure was passed in 1890 before the census. The annexation measure was finally approved by the state legislature through a compromise achieved with real estate magnates, and the area annexed was slightly smaller than first proposed.[38]: 126 

In 1893 the city was rechartered with home rule, which restored its ability to enact taxes. The state legislature established a cap rate.[39] Although the commission government was retained and enlarged to five commissioners, Democratic politicians regained control from the business elite. The commission form of government was believed effective in getting things done, but because all positions were elected at-large, requiring them to gain majority votes, this practice reduced representation by candidates representing significant minority political interests.[38]: 126f 

20th century

 
Cotton merchants on Union Avenue (1937)

In terms of its economy, Memphis developed as the world's largest spot cotton market and the world's largest hardwood lumber market, both commodity products of the Mississippi Delta. Into the 1950s, it was also the world's largest mule market. These animals were still used extensively for agriculture.[40] Attracting workers from Southern rural areas as well as new European immigrants, from 1900 to 1950 the city increased nearly fourfold in population, from 102,350 to 396,000 residents.[41]

Racist violence continued into the 20th century, with four lynchings between 1900 and the lynching of Thomas Williams in 1928.[42]

The Ford Motor Company built cars in Memphis from 1913 until 1958/59.[43]

A Firestone Tire and Rubber Company plant made tires in North Memphis from 1936 to 1982. The plant made 100 million tires.[44]

A Tennessee Powder Company built an explosives powder plant to make TNT and gunpowder on a 6,000-acre site in Millington in 1940. The plant was built to make smokeless gunpowder for the British forces in World War II. In May 1941, DuPont (1802–2017) took over the plant, changed the name to the Chickasaw Ordnance Works, and made powder for the US Army. There were 8,000 employees. The plant was dismantled after the war in 1946.[45][46]

From the 1910s to the 1950s, Memphis was a place of machine politics under the direction of E. H. "Boss" Crump. He gained a state law in 1911 to establish a small commission to manage the city. The city retained a form of commission government until 1967 and patronage flourished under Crump. Per the publisher's summary of L.B. Wrenn's study of the period, "This centralization of political power in a small commission aided the efficient transaction of municipal business, but the public policies that resulted from it tended to benefit upper-class Memphians while neglecting the less affluent residents and neighborhoods."[38][page needed][47] The city installed a revolutionary sewer system and upgraded sanitation and drainage to prevent another epidemic. Pure water from an artesian well was discovered in the 1880s, securing the city's water supply. The commissioners developed an extensive network of parks and public works as part of the national City Beautiful movement, but did not encourage heavy industry, which might have provided substantial employment for the working-class population. The lack of representation in city government resulted in the poor and minorities being underrepresented. The majority controlled the election of all the at-large positions.[38][page needed]

Memphis did not become a home rule city until 1963, although the state legislature had amended the constitution in 1953 to provide home rule for cities and counties. Before that, the city had to get state bills approved in order to change its charter and other policies and programs. Since 1963, it can change the charter by popular approval of the electorate.[38]: 194 

During the 1960s, the city was at the center of the Civil Rights Movement, as its large African-American population had been affected by state segregation practices and disenfranchisement in the early 20th century. African-American residents drew from the civil rights movement to improve their lives. In 1968, the Memphis sanitation strike began for living wages and better working conditions; the workers were overwhelmingly African American. They marched to gain public awareness and support for their plight: the danger of their work, and the struggles to support families with their low pay. Their drive for better pay had been met with resistance by the city government.

Martin Luther King Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, known for his leadership in the non-violent movement, came to lend his support to the workers' cause. King stayed at the Lorraine Motel in the city, and was assassinated by James Earl Ray on April 4, 1968, the day after giving his I've Been to the Mountaintop speech at the Mason Temple.

After learning of King's murder, many African Americans in the city rioted, looting and destroying businesses and other facilities, some by arson. The governor ordered Tennessee National Guardsmen into the city within hours, where small, roving bands of rioters continued to be active.[48] Fearing the violence, more of the middle-class began to leave the city for the suburbs.

In 1970, the Census Bureau reported Memphis's population as 60.8% white and 38.9% black.[49] Suburbanization was attracting wealthier residents to newer housing outside the city. After the riots and court-ordered busing in 1973 to achieve desegregation of public schools, "about 40,000 of the system's 71,000 white students abandon[ed] the system in four years."[50] Today, the city has a majority African-American population.

Memphis is well known for its cultural contributions to the identity of the American South. Many renowned musicians grew up in and around Memphis and moved to Chicago and other areas from the Mississippi Delta, carrying their music with them to influence other cities and listeners over radio airwaves.[51][full citation needed]

Former and current Memphis residents include musicians Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Muddy Waters, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Robert Johnson, W. C. Handy, Bobby Whitlock, B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, Isaac Hayes, Booker T. Jones, Eric Gales, Al Green, Alex Chilton, Justin Timberlake, Three 6 Mafia, the Sylvers, Jay Reatard, Zach Myers, and Aretha Franklin.

The International Harvester Company manufacturing plant opened in 1947 and closed in 1985. The plant made cotton harvesting equipment and Farm Tillage equipment. It once had 1,000 employees.[52][53]

CBI Nuclear Company operated in Memphis for more than 20 years. Chicago Bridge & Iron Company, CBI, and General Electric built large nuclear reactor pressure vessels and other large structures in Memphis.[54][55][56]

On December 23, 1988, a tanker truck hauling liquefied propane crashed at the I-40/I-240 interchange in Midtown and exploded, starting multiple vehicle and structural fires. Nine people were killed and ten were injured. It was one of Tennessee's deadliest motor vehicle accidents and eventually led to the reconstruction of the interchange where it occurred.[57][58]

21st century

Schering-Plough Corporation became defunct in 2009. It is now a subsidiary of Merck & Co. Abe Plough founded Plough, Incorporated in Memphis in 1908. In 1971, the Schering Corporation merged with Plough, Inc.[a]

On June 2, 2021, the remains of Confederate General and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest were removed from a Memphis park.[59]

On January 7, 2023, after a routine traffic stop, five police officers brutally beat a 29-year-old African American man, Tyre Nichols. Nichols died from his injuries in the hospital three days later. Officer body cam footage and local surveillance cameras captured the altercations, which were described as "heinous" and showed "a total lack of regard for human life", according to Memphis police chief Cerelyn "CJ" Davis.[60] The officers were fired and charged with second-degree murder, aggravated kidnapping, and other crimes. The relatively rapid dismissal and prosecution of the offending officers were favorably perceived by Nichols's family, and Davis called it a "blueprint" for future incidents of police brutality nationwide. The incident also resulted in the disbanding of the city's "SCORPION" unit, which had been mandated with directly combating the most violent crimes in the city. All the officers charged with involvement in Nichols's death were members of the unit.[61]

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 324.0 square miles (839.2 km2), of which 315.1 square miles (816.0 km2) is land and 9.0 square miles (23.2 km2), or 2.76%, is water.[62]

Cityscape

 
The Downtown skyline from the lookout at the Pyramid facing southwest

Downtown Memphis rises from a bluff along the Mississippi River. The city and metro area spread out through suburbanization, and encompass southwest Tennessee, northern Mississippi, and eastern Arkansas. Several large parks were founded in the city in the early 20th century, notably Overton Park in Midtown and the 4,500-acre (18 km2) Shelby Farms. The city is a national transportation hub and Mississippi River crossing for Interstate 40, (east-west), Interstate 55 (north-south), barge traffic, Memphis International Airport (FedEx's "SuperHub" facility) and numerous freight railroads that serve the city.

Riverfront

 
The American Queen docked at Beale Street Landing along the riverfront

The Memphis Riverfront stretches along the Mississippi River from the Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park in the north, to the T. O. Fuller State Park in the south. The River Walk is a park system that connects downtown Memphis from Mississippi River Greenbelt Park in the north, to Tom Lee Park in the south.

De-annexation

In recent years the city has decided to de-annex some of its territory. It is going through a three-phase process to de-annex five areas within the city limits that will return to being part of unincorporated Shelby County.[63] The first phase of de-annexation occurred on January 1, 2020, when the Eads and River Bottoms areas of the city returned to county jurisdiction. As a result, the Shelby County Sheriff is responsible for patrolling these former parts of Memphis.[64] It is estimated that this first phase of the de-annexation process will reduce the city's size by 5% and its population by 0.03%.[63] The next two phases will have a much more significant impact.

Aquifer

Shelby County is located over four natural aquifers, one of which is recognized as the "Memphis Sand Aquifer" or simply as the "Memphis Aquifer". Located 350 to 1,100 feet (110 to 340 m) underground, this artesian water source is considered soft and estimated by Memphis Light, Gas and Water to contain more than 100 trillion US gallons (380 km3) of water.[65]

Climate

Memphis has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa, Trewartha Cf), with four distinct seasons, and is located in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 8a in downtown, cooling to 7b for much of the surrounding region.[66] Winter weather comes alternately from the upper Great Plains and the Gulf of Mexico, which can lead to drastic swings in temperature. Summer weather may come from Texas (very hot and humid) or the Gulf (hot and very humid). July has a daily average temperature of 82.8 °F (28.2 °C), with high levels of humidity due to moisture encroaching from the Gulf of Mexico. Afternoon and evening thunderstorms are frequent during summer, but usually brief, lasting no longer than an hour. Early autumn is pleasantly drier and mild, but can be hot until late October. Late autumn is rainy and cooler; precipitation peaks again in November and December. Winters are mild to chilly, with a January daily average temperature of 42.1 °F (5.6 °C). Snow occurs sporadically in winter, with an average seasonal snowfall of 2.7 inches (6.9 cm). Ice storms and freezing rain pose a greater danger, as they can often pull tree limbs down on power lines and make driving hazardous. Severe thunderstorms can occur at any time of the year though mainly during the spring months. Large hail, strong winds, flooding, and frequent lightning can accompany these storms. Some storms spawn tornadoes.

The lowest temperature ever recorded in Memphis was −13 °F (−25 °C) on December 24, 1963,[67][68] and the highest temperature ever was 108 °F (42 °C) on July 13, 1980.[69] Over the course of a year, there is an average of 4.4 days of highs below freezing, 6.9 nights of lows below 20 °F (−7 °C), 43 nights of lows below freezing, 64 days of highs above 90 °F (32 °C), and 2.1 days of highs above 100 °F (38 °C).

Memphis temperatures dropped to -4 F during the 1985 North American cold wave and during the December 1989 United States cold wave.

Annual precipitation is high (54.94 inches [1,400 mm]) and relatively evenly distributed throughout the year. Average monthly rainfall is especially high in March through May, and December, while August and September are relatively drier.

Climate data for Memphis (Memphis Int'l), 1991−2020 normals,[b] extremes 1872−present[c]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 79
(26)
81
(27)
87
(31)
94
(34)
99
(37)
104
(40)
108
(42)
107
(42)
103
(39)
98
(37)
86
(30)
81
(27)
108
(42)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 70.5
(21.4)
73.5
(23.1)
80.2
(26.8)
85.3
(29.6)
90.7
(32.6)
95.9
(35.5)
98.1
(36.7)
98.5
(36.9)
95.3
(35.2)
88.5
(31.4)
79.1
(26.2)
71.4
(21.9)
99.9
(37.7)
Average high °F (°C) 50.9
(10.5)
55.5
(13.1)
64.2
(17.9)
73.4
(23.0)
81.7
(27.6)
89.4
(31.9)
91.9
(33.3)
91.5
(33.1)
86.0
(30.0)
75.1
(23.9)
62.6
(17.0)
53.4
(11.9)
73.0
(22.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 42.1
(5.6)
46.1
(7.8)
54.2
(12.3)
63.2
(17.3)
72.1
(22.3)
79.9
(26.6)
82.8
(28.2)
82.1
(27.8)
76.0
(24.4)
64.6
(18.1)
52.7
(11.5)
44.8
(7.1)
63.4
(17.4)
Average low °F (°C) 32.6
(0.3)
36.3
(2.4)
44.1
(6.7)
52.9
(11.6)
62.2
(16.8)
70.3
(21.3)
73.8
(23.2)
72.7
(22.6)
65.2
(18.4)
53.8
(12.1)
43.7
(6.5)
35.1
(1.7)
53.6
(12.0)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 16.0
(−8.9)
20.8
(−6.2)
26.3
(−3.2)
37.3
(2.9)
48.4
(9.1)
60.4
(15.8)
67.0
(19.4)
64.8
(18.2)
52.4
(11.3)
38.0
(3.3)
27.3
(−2.6)
21.1
(−6.1)
13.6
(−10.2)
Record low °F (°C) −8
(−22)
−11
(−24)
12
(−11)
27
(−3)
36
(2)
48
(9)
52
(11)
48
(9)
36
(2)
25
(−4)
9
(−13)
−13
(−25)
−13
(−25)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 4.14
(105)
4.55
(116)
5.74
(146)
5.87
(149)
5.27
(134)
3.99
(101)
4.82
(122)
3.37
(86)
3.03
(77)
3.98
(101)
4.69
(119)
5.49
(139)
54.94
(1,395)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 0.9
(2.3)
1.0
(2.5)
0.5
(1.3)
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)
0.1
(0.25)
0.2
(0.51)
2.7
(6.9)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10.0 9.9 11.5 9.6 10.6 8.9 9.5 7.6 7.1 7.5 9.0 10.2 111.4
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 1.0 0.8 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.3 2.6
Average relative humidity (%) 68.2 66.4 63.2 62.5 66.4 66.8 69.1 69.6 71.3 66.2 67.7 68.8 67.2
Mean monthly sunshine hours 166.6 173.8 215.3 254.6 301.5 320.6 326.9 307.0 251.2 245.9 173.0 151.9 2,888.3
Percent possible sunshine 53 57 58 65 69 74 74 74 68 70 56 50 65
Source: NOAA (relative humidity 1961−1990, sun 1961−1987)[71][72][73][74][75]

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18508,841
186022,623155.9%
187040,22677.8%
188033,592−16.5%
189064,49592.0%
1900102,32058.6%
1910131,10528.1%
1920162,35123.8%
1930253,14355.9%
1940292,94215.7%
1950396,00035.2%
1960497,52425.6%
1970623,98825.4%
1980646,1743.6%
1990610,337−5.5%
2000650,1006.5%
2010646,889−0.5%
2020633,104−2.1%
U.S. Decennial Census[76]
2010–2020[6][2]
Racial composition 2020[77] 2010[78] 1990[49] 1970[49] 1950[49]
White 27.1% 29.4% 44.0% 60.8% 62.8%
 —Non-Hispanic 24.0% 27.5% 43.7% 60.5%[d] n/a
Black or African American 61.2% 63.3% 54.8% 38.9% 37.2%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 9.8% 6.5% 0.7% 0.4%[d] n/a
Asian 1.8% 1.6% 0.8% 0.2%

For historical population data, see: History of Memphis, Tennessee. According to the 2020 United States Census, the racial composition of the city of Memphis was:

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

As of the 2010 United States Census, there were 652,078 people and 245,836 households in the city.[79] The population density was 2,327.4 people per sq mi (898.6/km2). There were 271,552 housing units at an average density of 972.2 per square mile (375.4/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 63.33% African American, 29.39% White, 1.46% Asian American, 1.57% Native American, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 1.45% from other races, and 1.04% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 6.49% of the population.

The median income for a household in the city was $32,285, and the median income for a family was $37,767. Males had a median income of $31,236 versus $25,183 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,838. About 17.2% of families and 20.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 30.1% of those under age 18, and 15.4% of those age 65 or over. In 2011, the U.S. Census Bureau ranked the Memphis area as the poorest large metro area in the country.[80] Dr. Jeff Wallace of the University of Memphis noted that the problem was related to decades of segregation in government and schools. He said that it was a low-cost job market, but other places in the world could offer cheaper labor, and the workforce was undereducated for today's challenges.[80]

The Memphis Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), the 42nd largest in the United States, has a 2010 population of 1,316,100 and includes the Tennessee counties of Shelby, Tipton and Fayette; as well as the northern Mississippi counties of DeSoto, Marshall, Tate, and Tunica; and Crittenden County, Arkansas, all part of the Mississippi Delta.

The total metropolitan area has a higher proportion of whites and a higher per capita income than the population in the city. The 2010 census shows that the Memphis metro area is close to a majority-minority population:

the white population is 47.9 percent of the eight-county area's 1,316,100 residents. The non-Hispanic white population, a designation frequently used in census reports, was 46.2 percent of the total. The African American percentage was 45.7. For several decades, the Memphis metro area has had the highest percentage of black population among the nation's large metropolitan areas. The area has seemed on a path to become the nation's first metro area of one million or more with a majority black population.[81]

In a reverse trend of the Great Migration, numerous African Americans and other minorities have moved into DeSoto County, and blacks have followed suburban trends, moving into the suburbs of Shelby County.[81]

Religion

 
Asian-American tombstones in Elmwood Cemetery

An 1870 map of Memphis shows religious buildings of the Baptist, Catholic, Episcopal, Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregational, and other Christian denominations, and a Jewish congregation.[82] In 2009, places of worship exist for Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, and Muslims.

The international headquarters of the Church of God in Christ, the largest Pentecostal denomination in the United States, is located in Memphis. Its Mason Temple was named after the denomination's founder, Charles Harrison Mason. This auditorium is where Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his noted "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speech in April 1968, the night before he was assassinated at his motel. The National Civil Rights Museum, located in Memphis at the Lorraine Motel and other buildings, has an annual ceremony at Mason's Temple of Deliverance where it honors people with Freedom Awards.

Bellevue Baptist Church is a Southern Baptist megachurch in Memphis that was founded in 1903. Its current membership is around 30,000.[83] For many years, it was led by Adrian Rogers, a three-term president of the Southern Baptist Convention.

Other notable and/or large churches in Memphis include Second Presbyterian Church (EPC), Highpoint Church[84] (SBC), Hope Presbyterian Church (EPC), Evergreen Presbyterian Church (PCUSA), Colonial Park United Methodist Church, Christ United Methodist Church, Idlewild Presbyterian Church (PCUSA), GraceLife Pentecostal Church (UPCI), First Baptist Broad, Temple of Deliverance, Calvary Episcopal Church, the Church of the River (First Unitarian Church of Memphis), First Congregational Church (UCC) and Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church.

Memphis is home to two cathedrals. The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Memphis, and St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral is the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee.

Memphis is home to Temple Israel, a Reform synagogue that has approximately 7,000 members, making it one of the largest Reform synagogues in the country. Baron Hirsch Synagogue is the largest Orthodox shul in the United States.[85] Jewish residents were part of the city before the Civil War, but more Jewish immigrants came from Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Memphis is home to an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Muslims of various cultures and ethnicities.[86]

A number of seminaries are located in Memphis and the metropolitan area. Memphis is home to Memphis Theological Seminary and Harding School of Theology. Suburban Cordova is home to Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary.

Crime

 
A Memphis Police Department vehicle

In the 21st century, Memphis has struggled to reduce crime. In 2007, it ranked as the second-most dangerous city by the Morgan Quitno rankings.[87] In 2004, violent crime in Memphis reached a decade record low. The next year, it was ranked the fourth-most dangerous city with a population of 500,000 or higher in the U.S.[88] Crime increased again in the first half of 2006. By 2014, Memphis crime had substantially decreased, bringing the city's ranking up to eleventh in violent crime.[89] Nationally, cities follow similar trends, and crime numbers tend to be cyclical. Nationally, other moderate-sized cities were also suffering large rises in crime, although crime in the largest cities continued to decrease or increased much less.[90][91][better source needed]

In the first half of 2006, robbery of businesses increased 52.5%, robbery of individuals increased 28.5%, and homicides increased 18% over the same period of 2005. The Memphis Police Department responded with the initiation of Operation Blue C.R.U.S.H. (Crime Reduction Using Statistical History), which targets crime hotspots and repeat offenders.[92]

Memphis ended 2005 with 154 murders, and 2006 ended with 160; in 2007 there were 164 murders, 2008 had 138, and 2009 had 132. Violent crimes dropped from 12,939 in 2008 to 12,047. Robbery dropped from 4,788 in 2008 to 4,137 in 2009. Aggravated assault dropped 53,870 in 2008 to 47,158 in 2009 (FBI's UCR). In 2006 and 2007, the Memphis metropolitan area ranked second-most dangerous in the nation among cities with a population over 500,000. In 2006, the Memphis metropolitan area ranked number one in violent crimes for major cities around the U.S., according to the FBI's annual crime rankings, whereas it had ranked second in 2005.[93]

Between 2006 and 2008, the crime rate fell by 16%, while the first half of 2009 saw a reduction in serious crime of more than 10% from 2008. The Memphis Police Department's use of the FBI National Incident-Based Reporting System, a more detailed method of reporting crimes than what is used in many other major cities, has been cited as a reason for Memphis's frequent appearance on lists of most dangerous U.S. cities.[94] Homicide statistics released by the city in more recent years show another dramatic rise in murders in Memphis. There were 140 homicides in the city in 2014 and 161 in 2015.[95][96] In 2016, police officials recorded 228 murders, a 63% increase since 2014.[97] According to Michael Rallings, the director of the Memphis Police Department, investigations determined that one third of the murder victims in 2016 had been involved in gang activity.[97]

Economy

 
Memphis products treemap, 2020

The city's central geographic location has aided its business development. On the Mississippi River and intersected by five major freight railroads and two Interstate Highways, I-40 and I-55, Memphis is well positioned for commerce in the transportation and shipping industry. Its access by water was key to its initial development, with steamboats plying the Mississippi river. Railroad construction strengthened its connection to other markets to the east and west.

Since the second half of the 20th century, highways and interstates have played major roles as transportation corridors. A third interstate, I-69, is under construction, and a fourth, I-22, has recently been designated from the former High Priority Corridor X. River barges are unloaded onto trucks and trains. The city is home to Memphis International Airport, the world's busiest cargo airport, surpassing Hong Kong International Airport in 2021. Memphis serves as a primary hub for FedEx Express shipping.

As of 2014, Memphis was the home of three Fortune 500 companies: FedEx (no. 63), International Paper (no. 107), and AutoZone (no. 306).[98]

Other major corporations based in Memphis include Allenberg Cotton, American Residential Services (also known as ARS/Rescue Rooter); Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz; Cargill Cotton, City Gear, First Horizon National Corporation, Fred's, GTx, Lenny's Sub Shop, Mid-America Apartments, Perkins Restaurant and Bakery, ServiceMaster, True Temper Sports, Varsity Brands, and Verso Paper. Corporations with major operations based in Memphis include Gibson guitars (based in Nashville), and Smith & Nephew.

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis also has a branch in Memphis.

The entertainment and film industries have discovered Memphis in recent years. Several major motion pictures, most of which were recruited and assisted by the Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission,[99] have been filmed in Memphis, including Making the Grade (1984), Elvis and Me (1988), Great Balls of Fire! (1988), Heart of Dixie (1989), Mystery Train (1989), The Silence of the Lambs (1991), Trespass (1992), The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag (1992), The Firm (1993), The Delta (1996), The People Vs. Larry Flynt (1996), The Rainmaker (1997), Cast Away (2000), 21 Grams (2002), A Painted House (2002), Hustle & Flow (2005), Forty Shades of Blue (2005), Walk the Line (2005), Black Snake Moan (2007), Nothing But the Truth (2008), Soul Men (2008), and The Grace Card (2011). The Blind Side (2009) was set in Memphis but filmed in Atlanta. The 1992 television movie Memphis, starring Memphis native Cybill Shepherd, who also served as executive producer and writer, was also filmed in Memphis.

Arts and culture

Cultural events

One of the largest celebrations of the city is Memphis in May. The month-long series of events promotes Memphis's heritage and outreach of its people far beyond the city's borders. The four main events are the Beale Street Music Festival, International Week, The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, and the Great River Run. The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest is the largest pork barbecue-cooking contest in the world.

In April, downtown Memphis celebrates "Africa in April Cultural Awareness Festival", or simply Africa in April. The festival was designed to celebrate the arts, history, culture, and diversity of the African diaspora. Africa in April is a three-day festival with vendors' markets, fashion showcases, blues showcases, and an international diversity parade.[100]

During late May-early June, Memphis is home to the Memphis Italian Festival at Marquette Park. The 2019 festival will be its 30th and has hosted musical acts, local artisans, and Italian cooking competitions. It also presents chef demonstrations, the Coors Light Competitive Bocce Tournament, the Galtelli Cup Recreational Bocce Tournament, a volleyball tournament, and pizza tossing demonstrations. This festival was started by Holy Rosary School and Parish and began inside the School parking lot in 1989. The Memphis Italian Festival is run almost completely by former and current Holy Rosary School and Church members and begins with a 5K run each year.

Carnival Memphis, formerly known as the Memphis Cotton Carnival, is an annual series of parties and festivities in June that salutes various aspects of Memphis and its industries. An annual King and Queen of Carnival are secretly selected to reign over Carnival activities. From 1935 to 1982, the African-American community staged the Cotton Makers Jubilee; it has merged with Carnival Memphis.[101]

A market and arts festival, the Cooper-Young Festival,[102] is held annually in September in the Cooper-Young district of Midtown Memphis. The event draws artists from all over North America and includes local music, art sales, contests, and displays.

Memphis sponsors several film festivals: the Indie Memphis Film Festival, Outflix, and the Memphis International Film and Music Festival. The Indie Memphis Film Festival is in its 14th year and was held April 27–28, 2013.[103] Recognized by MovieMaker Magazine as one of 25 "Coolest Film Festivals" (2009) and one of 25 "Festivals Worth the Entry Fee" (2011), Indie Memphis offers Memphis year-round independent film programming, including the Global Lens international film series, IM Student Shorts student films, and an outdoor concert film series at the historic Levitt Shell. The Outflix Film Festival, also in its 15th year, was held September 7–13, 2013. Outflix features a full week of LGBT cinema, including short films, features, and documentaries. The Memphis International Film and Music Festival is held in April; it is in its 11th year and takes place at Malco's Ridgeway Four.

Mid-South Pride is Tennessee's second-largest LGBT pride event.[104][105]

On the weekend before Thanksgiving, the Memphis International Jazz Festival is held in the South Main Historic Arts District in Downtown Memphis. This festival promotes the important role Memphis has played in shaping Jazz nationally and internationally. Acts such as George Coleman, Herman Green, Kirk Whalum and Marvin Stamm all come out of the rich musical heritage in Memphis.

Formerly titled the W. C. Handy Awards, the International Blues Awards are presented by the Blues Foundation (headquartered in Memphis) for Blues music achievement. Weeklong playing competitions are held, as well as an awards banquet including a night of performance and celebration.

Music

Memphis is the home of founders and pioneers of various American music genres, including Memphis soul, Memphis blues, gospel, rock n' roll, rockabilly, Memphis rap, Buck, crunk, and "sharecropper" country music (in contrast to the "rhinestone" country sound historically associated with Nashville).

Many musicians, including Aretha Franklin, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison, Booker T. & the M.G.'s, Otis Redding, Isaac Hayes, Shawn Lane, Al Green, Bobby Whitlock, Rance Allen, Percy Sledge, Solomon Burke, William Bell, Sam & Dave and B.B. King, got their start in Memphis in the 1950s and 1960s.

Beale Street is a national historical landmark, and shows the impact Memphis has had on American blues, particularly after World War II as electric guitars took precedence over the original acoustic sound from the Mississippi Delta. Sam Phillips's Sun Studio still stands, and is open for tours. Elvis, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison all made their first recordings there, and were "discovered" by Phillips. Many great blues artists recorded there, such as W. C. Handy, the "Father of the Blues."

Stax Records created a classic 1960s soul music sound, much grittier and horn-based than the better-known Motown from Detroit. Booker T. and the M.G.s were the label's backing band for most of the classic hits that came from Stax, by Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, and many more. The sound was revisited in the 1980s in the Blues Brothers movie, in which many of the musicians starred as themselves.

Memphis is also noted for its influence on the power pop musical genre in the 1970s. Notable bands and musicians include Big Star, Chris Bell, Alex Chilton, Tommy Hoehn, The Scruffs, and Prix.[106][107]

Several notable singers are from the Memphis area, including Justin Timberlake, K. Michelle, Kirk Whalum, Ruth Welting, Kid Memphis, Kallen Esperian, Julien Baker, and Andrew VanWyngarden. The Metropolitan Opera of New York had its first tour in Memphis in 1906; in the 1990s it decided to tour only larger cities. Metropolitan Opera performances are now broadcast in HD at local movie theaters across the country.

Cuisine

Visual art

In addition to the Brooks Museum and Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis plays host to two burgeoning visual art areas, one city-sanctioned, and the other organically formed.

The South Main Arts District is an arts neighborhood in south downtown. Over the past 20 years, the area has morphed from a derelict brothel and juke joint neighborhood to a gentrified, well-lit area sponsoring "Trolley Night", when arts patrons stroll down the street to see fire spinners, DJs playing in front of clubs, specialty shops and galleries.[108][109] Not far from South Main Arts district is Medicine Factory, an artist-run organization.[110]

Another developing arts district in Memphis is Broad Avenue. This east–west avenue is undergoing neighborhood revitalization from the influx of craft and visual artists taking up residence and studios in the area.[111][112] An art professor from Rhodes College holds small openings on the first floor of his home for local students and professional artists. Odessa, another art space on Broad Avenue, hosts student art shows and local electronic music. Other gallery spaces spring up for semi-annual artwalks.[113][114]

Memphis also has non-commercial visual arts organizations and spaces, including local painter Pinkney Herbert's Marshall Arts gallery, on Marshall Avenue near Sun Studios, another arts neighborhood characterized by affordable rent.[115]

Literature

Well-known writers from Memphis include Shelby Foote, the noted Civil War historian. Novelist John Grisham grew up in nearby DeSoto County, Mississippi, and sets many of his books in Memphis.

Many works of fiction and literature are set in Memphis. These include The Reivers by William Faulkner (1962), September, September by Shelby Foote (1977); Peter Taylor's The Old Forest and Other Stories (1985), and his Pulitzer Prize-winning A Summons to Memphis (1986); The Firm (1991) and The Client (1993), both by John Grisham; Memphis Afternoons: a Memoir by James Conaway (1993), Plague of Dreamers by Steve Stern (1997); Cassina Gambrel Was Missing by William Watkins (1999); The Guardian by Beecher Smith (1999), "We are Billion-Year-Old Carbon" by Corey Mesler (2005), The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris, and The Architect by James Williamson (2007).

Tourism

Points of interest

Other Memphis attractions include the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, FedExForum, and Mississippi riverboat day cruises.

Museums and art collections

 
National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis (2012)
 
Mud Island Mississippi River Park
 
Stax Museum and Satellite Record Shop

Cemeteries

The Memphis National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in northeastern Memphis.

Historic Elmwood Cemetery is one of the oldest rural garden cemeteries in the South, and contains the Carlisle S. Page Arboretum. Memorial Park Cemetery is noted for its sculptures by Mexican artist Dionicio Rodriguez.

Elvis Presley was originally buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, the resting place of his backing band's bassist, Bill Black. After an attempted grave robbing, Elvis's body was moved and reinterred at the grounds of Graceland.

Sports

 
FedExForum during a Grizzlies game
Current professional and major college teams
Sports Franchise League Sport Founded Stadium (capacity)
Memphis Grizzlies NBA Basketball 2001 FedExForum (18,100)
Memphis Redbirds MiLB Baseball 1998 AutoZone Park (10,000)
Memphis Hustle NBA G League Basketball 2017 Landers Center (8,400)
Memphis 901 FC USLC Soccer 2018 AutoZone Park (10,000)
Memphis Showboats USFL Football 2022 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium (58,318)
Memphis Tigers NCAA D1 Football 1920 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium (58,318)
Memphis Tigers NCAA D1 Basketball 1920 FedExForum (18,100)
CBU Buccaneers NCAA D2 Baseball 1966 Nadicksbernd Field (800)

The Memphis Grizzlies of the National Basketball Association is the only team from one of the "big four" major sports leagues in Memphis.[122] The Memphis Redbirds of the Triple-A East are a Minor League Baseball affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals.[123]Memphis 901 FC is a professional soccer team that plays in the USL Championship division and plays their home matches at AutoZone Park


The University of Memphis college basketball team, the Memphis Tigers, has a strong following in the city due to a history of competitive success. The Tigers have competed in three NCAA Final Fours (1973, 1985, 2008), with the latter two appearances being vacated. The current coach of the Memphis Tigers is Penny Hardaway. Memphis is home to Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, the site of University of Memphis football, the Liberty Bowl and the Southern Heritage Classic.

The annual St. Jude Classic, a regular part of the PGA Tour, is also held in the city. Each February the city hosts the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships and the Cellular South Cup, which are men's ATP World Tour 500 series and WTA events, respectively.

Memphis has a significant history in pro wrestling. Jerry "The King" Lawler and Jimmy "The Mouth of the South" Hart are among the sport's most well-known figures who came out of the city. Sputnik Monroe, a wrestler of the 1950s, like Lawler, promoted racial integration in the city. Ric Flair also noted Memphis as his birthplace.

In the 1970s and early 1980s, the former WFL franchise Memphis Southmen / Memphis Grizzlies sued the NFL in an attempt to be accepted as an expansion franchise. In 1993, the Memphis Hound Dogs was a proposed NFL expansion that was passed over in favor of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers. The Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium also served as the temporary home of the former Tennessee Oilers (now the Titans) while the city of Nashville worked out stadium issues.

The city is also the site of Memphis International Raceway, which held NASCAR events from 1998 to 2009, when Dover Motorsports closed it. In 2011 it reopened under different ownership. It no longer holds NASCAR races, but the Arca Menards Series returned to the track in 2020.

Parks and recreation

Major Memphis parks include W.C. Handy Park, Tom Lee Park, Audubon Park, Overton Park including the Old Forest Arboretum,[124] the Lichterman Nature Center (a nature learning center), the Memphis Botanic Garden,[125] and Jesse H Turner Park.

Shelby Farms park, located at the eastern edge of the city, is one of the largest urban parks in the United States.

Law and government

Beginning in 1963, Memphis adopted a mayor-council form of government, with 13 City Council members, six elected at-large from throughout the city and seven elected from geographic districts. Following passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, civil rights activists challenged the at-large electoral system in court because it made it more difficult for the minority to elect candidates of their choice; at-large voting favored candidates who could command a majority across the city. In 1995, the city adopted a new plan. The 13 Council positions are elected from nine geographic districts: seven are single-member districts and two elect three members each.

Jim Strickland, a Democrat, is the city's mayor, elected on October 8, 2015. He is a former Memphis city councilman.

Since the late 20th century, regional discussions have recurred on the concept of consolidating unincorporated Shelby County and Memphis into a metropolitan government, as Nashville-Davidson County did in 1963. Consolidation was a referendum item on the 2010 ballots in both the city of Memphis and Shelby County, under the state law for dual-voting on such measures. The referendum was controversial in both jurisdictions. Black leaders, including then-Shelby County Commissioner Joe Ford and national civil rights leader Al Sharpton, opposed the consolidation. According to the plaintiffs' expert, Marcus Pohlmann, these leaders "tried to turn that referendum into a civil rights issue, suggesting that for blacks to vote for consolidation was to give up hard-won civil rights victories of the past".[126]

In October 2010 before the vote, eight Shelby County citizens had filed a lawsuit in federal court against the state and the Shelby County Elections Commission against the dual-voting requirement. Plaintiffs argued that total votes for the referendum should have been counted together, rather than as separate elections. City voters narrowly supported the measure for consolidation with 50.8% in favor; county voters overwhelmingly voted against the measure with 85% against.[127] The state argued that with the election decided, the lawsuit should be dismissed, but the federal court disagreed.[126]

By late 2013, in pre-trial actions, both sides were trying to disqualify the other's experts, in discussions of whether regional voting revealed racial polarization, and whether voting on the referendum demonstrated racial bloc voting. "The experts for both sides have clashed on whether racial bloc voting is inevitable in local elections and whether that would require some kind of court remedy."[126]

The defendants' expert, Todd Donovan, did not think that polarized voting as revealed for political candidates meant that "African-American voters and white voters have polarized interests when it comes to referendum choices on government administration, taxation, service provision and other policy questions."[126] He noted, "In the absence of distinct political interests that create polarized blocs of referendum voters defined by race, there is no cohesive racial minority voting interest that can be diluted by a referendum."[126]

In 2014, the federal district court dismissed the lawsuit, on the grounds that the referendum would have failed when both jurisdictions' votes were counted together. (In total voting, 64% of voters opposed the consolidation.) In the last week of December 2014, the U.S. Sixth District Court of Appeals upheld that decision, ruling that, ""In this election, the referendum for consolidation did not pass and would not have passed even if there had been no dual-majority vote requirement (with the vote counts combined)."[127]

Before the referendum, the decision was made by the city and county to exclude public school management and operations from the proposed consolidation. As noted below, in 2011 the Memphis city council voted to dissolve its city school board and consolidate with the Shelby County School System, without the collaboration or agreement of Shelby County.[128] The city had authority for this action under Tennessee state laws that differentiate between city and county powers.

Education

 
Early nursing class in Memphis

The city is served by Shelby County Schools. On March 8, 2011, residents voted to dissolve the charter for Memphis City Schools, effectively merging it with the Shelby County School District.[129] After issues with state law and court challenges, the merger took effect the start of the 2013–14 school year. In Shelby County, six incorporated cities voted to establish separate school systems in 2013.

The Shelby County School System operates more than 200 elementary, middle, and high schools.

The Memphis area is also home to many private, college-prep schools: Briarcrest Christian School (co-ed), Christian Brothers High School (boys), Evangelical Christian School (co-ed), First Assembly Christian School (co-ed), St. Mary's Episcopal School (girls), Hutchison School (girls), Lausanne Collegiate School (co-ed), Memphis University School (boys), Saint Benedict at Auburndale (co-ed), St. Agnes Academy (girls), Immaculate Conception Cathedral School (girls), and Elliston Baptist Academy (co-ed). Also included in this list is Memphis Harding Academy, a co-ed school affiliated with the Churches of Christ.

Colleges and universities in the city include the University of Memphis, Rhodes College, Christian Brothers University, Memphis College of Art, LeMoyne–Owen College, Baptist College of Health Sciences, Memphis Theological Seminary, Harding School of Theology, Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University, Worldwide (Memphis campus),[130] Reformed Theological Seminary (satellite campus), William R. Moore College of Technology, Southern College of Optometry, Southwest Tennessee Community College, Tennessee Technology Center at Memphis, Visible Music College, Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary, and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center. Memphis also has campuses of several for-profit post-secondary institutions, including Concorde Career College, ITT Technical Institute, Vatterott College,[131] and University of Phoenix. Remington College[132] is a local nonprofit post-secondary institution.

The University of Tennessee College of Dentistry was founded in 1878, making it the oldest dental college in the South, and the third oldest public college of dentistry in the United States.[133]

The Christian Brothers High School Band is the oldest high school band in the U.S., founded in 1872.[134]

Media

Newspapers

Title Locale Year est. Frequency Publisher/parent company
The Commercial Appeal[135] Memphis[136] 1840[137] Daily Gannett Company[138]
Memphis Daily News Memphis 1886 Weekly or bi-weekly
Memphis Flyer 1989 Weekly Contemporary Media, Inc.
Memphis Tri-State Defender 1951[139] Best Media Properties, Inc.

Television

Nielsen Media Research currently defines Memphis and its surrounding metropolitan area as the 51st largest American media market.[140] Despite Memphis proper's large size, Memphis has always been a medium-sized market; the nearby suburban and rural areas are not much larger than the city itself.

Major broadcast television affiliate stations in the Memphis area include, but are not limited to:

Channel Call sign Network Owner Subchannels
3 WREG CBS Nexstar Newschannel 3 Anytime on 3.2, Antenna TV on 3.3
5 WMC NBC Gray Television Bounce TV on 5.2, Circle on 5.3, Grit on 5.4, WMC Plus on 5.5
10 WKNO PBS Mid South Public Communications Foundation WKNO-2 on 10.2, PBS Kids on 10.3
13 WHBQ Fox Imagicomm Communications Heroes & Icons on 13.2, ION Mystery on 13.3
23 WTWV Independent Religious Christian Worldview Broadcasting Corporation
24 WATN ABC Tegna Inc. Laff on 24.2, Cozi TV on 24.3
30 WLMT The CW MeTV on 30.2, Start TV on 30.3
34 WWTW TCT Tri-State Christian Television
40 WBUY TBN Trinity Broadcasting Network Hillsong Channel on 40.2, Smile on 40.3, Enlace on 40.4, Positiv on 40.5
50 WPXX ION Inyo Broadcast Holdings Court TV Mystery on 50.2, Court TV on 50.3, Defy TV on 50.4, TrueReal on 50.5, HSN on 50.6

Radio

Terrestrial broadcast radio stations in the Memphis area include, but are not limited to:

FM stations

Call sign Frequency City of License[141] Owner Slogan Format[142]
WQOX 088.5 FM Memphis Shelby County Schools (Grades K-12) 88.5 the Voice of SCS Urban adult contemporary
WYPL 089.3 FM Memphis Public Library & Information Center Memphis Public Library Reading Radio Radio reading service
WEVL 089.9 FM Southern Communication Volunteers, Inc. Volunteer, Member Supported Radio Freeform
WKNO 091.1 FM Mid-South Public Communications Foundation WKNO NPR For the Mid South Public radio/Classical
WYXR 091.7 FM Crosstown Radio Partnership, Inc. Freeform
WMFS 092.9 FM Bartlett Audacy, Inc. ESPN Radio Sports
WLFP 094.1 FM Germantown The Wolf Country
WHAL 095.7 FM Hornlake, Mississippi iHeartMedia, Inc. Hallelujah Urban gospel
WHRK 097.1 FM Memphis K97.1 Hip hop
WXMX 098.1 FM Millington Cumulus Media The Max Rock
WKIM 098.9 FM Munford The Bridge Adult contemporary
WMC 099.7 FM Memphis Audacy, Inc. FM 100 Hot adult contemporary
KJMS 0101.1 FM Olive Branch, Mississippi iHeartMedia, Inc. V101 Urban adult contemporary
KWNW 0 101.9 FM Crawfordsville, Arkansas Kiss-FM Top 40
WEGR 0 102.7 FM Arlington Rock 102.7 Classic rock
WRBO 0 103.5 FM Como, Mississippi Cumulus Media 103.5 WBRO Urban adult contemporary
WRVR 0104.5 FM Memphis Audacy, Inc. The River Adult contemporary
WGKX 0105.9 FM Cumulus Media KIX 106 Country
KXHT 0107.1 FM Marion, Arkansas Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Hot Hip Hop
WHBQ 0107.5 FM Germantown 107.5 WHBQ Classic Hits

AM stations

Call sign Frequency City of License[143] Owner Format[142]
WHBQ 00560 AM Memphis Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Sports
WREC 0600 AM iHeartMedia Talk radio
WCRV 0640 AM Bott Radio Network Christian radio
WMFS 0680 AM Audacy, Inc. Sports
KQPN 0730 AM West Memphis, Arkansas F.W. Robbert Broadcasting
WMC 0790 AM Memphis Audacy, Inc.
WUMY 0830 AM GMF-Christian Media I, LLC. Spanish Christian
KWAM 0990 AM Starnes Media Group Talk
WGSF 01030 AM Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Regional Mexican
WDIA 01070 AM iHeartMedia Urban oldies
WGUE 01180 AM Turrell, Arkansas Butron Media Corporation Regional Mexican
WMPS 01210 AM Bartlett Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Adult Standards
WMSO 01240 AM Southaven, Mississippi Urban oldies
WLOK 01340 AM Memphis WLOK Radio Inc Urban gospel
WLRM 01380 AM Millington F.W. Robbert Broadcasting Blues
WOWW 01430 AM Germantown Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Classic hits
WBBP 01480 AM Memphis Bountiful Blessings Urban gospel
WMQM 01600 AM Lakeland F. W. Robbert Broadcasting Christian

Cultural references

Music

Memphis is the subject of numerous pop and country songs, including "The Memphis Blues" by W. C. Handy, "Memphis, Tennessee" by Chuck Berry, "Night Train to Memphis" by Roy Acuff, "Goin' to Memphis" by Paul Revere and the Raiders, "Queen of Memphis" by Confederate Railroad, "Memphis Soul Stew" by King Curtis, "Maybe It Was Memphis" by Pam Tillis, "Graceland" by Paul Simon, "Memphis Train" by Rufus Thomas, "All the Way from Memphis" by Mott the Hoople, "Wrong Side of Memphis" by Trisha Yearwood, "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" by Bob Dylan, "Memphis Skyline" by Rufus Wainwright, "Sequestered in Memphis" by The Hold Steady and "Walking in Memphis" by Marc Cohn.

In addition, Memphis is mentioned in scores of other songs, including "Proud Mary" by Creedence Clearwater Revival, "Honky Tonk Women" by the Rolling Stones, "Dixie Chicken" by Little Feat, "Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes" by George Jones, "Daisy Jane" by America, "Life Is a Highway" by Tom Cochrane, "Black Velvet" by Alannah Myles, "Cities" by Talking Heads, "Crazed Country Rebel" by Hank Williams III, "Pride (In the Name of Love)" by U2, "M.E.M.P.H.I.S." by the Disco Biscuits, "New New Minglewood Blues" and "Candyman" by the Grateful Dead, "You Should Be Glad" by Widespread Panic, "Roll With Me" by 8Ball & MJG, "Someday" by Steve Earle and popularly recorded by Shawn Colvin, and many others.

More than 1,000 commercial recordings of over 800 distinct songs contain "Memphis" in them. The Memphis Rock N' Soul Museum maintains an ever updated list of these on their website.[144]

Film and television

Many films are set in the American city including, Black Snake Moan, The Blind Side, Cast Away, Choices: The Movie, The Client, Elvis, The Firm, Forty Shades of Blue, Great Balls of Fire!, Hustle & Flow, Kill Switch, Making the Grade, Memphis Belle, Mississippi Grind, Mystery Train, N-Secure, The Rainmaker, The Silence of the Lambs, Soul Men, and Walk the Line.

Many of those and other films have also been filmed in Memphis including, Black Snake Moan, Walk the Line, Hustle & Flow, Forty Shades of Blue, 21 Grams, A Painted House, American Saint, The Poor and Hungry, Cast Away, Woman's Story, The Big Muddy, The Rainmaker, Finding Graceland, The People vs. Larry Flynt, The Delta, Teenage Tupelo, A Family Thing, Without Air, The Firm, The Client, The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag, Trespass, The Silence of the Lambs, Great Balls of Fire!, Elvis and Me, Mystery Train, Leningrad Cowboys Go America, Heart of Dixie, The Contemporary Gladiator, U2: Rattle and Hum, Making the Grade, The River Rat, The River, Hallelujah!, Elizabethtown, 3000 Miles to Graceland, A Face in the Crowd, Undefeated, Man on the Moon, Nothing But the Truth, Sore Losers, Soul Men, I Was a Zombie for the F.B.I., I'm From Hollywood, The Grace Card, This is Elvis, Cookie's Fortune, Open Five, The Open Road, In the Valley of Elah, Walk Hard, My Blueberry Nights, Savage Country, and Two-Lane Blacktop.[145]

The television series Greenleaf, Memphis Beat, Quarry and Bluff City Law are set in the city.

Literature

Many works of fiction and literature are set in Memphis. These include The Reivers by William Faulkner (1962), September, September by Shelby Foote (1977); Peter Taylor's The Old Forest and Other Stories (1985), and his Pulitzer Prize-winning A Summons to Memphis (1986); The Firm (1991) and The Client (1993), both by John Grisham; Memphis Afternoons: a Memoir by James Conaway (1993), Plague of Dreamers by Steve Stern (1997); Cassina Gambrel Was Missing by William Watkins (1999); The Guardian by Beecher Smith (1999), "We are Billion-Year-Old Carbon" by Corey Mesler (2005), The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris, and The Architect by James Williamson (2007).

Infrastructure

Transportation

Highways

Interstate 40, Interstate 55, Interstate 22, Interstate 240, Interstate 269, and State Route 385 are the main expressways in the Memphis area. Interstates 40 and 55 cross the Mississippi River at Memphis from the state of Arkansas.[146] Interstate 69 is a proposed interstate that, upon completion, would connect Memphis to Canada and Mexico.[147]

I-40 is a coast-to-coast freeway that connects Memphis to Nashville and on to North Carolina to the east, and Little Rock, Arkansas, Oklahoma City, and the Greater Los Angeles Area to the west. I-55 connects Memphis to St. Louis and Chicago to the north, and Jackson, Mississippi and New Orleans to the south. I-240 is the inner beltway which serves areas including Downtown, Midtown, South Memphis, Memphis International Airport, East Memphis, and North Memphis.[146] I-269 is the larger, outer interstate loop immediately serving the suburbs of Millington, Eads, Arlington, Collierville, and Hernando, Mississippi. It was completed in 2018.[148]

Interstate 22 connects Memphis with Birmingham, Alabama, via northern Mississippi (including Tupelo) and northwestern Alabama. While technically not entering the city of Memphis proper, I-22 ends at I-269 in Byhalia, Mississippi, connecting it to the rest of the Memphis interstate system.

Interstate 69 is proposed to follow I-55 and I-240 through the city of Memphis. Once completed, I-69 will link Memphis with Port Huron, Michigan via Indianapolis, Indiana, and Brownsville, Texas via Shreveport, Louisiana and Houston, Texas.[147]

A new spur, Interstate 555, also serves the Memphis metro area connecting it to Jonesboro, Arkansas.

Other important federal highways though Memphis include the east–west U.S. Route 70, U.S. Route 64, and U.S. Route 72; and the north–south U.S. Route 51 and U.S. Route 61.[146] The former is the historic highway north to Chicago via Cairo, Illinois, while the latter roughly parallels the Mississippi River for most of its course and crosses the Mississippi Delta region to the south, with the Delta also legendary for Blues music.

Roadways

Memphis maintains 6,800 lane-miles of city roadways. The city collaborated with Google Cloud Platform and SpringML in February 2019 to test machine learning (ML) to improve public services. A key focus is pothole identification using TensorFlow technology.[149] Public Works personnel completed 63,000 repairs, with around 7,500 of those reported by citizens to 311.[150]

Railroads

 
Three bridges over the Mississippi

A large volume of railroad freight moves through Memphis, because of its two heavy-duty Mississippi River railroad crossings, which carry several major east–west railroad freight lines, and also because of the major north–south railroad lines through Memphis which connect with such major cities as Chicago, St. Louis, Indianapolis, Louisville, New Orleans, Dallas, Houston, Mobile, and Birmingham.

By the early 20th century, Memphis had two major passenger railroad stations, which made the city a regional hub for trains coming from the north, east, south and west. After passenger railroad service declined heavily through the middle of the 20th century, the Memphis Union Station was demolished in 1969. The Memphis Central Station[151] was eventually renovated, and it still serves the city. The only inter-city passenger railroad service to Memphis is the daily City of New Orleans train, operated by Amtrak, which has one train northbound and one train southbound each day between Chicago and New Orleans.

Railroads, common freight carriers
Railroads, passenger carriers

Amtrak (AMTK)

Airports

 
FedEx aircraft at Memphis International Airport

Memphis International Airport is the global "SuperHub" of FedEx Express, and has the largest cargo operations by volume of any airport worldwide, surpassing Hong Kong International Airport in 2021.[152][153]

Memphis International ranks as the 41st busiest passenger airport in the US and served as a hub for Northwest Airlines (later Delta Air Lines) until September 3, 2013.[154] and had 4.39 million boarding passengers (enplanements) in 2011, an 11.9% decrease over the previous year.[155] Delta has reduced its flights at Memphis by approximately 65% since its 2008 merger with Northwest Airlines and operates an average of 30 daily flights as of December 2013, with two international destinations (Cancún – seasonally; Toronto year-round). Delta Air Lines announced the closing of its Memphis pilot and crew base in 2012. Other airlines providing passenger service are: Southwest Airlines; American Airlines; United Airlines; Allegiant; Frontier; Air Canada; and Southern Vacations Express.[156]

There are also general aviation airports in the Memphis Metropolitan Area, including the Millington Regional Jetport, located at the former Naval Air Station in Millington, Tennessee.

River port

Memphis has the second-busiest cargo port on the Mississippi River, which is also the fourth-busiest inland port in the United States.[157] The International Port of Memphis covers both the Tennessee and Arkansas sides of the Mississippi River from river mile 725 (km 1167) to mile 740 (km 1191).[158] A focal point of the river port is the industrial park on President's Island, just south of Downtown Memphis.

Bridges

Four railroad and highway bridges cross the Mississippi River at Memphis. In order of their opening years, these are the Frisco Bridge (1892, single-track rail), the Harahan Bridge (1916, a road-rail bridge until 1949, currently carries double-track rail), the Memphis-Arkansas Memorial Bridge (Highway, 1949; later incorporated into Interstate 55), and the Hernando de Soto Bridge (Interstate 40, 1973). A bicycle/pedestrian walkway opened along the Harahan Bridge in late 2016, utilizing the former westbound roadway.[159][160][161]

Utilities

Memphis's primary utility provider is the Memphis Light, Gas and Water Division (MLGW). This is the largest three-service municipal utility in the United States, providing electricity, natural gas, and pure water service to all residents of Shelby County. Prior to that, Memphis was served by two primary electric companies, which were merged into the Memphis Power Company.[162]

The City of Memphis bought the private company in 1939 to form MLGW,[162][163] which was an early customer of electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). In 1954 the Dixon-Yates contract was proposed to make more power available to the city from the TVA, but the contract was cancelled; it had been an issue for the Democrats in the 1954 Congressional elections.

MLGW still buys most of its power from TVA, and the company pumps its own fresh water from the Memphis Aquifer, using more than 180 water wells.

Health care

The Memphis and Shelby County region supports numerous hospitals, including the Methodist and Baptist Memorial health systems, two of the nation's largest private hospitals. Until the 1960s and the end of segregation, most hospitals only served white patients. One of the few hospitals for African Americans in Memphis in those times was Collins Chapel Connectional Hospital, whose historic building now houses a homeless shelter.[164]

Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare, the largest healthcare provider in the Memphis region and the fourth largest employer as of 2018,[165] operates seven hospitals and several rural clinics. Methodist Healthcare operates, among others, the Le Bonheur Children's Hospital, which offers primary level 1 pediatric trauma care, as well as a nationally recognized pediatric brain tumor program. Methodist Healthcare also operates Methodist University Hospital, a 617-bed facility 1 mile southeast of Le Bonheur.

Baptist Memorial Healthcare operates fifteen hospitals (three in Memphis), including Baptist Memorial Hospital, and with a merger in 2018 became the largest healthcare system in the mid-South.[166] According to Health Care Market Guide's annual studies, Mid-Southerners have named Baptist Memorial their "preferred hospital choice for quality".

The St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, leading pediatric treatment and research facility focused on children's catastrophic diseases, resides in Memphis. The institution was conceived and built by entertainer Danny Thomas in 1962 as a tribute to St. Jude Thaddeus, patron saint of impossible, hopeless, and difficult causes.

Memphis is also home to Regional One Healthcare,[167] which is locally referred to as "The Med". In recent years, the hospital has experienced severe funding difficulties that nearly led to a reduction or elimination of emergency room services. In July 2010, The Med received approximately $40.6 million in federal and local funding to keep the Elvis Presley Trauma Center operational.

Memphis is home to Delta Medical Center of Memphis,[168] which is the only employee-owned medical facility in North America.

Individual health insurance marketplace insurers are limited, with Bright Health and Cigna offering coverage in the area.[169]

Notable people

Twin towns – sister cities

Memphis has three sister cities, as per Sister Cities International:[170]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Copied content from Schering-Plough; see that page's history for attribution.
  2. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  3. ^ Official records for Memphis were kept at downtown from January 1872 to December 1939 and at Memphis Int'l since January 1940.[70]
  4. ^ a b From 15% sample

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Further reading

  • Biles, Roger. Memphis: In the Great Depression (U of Tennessee Press, 1986).
  • Dowdy, G. Wayne (2010). Crusades for Freedom: Memphis and the Political Transformation of the American South. Jackson, Mississippi, USA: University Press of Mississippi.
  • Haynes, Stephen R. (2012). The Last Segregated Hour: The Memphis Kneel-Ins and the Campaign for Southern Church Desegregation. New York, USA: Oxford University Press.
  • McPherson, Larry E. & Wilson, Charles Reagan (2002) Memphis.
  • Rushing, Wanda (2009). Memphis and the Paradox of Place: Globalization in the American South. Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA: University of North Carolina Press, 2009.
  • Rushing, Wanda (2009). "Memphis: Cotton Fields, Cargo Planes, & Biotechnology", inSouthern Spaces (online, August 28), see Memphis: Cotton Fields, Cargo Planes, and Biotechnology – Southern Spaces, accessed December 2, 2015.
  • Rushing, Wanda (June 2017). "No place for a feminist: intersectionality and the Problem South: SWS Presidential Address". Gender & Society. 31 (3): 293–309. doi:10.1177/0891243217701083. S2CID 2643962.
  • Thomas, Wendi C. (March 30, 2018). "How Memphis Gave Up on Dr. King's Dream". The New York Times.
  • Williams, Charles (2013). African American Life and Culture in Orange Mound: Case Study of a Black Community in Memphis, Tennessee, 1890–1980. Lanham, Maryland, USA: Rowman & Littlefield/Lexington Books.
  • Weeks, Charles A. (2010). "Paths—River and Other—from Nogales to San Fernando de las Barrancas [Chapter 9]". in Paths to a Middle Ground: The Diplomacy of Natchez, Boukfouka, Nogales, and San Fernando de Las Barrancas, 1791–1795. Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA: University of Alabama Press. pp. 126–145. ISBN 978-0-8173-5645-3. Retrieved December 2, 2015.

External links

  • Official website
  • Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau
  • Memphis Chamber of Commerce

memphis, tennessee, other, uses, memphis, memphis, city, state, tennessee, seat, shelby, county, southwest, part, state, situated, along, mississippi, river, with, population, 2020, census, memphis, second, most, populous, city, tennessee, after, nashville, me. For other uses see Memphis Memphis is a city in the U S state of Tennessee It is the seat of Shelby County in the southwest part of the state it is situated along the Mississippi River With a population of 633 104 at the 2020 U S census 6 Memphis is the second most populous city in Tennessee after Nashville MemphisCityFrom top to bottom and left to right Downtown Memphis skyline Beale Street University of Memphis Graceland and Memphis PyramidFlagSealNickname s Bluff City Home of the Blues Grind CityInteractive map of MemphisCoordinates 35 07 03 N 89 58 16 W 35 11750 N 89 97111 W 35 11750 89 97111 Coordinates 35 07 03 N 89 58 16 W 35 11750 N 89 97111 W 35 11750 89 97111CountryUnited StatesStateTennesseeCountyShelbyFoundedMay 22 1819 1819 05 22 IncorporatedDecember 19 1826 1826 12 19 Named forMemphis EgyptGovernment MayorJim Strickland D Area 1 City302 55 sq mi 783 60 km2 Land294 92 sq mi 763 83 km2 Water7 63 sq mi 19 77 km2 Elevation337 ft 103 m Population 2020 2 City633 104 Rank28th in the United States2nd in Tennessee Density2 146 71 sq mi 828 85 km2 Urban1 056 190 US 45th Urban density2 149 9 sq mi 830 1 km2 Metro 3 1 337 779 US 43rd DemonymMemphianTime zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT ZIP CodesZIP Codes 4 37501 37544 38002 38016 38018 38028 38088 38101 38103 38109 38111 38120 38122 38124 38128 38130 38139 38141 38145 38147 38148 38150 38152 38157 38159 38161 38163 38166 38168 38173 38175 38177 38181 38182 38184 38186 38188 38190 38193 38194 38197Area code901FIPS code47 48000 5 WebsiteCity of MemphisMemphis is the fifth most populous city in the Southeast the nation s 28th largest overall as well as the largest city bordering the Mississippi River and third largest Metropolitan statistical area behind Saint Louis MO and the Twin Cities on the Mississippi River 7 The Memphis metropolitan area includes West Tennessee and the greater Mid South region which includes portions of neighboring Arkansas Mississippi and the Missouri Bootheel One of the more historic and culturally significant cities of the Southern United States Memphis has a wide variety of landscapes and distinct neighborhoods The first European explorer to visit the area of present day Memphis was Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto in 1541 The high Chickasaw Bluffs protecting the location from the waters of the Mississippi was contested by Spanish French and English colonizers as Memphis developed By 1819 when modern Memphis was founded it was part of the United States territory John Overton James Winchester and Andrew Jackson founded the city 8 Based on the wealth of cotton plantations and river traffic along the Mississippi Memphis grew into one of the largest cities of the Antebellum South After the American Civil War and the end of slavery the city continued to grow into the 20th century It became among the largest world markets for cotton and lumber 9 Home to Tennessee s largest African American population Memphis played a prominent role in the American Civil Rights Movement Leader Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated there in 1968 after activities supporting a strike by the city s maintenance workers The National Civil Rights Museum was established there and is a Smithsonian affiliate institution Since the civil rights era Memphis has become one of the nation s leading commercial centers in transportation and logistics 10 The largest employer is FedEx which maintains its global air hub at Memphis International Airport In 2021 Memphis was the world s second busiest cargo airport The International Port of Memphis also hosts the fifth busiest inland water port in the U S 11 The Globalization and World Cities Research Network considers Memphis a Sufficiency level global city as of 2020 12 Memphis is a center for media and entertainment notably a historic music scene 13 With blues clubs on Beale Street originating the unique Memphis blues sound the city has been nicknamed the Home of the Blues Its music has continued to be shaped by a multicultural mix of influences country rock and roll soul and hip hop The city is home to a major professional sports team the Grizzlies of the NBA Other attractions include Graceland the Memphis Pyramid Sun Studio the Blues Hall of Fame and Stax Museum of American Soul Music Memphis style barbecue has achieved international prominence and the city hosts the annual World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest which attracts more than 100 000 visitors each year Higher level educational institutions include the University of Memphis and Rhodes College Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 19th century 1 3 Postwar years Reconstruction and Democratic control 1 4 Yellow Jack 1 5 Late 19th century 1 6 20th century 1 7 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 Cityscape 2 2 Riverfront 2 3 De annexation 2 4 Aquifer 2 5 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Religion 3 2 Crime 4 Economy 5 Arts and culture 5 1 Cultural events 5 2 Music 5 3 Cuisine 5 4 Visual art 5 5 Literature 5 6 Tourism 5 6 1 Points of interest 5 6 2 Museums and art collections 5 6 3 Cemeteries 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 8 Law and government 9 Education 10 Media 10 1 Newspapers 10 2 Television 10 3 Radio 10 4 FM stations 10 5 AM stations 10 6 Cultural references 10 6 1 Music 10 6 2 Film and television 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Transportation 11 1 1 Highways 11 1 2 Railroads 11 1 2 1 Railroads common freight carriers 11 1 2 2 Railroads passenger carriers 11 1 3 Airports 11 1 4 River port 11 1 5 Bridges 11 2 Utilities 11 3 Health care 12 Notable people 13 Twin towns sister cities 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Memphis Tennessee For a chronological guide see Timeline of Memphis Tennessee Early history Edit Occupying a substantial bluff rising from the Mississippi River the site of Memphis has been a natural location for human settlement by varying indigenous cultures over thousands of years 14 In the first millennium A D people of the Mississippian culture were prominent the culture influenced a network of communities throughout the Mississippi River Valley and its tributaries The hierarchical societies built complexes with large earthwork ceremonial and burial mounds as expressions of their sophisticated culture 15 The Chickasaw people believed to be their descendants later inhabited this site and a large territory in the Southeast 16 French explorers led by Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle 17 and Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto 18 19 encountered the historic Chickasaw in this area in the 16th century J D L Holmes writing in Hudson s Four Centuries of Southern Indians 2007 notes that this site was a third strategic point in the late 18th century through which European powers could control United States encroachment beyond the Appalachians and their interference with Indian matters after Fort Nogales present day Vicksburg and Fort Confederacion present day Epes Alabama Chickasaw Bluffs located on the Mississippi River at the present day location of Memphis Spain and the United States vied for control of this site which was a favorite of the Chickasaws 20 71 In 1795 the Spanish Governor General of Louisiana Francisco Luis Hector de Carondelet sent his lieutenant governor Manuel Gayoso de Lemos to negotiate and secure consent from the local Chickasaw so that a Spanish fort could be erected on the bluff Fort San Fernando De Las Barrancas was the result 20 71 21 Holmes notes that consent was reached despite opposition from disappointed Americans and a pro American faction of the Chickasaws when the pro Spanish faction signed the Chickasaw Bluffs Cession and Spain provided the Chickasaws with a trading post 20 71 Fort San Fernando de las Barrancas remained a focal point of Spanish activity until as Holmes summarizes T he Treaty of San Lorenzo or Pinckney s Treaty of 1795 implemented in March 1797 had as its result that all of the careful diplomatic work by Spanish officials in Louisiana and West Florida which has succeeded for a decade in controlling the Indians e g the Choctaws was undone The United States gained the right to navigate the Mississippi River and won control over the Yazoo Strip north of the thirty first parallel 20 75 71 The Spanish dismantled the fort shipping its lumber and iron to their locations in Arkansas 22 In 1796 the site became the westernmost point of the newly admitted state of Tennessee in what was then called the Southwest United States The area was still largely occupied and controlled by the Chickasaw nation Captain Isaac Guion led an American force down the Ohio River to claim the land arriving on July 20 1797 By this time the Spanish had departed 23 The fort s ruins went unnoticed 20 years later when Memphis was laid out as a city after the United States government paid the Chickasaw for land 24 19th century Edit Memphis in the mid 1850s At the beginning of the century as recognized by the United States in 1786 Treaty of Hopewell the land still belonged to the Chickasaw Nation In the Treaty of Tuscaloosa signed on October 1818 and ratified by Congress on January 7 1819 the Chickasaw ceded their territory in Western Tennessee to the United States The city of Memphis was founded less than five months after the U S takeover of the territory on May 22 1819 incorporated December 19 1826 by John Overton James Winchester and Andrew Jackson 25 26 They named it after the ancient capital of Egypt on the Nile River 27 The city had a high proportion of African Americans some of whom were free people of color and others enslaved in service to whites predominately white Protestants of British ethnicity Many African Americans worked along the river and even more on the outlying cotton plantations of the Delta The city s demographics changed dramatically in the 1850s and 1860s under waves of immigration and domestic migration Due to increased immigration since the 1840s and the Great Famine ethnic Irish made up 9 9 of the population in 1850 but 23 2 by 1860 when the total population was 22 623 28 29 30 Attack on Irving Block by General Forrest in 1864 Tennessee seceded from the Union in June 1861 and Memphis briefly became a Confederate stronghold Union ironclad gunboats captured it in the naval Battle of Memphis on June 6 1862 and the city and state were occupied by the Union Army for the duration of the war Union Army commanders allowed the city to maintain its civil government during most of this period but excluded Confederate veterans from office This shifted political dynamics in the city as the war went on 31 The war years contributed to additional dramatic changes in the city population The Union Army s presence attracted many fugitive slaves who had escaped from surrounding rural plantations So many sought protection behind Union lines that the Army set up contraband camps to accommodate them Memphis s black population increased from 3 000 in 1860 when the total population was 22 623 to nearly 20 000 in 1865 with most settling south of the city limits 32 Postwar years Reconstruction and Democratic control Edit The rapid demographic changes added to the stress of war and occupation and uncertainty about who was in charge increasing tensions between the city s ethnic Irish policemen and black Union soldiers after the war 31 In three days of rioting in early May 1866 the Memphis Riots erupted in which white mobs made up of policemen firemen and other mostly ethnic Irish Americans attacked and killed 46 blacks wounding 75 and injuring 100 raped several women and destroyed nearly 100 houses while severely damaging churches and schools in South Memphis Much of the black settlement was left in ruins Two whites were killed in the riot 32 Many blacks permanently fled Memphis afterward especially as the Freedmen s Bureau continued to have difficulty in protecting them Their population fell to about 15 000 by 1870 31 37 4 of the total population of 40 226 Historic aerial view of Memphis 1870 Historian Barrington Walker suggests that the Irish rioted against blacks because of their relatively recent arrival as immigrants and the uncertain nature of their own claim to whiteness they were trying to distinguish themselves from blacks in the underclass The main fighting participants were ethnic Irish decommissioned black Union soldiers and newly emancipated African American freedmen Walker suggests that most of the mob was not in direct economic conflict with the blacks as by then the Irish had attained better jobs but were establishing social and political dominance over the freedmen 30 In Memphis unlike disturbances in some other cities ex Confederate veterans were generally not part of the attacks against blacks The outrages of the riots in Memphis and a similar one in New Orleans Louisiana in September the latter did include Confederate veterans resulted in Congress s passing the Reconstruction Act and the Fourteenth Amendment to the U S Constitution 32 Yellow Jack Edit In the 1870s a series of yellow fever epidemics devastated Memphis with the disease carried by river passengers traveling by ships along the waterways During the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1878 more than 5 000 people were listed in the official register of deaths between July 26 and November 27 The vast majority died of yellow fever making the epidemic in the city of 40 000 one of the most traumatic and severe in urban U S history Within four days of the Memphis Board of Health s declaration of a yellow fever outbreak 20 000 residents fled the city The ensuing panic left the poverty stricken the working classes and the African American community at the most risk from the epidemic Those who remained relied on volunteers from religious and physician organizations to tend to the sick By the end of the year more than 5 000 were confirmed dead in Memphis The New Orleans health board listed not less than 4 600 dead The Mississippi Valley recorded 120 000 cases of yellow fever with 20 000 deaths The 15 million in losses caused by the epidemic bankrupted Memphis and as a result its charter was revoked by the state legislature Woodcut representing the waterfront of Memphis c 1879 By 1870 Memphis s population of 40 000 was almost double that of Nashville and Atlanta and it was the second largest city in the South after New Orleans 33 Its population continued to grow after 1870 even when the Panic of 1873 hit the US hard particularly in the South The Panic of 1873 resulted in expanding Memphis s underclasses amid the poverty and hardship it wrought giving further credence to Memphis as a rough shiftless city Leading up to the outbreak in 1878 it had suffered two yellow fever epidemics cholera and malaria giving it a reputation as sickly and filthy It was unheard of for a city with a population as large as Memphis s not to have any waterworks the city still relied for supplies entirely on collecting water from the river and rain cisterns and had no way to remove sewage 33 The combination of a swelling population especially of lower and working classes and abysmal health and sanitary conditions made Memphis ripe for a serious epidemic Kate Bionda an owner of an Italian snack house died of a fever on August 13 1878 33 Hers was officially reported by the Board of Health on August 14 as the first case of yellow fever in the city 33 A massive panic ensued The same trains and steamboats that had brought thousands into Memphis in five days carried away more than 25 000 refugees more than half of the city s population 33 On August 23 the Board of Health finally declared a yellow fever epidemic in Memphis and the city collapsed hemorrhaging its population In July of that year the city had a population of 47 000 by September 19 000 remained and 17 000 of them had yellow fever 33 The only people left in the city were the lower classes such as German and Irish immigrant workers and African Americans None had the means to flee the city as did the middle and upper class whites of Memphis and thus they were subjected to a city of death Immediately following the Board of Health s declaration a Citizen s Relief Committee was formed by Charles G Fisher It organized the city into refugee camps The committee s main priority was to separate the poor from the city and isolate them in refugee camps 33 The Howard Association formed specifically for yellow fever epidemics in New Orleans and Memphis organized nurses and doctors in Memphis and throughout the country 34 They stayed at the Peabody Hotel the only hotel to keep its doors open during the epidemic From there they were assigned to their respective districts Physicians of the epidemic reported seeing as many as 100 to 150 patients daily 33 The Catholic sisters of St Mary s Hospital played an important role during the epidemic in caring for the lower classes Already supporting a girls school and church orphanage the sisters of St Mary s also sought to provide care for the Canfield Asylum a home for black children Each day they alternated caring for the orphans at St Mary s delivering children to the Canfield Asylum and taking soup and medicine on house calls to patients 33 Between September 9 and October 4 Sister Constance and three other nuns fell victim to the epidemic and died They later became known as the Martyrs of Memphis 35 At long last on October 28 a killing frost struck The city sent out word to Memphians scattered all over the country to come home Though yellow fever cases were recorded in the pages of Elmwood Cemetery s burial record as late as February 29 1874 the epidemic seemed quieted 33 The Board of Health declared the epidemic at an end after it had caused over 20 000 deaths and financial losses of nearly 200 million 36 On November 27 a general citizen s meeting was called at the Greenlaw Opera House to offer thanks to those who had stayed behind to serve of whom many had died Over the next year property tax revenues collapsed and the city could not make payments on its municipal debts As a result Memphis temporarily lost its city charter and was reclassified by the state legislature as a Taxing District from 1878 to 1893 34 But a new era of sanitation was developed in the city a new municipal government in 1879 helped form the first regional health organization and during the 1880s Memphis led the nation in sanitary reform and improvements 36 Perhaps the most significant effect of yellow fever on Memphis was in demographic changes Nearly all of Memphis s upper and middle classes vanished depriving the city of its general leadership and class structure that dictated everyday life similar to that in other large Southern cities such as New Orleans Charleston South Carolina and Atlanta Georgia In Memphis the poorer whites and blacks fundamentally made up the city and played the greatest role in rebuilding it The epidemic had resulted in Memphis being a less cosmopolitan place with an economy that served the cotton trade and a population drawn increasingly from poor white and black Southerners 37 Late 19th century Edit The 1890 election was strongly contested resulting in white opponents of the D P Hadden faction working to deprive them of votes by disenfranchising blacks The state had enacted several laws including the requirement of poll taxes that made it more difficult for them to register to vote and served to disenfranchise many blacks Although political party factions in the future sometimes paid poll taxes to enable blacks to vote African Americans lost their last positions on the city council in this election and were forced out of the police force They did not recover the ability to exercise the franchise until after the passage of civil rights legislation in the mid 1960s Historian L B Wrenn suggests the heightened political hostility of the Democratic contest and related social tensions contributed to a white mob lynching three black grocers in Memphis in 1892 38 124 131 Journalist Ida B Wells of Memphis investigated the lynchings as one of the men killed was a friend of hers She demonstrated that these and other lynchings were more often due to economic and social competition than any criminal offenses by black men Her findings were considered so controversial and aroused so much anger that she was forced to move away from the city But she continued to investigate and publish the abuses of lynching 38 131 Businessmen were eager to increase the city population after the losses of 1878 79 and supported the annexation of new areas this measure was passed in 1890 before the census The annexation measure was finally approved by the state legislature through a compromise achieved with real estate magnates and the area annexed was slightly smaller than first proposed 38 126 In 1893 the city was rechartered with home rule which restored its ability to enact taxes The state legislature established a cap rate 39 Although the commission government was retained and enlarged to five commissioners Democratic politicians regained control from the business elite The commission form of government was believed effective in getting things done but because all positions were elected at large requiring them to gain majority votes this practice reduced representation by candidates representing significant minority political interests 38 126f 20th century Edit Cotton merchants on Union Avenue 1937 In terms of its economy Memphis developed as the world s largest spot cotton market and the world s largest hardwood lumber market both commodity products of the Mississippi Delta Into the 1950s it was also the world s largest mule market These animals were still used extensively for agriculture 40 Attracting workers from Southern rural areas as well as new European immigrants from 1900 to 1950 the city increased nearly fourfold in population from 102 350 to 396 000 residents 41 Racist violence continued into the 20th century with four lynchings between 1900 and the lynching of Thomas Williams in 1928 42 The Ford Motor Company built cars in Memphis from 1913 until 1958 59 43 A Firestone Tire and Rubber Company plant made tires in North Memphis from 1936 to 1982 The plant made 100 million tires 44 A Tennessee Powder Company built an explosives powder plant to make TNT and gunpowder on a 6 000 acre site in Millington in 1940 The plant was built to make smokeless gunpowder for the British forces in World War II In May 1941 DuPont 1802 2017 took over the plant changed the name to the Chickasaw Ordnance Works and made powder for the US Army There were 8 000 employees The plant was dismantled after the war in 1946 45 46 From the 1910s to the 1950s Memphis was a place of machine politics under the direction of E H Boss Crump He gained a state law in 1911 to establish a small commission to manage the city The city retained a form of commission government until 1967 and patronage flourished under Crump Per the publisher s summary of L B Wrenn s study of the period This centralization of political power in a small commission aided the efficient transaction of municipal business but the public policies that resulted from it tended to benefit upper class Memphians while neglecting the less affluent residents and neighborhoods 38 page needed 47 The city installed a revolutionary sewer system and upgraded sanitation and drainage to prevent another epidemic Pure water from an artesian well was discovered in the 1880s securing the city s water supply The commissioners developed an extensive network of parks and public works as part of the national City Beautiful movement but did not encourage heavy industry which might have provided substantial employment for the working class population The lack of representation in city government resulted in the poor and minorities being underrepresented The majority controlled the election of all the at large positions 38 page needed Memphis did not become a home rule city until 1963 although the state legislature had amended the constitution in 1953 to provide home rule for cities and counties Before that the city had to get state bills approved in order to change its charter and other policies and programs Since 1963 it can change the charter by popular approval of the electorate 38 194 During the 1960s the city was at the center of the Civil Rights Movement as its large African American population had been affected by state segregation practices and disenfranchisement in the early 20th century African American residents drew from the civil rights movement to improve their lives In 1968 the Memphis sanitation strike began for living wages and better working conditions the workers were overwhelmingly African American They marched to gain public awareness and support for their plight the danger of their work and the struggles to support families with their low pay Their drive for better pay had been met with resistance by the city government Martin Luther King Jr of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference known for his leadership in the non violent movement came to lend his support to the workers cause King stayed at the Lorraine Motel in the city and was assassinated by James Earl Ray on April 4 1968 the day after giving his I ve Been to the Mountaintop speech at the Mason Temple After learning of King s murder many African Americans in the city rioted looting and destroying businesses and other facilities some by arson The governor ordered Tennessee National Guardsmen into the city within hours where small roving bands of rioters continued to be active 48 Fearing the violence more of the middle class began to leave the city for the suburbs In 1970 the Census Bureau reported Memphis s population as 60 8 white and 38 9 black 49 Suburbanization was attracting wealthier residents to newer housing outside the city After the riots and court ordered busing in 1973 to achieve desegregation of public schools about 40 000 of the system s 71 000 white students abandon ed the system in four years 50 Today the city has a majority African American population Memphis is well known for its cultural contributions to the identity of the American South Many renowned musicians grew up in and around Memphis and moved to Chicago and other areas from the Mississippi Delta carrying their music with them to influence other cities and listeners over radio airwaves 51 full citation needed Former and current Memphis residents include musicians Elvis Presley Jerry Lee Lewis Muddy Waters Carl Perkins Johnny Cash Robert Johnson W C Handy Bobby Whitlock B B King Howlin Wolf Isaac Hayes Booker T Jones Eric Gales Al Green Alex Chilton Justin Timberlake Three 6 Mafia the Sylvers Jay Reatard Zach Myers and Aretha Franklin The International Harvester Company manufacturing plant opened in 1947 and closed in 1985 The plant made cotton harvesting equipment and Farm Tillage equipment It once had 1 000 employees 52 53 CBI Nuclear Company operated in Memphis for more than 20 years Chicago Bridge amp Iron Company CBI and General Electric built large nuclear reactor pressure vessels and other large structures in Memphis 54 55 56 On December 23 1988 a tanker truck hauling liquefied propane crashed at the I 40 I 240 interchange in Midtown and exploded starting multiple vehicle and structural fires Nine people were killed and ten were injured It was one of Tennessee s deadliest motor vehicle accidents and eventually led to the reconstruction of the interchange where it occurred 57 58 21st century Edit Schering Plough Corporation became defunct in 2009 It is now a subsidiary of Merck amp Co Abe Plough founded Plough Incorporated in Memphis in 1908 In 1971 the Schering Corporation merged with Plough Inc a On June 2 2021 the remains of Confederate General and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest were removed from a Memphis park 59 On January 7 2023 after a routine traffic stop five police officers brutally beat a 29 year old African American man Tyre Nichols Nichols died from his injuries in the hospital three days later Officer body cam footage and local surveillance cameras captured the altercations which were described as heinous and showed a total lack of regard for human life according to Memphis police chief Cerelyn CJ Davis 60 The officers were fired and charged with second degree murder aggravated kidnapping and other crimes The relatively rapid dismissal and prosecution of the offending officers were favorably perceived by Nichols s family and Davis called it a blueprint for future incidents of police brutality nationwide The incident also resulted in the disbanding of the city s SCORPION unit which had been mandated with directly combating the most violent crimes in the city All the officers charged with involvement in Nichols s death were members of the unit 61 Geography EditMain article Geography of Memphis Tennessee See also List of neighborhoods in Memphis Tennessee According to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 324 0 square miles 839 2 km2 of which 315 1 square miles 816 0 km2 is land and 9 0 square miles 23 2 km2 or 2 76 is water 62 Cityscape Edit The Downtown skyline from the lookout at the Pyramid facing southwest Downtown from the Harahan Bridge Downtown Memphis rises from a bluff along the Mississippi River The city and metro area spread out through suburbanization and encompass southwest Tennessee northern Mississippi and eastern Arkansas Several large parks were founded in the city in the early 20th century notably Overton Park in Midtown and the 4 500 acre 18 km2 Shelby Farms The city is a national transportation hub and Mississippi River crossing for Interstate 40 east west Interstate 55 north south barge traffic Memphis International Airport FedEx s SuperHub facility and numerous freight railroads that serve the city Riverfront Edit The American Queen docked at Beale Street Landing along the riverfront The Memphis Riverfront stretches along the Mississippi River from the Meeman Shelby Forest State Park in the north to the T O Fuller State Park in the south The River Walk is a park system that connects downtown Memphis from Mississippi River Greenbelt Park in the north to Tom Lee Park in the south De annexation Edit In recent years the city has decided to de annex some of its territory It is going through a three phase process to de annex five areas within the city limits that will return to being part of unincorporated Shelby County 63 The first phase of de annexation occurred on January 1 2020 when the Eads and River Bottoms areas of the city returned to county jurisdiction As a result the Shelby County Sheriff is responsible for patrolling these former parts of Memphis 64 It is estimated that this first phase of the de annexation process will reduce the city s size by 5 and its population by 0 03 63 The next two phases will have a much more significant impact Aquifer Edit Shelby County is located over four natural aquifers one of which is recognized as the Memphis Sand Aquifer or simply as the Memphis Aquifer Located 350 to 1 100 feet 110 to 340 m underground this artesian water source is considered soft and estimated by Memphis Light Gas and Water to contain more than 100 trillion US gallons 380 km3 of water 65 Climate Edit Memphis has a humid subtropical climate Koppen Cfa Trewartha Cf with four distinct seasons and is located in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 8a in downtown cooling to 7b for much of the surrounding region 66 Winter weather comes alternately from the upper Great Plains and the Gulf of Mexico which can lead to drastic swings in temperature Summer weather may come from Texas very hot and humid or the Gulf hot and very humid July has a daily average temperature of 82 8 F 28 2 C with high levels of humidity due to moisture encroaching from the Gulf of Mexico Afternoon and evening thunderstorms are frequent during summer but usually brief lasting no longer than an hour Early autumn is pleasantly drier and mild but can be hot until late October Late autumn is rainy and cooler precipitation peaks again in November and December Winters are mild to chilly with a January daily average temperature of 42 1 F 5 6 C Snow occurs sporadically in winter with an average seasonal snowfall of 2 7 inches 6 9 cm Ice storms and freezing rain pose a greater danger as they can often pull tree limbs down on power lines and make driving hazardous Severe thunderstorms can occur at any time of the year though mainly during the spring months Large hail strong winds flooding and frequent lightning can accompany these storms Some storms spawn tornadoes The lowest temperature ever recorded in Memphis was 13 F 25 C on December 24 1963 67 68 and the highest temperature ever was 108 F 42 C on July 13 1980 69 Over the course of a year there is an average of 4 4 days of highs below freezing 6 9 nights of lows below 20 F 7 C 43 nights of lows below freezing 64 days of highs above 90 F 32 C and 2 1 days of highs above 100 F 38 C Memphis temperatures dropped to 4 F during the 1985 North American cold wave and during the December 1989 United States cold wave Annual precipitation is high 54 94 inches 1 400 mm and relatively evenly distributed throughout the year Average monthly rainfall is especially high in March through May and December while August and September are relatively drier Climate data for Memphis Memphis Int l 1991 2020 normals b extremes 1872 present c Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 79 26 81 27 87 31 94 34 99 37 104 40 108 42 107 42 103 39 98 37 86 30 81 27 108 42 Mean maximum F C 70 5 21 4 73 5 23 1 80 2 26 8 85 3 29 6 90 7 32 6 95 9 35 5 98 1 36 7 98 5 36 9 95 3 35 2 88 5 31 4 79 1 26 2 71 4 21 9 99 9 37 7 Average high F C 50 9 10 5 55 5 13 1 64 2 17 9 73 4 23 0 81 7 27 6 89 4 31 9 91 9 33 3 91 5 33 1 86 0 30 0 75 1 23 9 62 6 17 0 53 4 11 9 73 0 22 8 Daily mean F C 42 1 5 6 46 1 7 8 54 2 12 3 63 2 17 3 72 1 22 3 79 9 26 6 82 8 28 2 82 1 27 8 76 0 24 4 64 6 18 1 52 7 11 5 44 8 7 1 63 4 17 4 Average low F C 32 6 0 3 36 3 2 4 44 1 6 7 52 9 11 6 62 2 16 8 70 3 21 3 73 8 23 2 72 7 22 6 65 2 18 4 53 8 12 1 43 7 6 5 35 1 1 7 53 6 12 0 Mean minimum F C 16 0 8 9 20 8 6 2 26 3 3 2 37 3 2 9 48 4 9 1 60 4 15 8 67 0 19 4 64 8 18 2 52 4 11 3 38 0 3 3 27 3 2 6 21 1 6 1 13 6 10 2 Record low F C 8 22 11 24 12 11 27 3 36 2 48 9 52 11 48 9 36 2 25 4 9 13 13 25 13 25 Average precipitation inches mm 4 14 105 4 55 116 5 74 146 5 87 149 5 27 134 3 99 101 4 82 122 3 37 86 3 03 77 3 98 101 4 69 119 5 49 139 54 94 1 395 Average snowfall inches cm 0 9 2 3 1 0 2 5 0 5 1 3 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 1 0 25 0 2 0 51 2 7 6 9 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 0 9 9 11 5 9 6 10 6 8 9 9 5 7 6 7 1 7 5 9 0 10 2 111 4Average snowy days 0 1 in 1 0 0 8 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 2 6Average relative humidity 68 2 66 4 63 2 62 5 66 4 66 8 69 1 69 6 71 3 66 2 67 7 68 8 67 2Mean monthly sunshine hours 166 6 173 8 215 3 254 6 301 5 320 6 326 9 307 0 251 2 245 9 173 0 151 9 2 888 3Percent possible sunshine 53 57 58 65 69 74 74 74 68 70 56 50 65Source NOAA relative humidity 1961 1990 sun 1961 1987 71 72 73 74 75 Demographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 18508 841 186022 623155 9 187040 22677 8 188033 592 16 5 189064 49592 0 1900102 32058 6 1910131 10528 1 1920162 35123 8 1930253 14355 9 1940292 94215 7 1950396 00035 2 1960497 52425 6 1970623 98825 4 1980646 1743 6 1990610 337 5 5 2000650 1006 5 2010646 889 0 5 2020633 104 2 1 U S Decennial Census 76 2010 2020 6 2 Racial composition 2020 77 2010 78 1990 49 1970 49 1950 49 White 27 1 29 4 44 0 60 8 62 8 Non Hispanic 24 0 27 5 43 7 60 5 d n aBlack or African American 61 2 63 3 54 8 38 9 37 2 Hispanic or Latino of any race 9 8 6 5 0 7 0 4 d n aAsian 1 8 1 6 0 8 0 2 For historical population data see History of Memphis Tennessee According to the 2020 United States Census the racial composition of the city of Memphis was Black or African American non Hispanic 387 964 61 28 White non Hispanic 151 581 23 94 Hispanic or Latino of any race 62 167 9 82 Asian 11 503 1 82 Native American 1 007 0 16 Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 141 0 02 Some other race 2 425 0 38 Two or more races 16 316 2 58 Map of racial distribution in Memphis 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other As of the 2010 United States Census update there were 652 078 people and 245 836 households in the city 79 The population density was 2 327 4 people per sq mi 898 6 km2 There were 271 552 housing units at an average density of 972 2 per square mile 375 4 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 63 33 African American 29 39 White 1 46 Asian American 1 57 Native American 0 04 Pacific Islander 1 45 from other races and 1 04 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 6 49 of the population The median income for a household in the city was 32 285 and the median income for a family was 37 767 Males had a median income of 31 236 versus 25 183 for females The per capita income for the city was 17 838 About 17 2 of families and 20 6 of the population were below the poverty line including 30 1 of those under age 18 and 15 4 of those age 65 or over In 2011 the U S Census Bureau ranked the Memphis area as the poorest large metro area in the country 80 Dr Jeff Wallace of the University of Memphis noted that the problem was related to decades of segregation in government and schools He said that it was a low cost job market but other places in the world could offer cheaper labor and the workforce was undereducated for today s challenges 80 The Memphis Metropolitan Statistical Area MSA the 42nd largest in the United States has a 2010 population of 1 316 100 and includes the Tennessee counties of Shelby Tipton and Fayette as well as the northern Mississippi counties of DeSoto Marshall Tate and Tunica and Crittenden County Arkansas all part of the Mississippi Delta The total metropolitan area has a higher proportion of whites and a higher per capita income than the population in the city The 2010 census shows that the Memphis metro area is close to a majority minority population the white population is 47 9 percent of the eight county area s 1 316 100 residents The non Hispanic white population a designation frequently used in census reports was 46 2 percent of the total The African American percentage was 45 7 For several decades the Memphis metro area has had the highest percentage of black population among the nation s large metropolitan areas The area has seemed on a path to become the nation s first metro area of one million or more with a majority black population 81 In a reverse trend of the Great Migration numerous African Americans and other minorities have moved into DeSoto County and blacks have followed suburban trends moving into the suburbs of Shelby County 81 Religion Edit Asian American tombstones in Elmwood Cemetery An 1870 map of Memphis shows religious buildings of the Baptist Catholic Episcopal Methodist Presbyterian Congregational and other Christian denominations and a Jewish congregation 82 In 2009 places of worship exist for Christians Jews Hindus Buddhists and Muslims The international headquarters of the Church of God in Christ the largest Pentecostal denomination in the United States is located in Memphis Its Mason Temple was named after the denomination s founder Charles Harrison Mason This auditorium is where Rev Martin Luther King Jr gave his noted I ve Been to the Mountaintop speech in April 1968 the night before he was assassinated at his motel The National Civil Rights Museum located in Memphis at the Lorraine Motel and other buildings has an annual ceremony at Mason s Temple of Deliverance where it honors people with Freedom Awards Bellevue Baptist Church is a Southern Baptist megachurch in Memphis that was founded in 1903 Its current membership is around 30 000 83 For many years it was led by Adrian Rogers a three term president of the Southern Baptist Convention Other notable and or large churches in Memphis include Second Presbyterian Church EPC Highpoint Church 84 SBC Hope Presbyterian Church EPC Evergreen Presbyterian Church PCUSA Colonial Park United Methodist Church Christ United Methodist Church Idlewild Presbyterian Church PCUSA GraceLife Pentecostal Church UPCI First Baptist Broad Temple of Deliverance Calvary Episcopal Church the Church of the River First Unitarian Church of Memphis First Congregational Church UCC and Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church Memphis is home to two cathedrals The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Memphis and St Mary s Episcopal Cathedral is the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee Memphis is home to Temple Israel a Reform synagogue that has approximately 7 000 members making it one of the largest Reform synagogues in the country Baron Hirsch Synagogue is the largest Orthodox shul in the United States 85 Jewish residents were part of the city before the Civil War but more Jewish immigrants came from Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Memphis is home to an estimated 10 000 to 15 000 Muslims of various cultures and ethnicities 86 A number of seminaries are located in Memphis and the metropolitan area Memphis is home to Memphis Theological Seminary and Harding School of Theology Suburban Cordova is home to Mid America Baptist Theological Seminary Crime Edit Main article Crime in Memphis Tennessee A Memphis Police Department vehicle In the 21st century Memphis has struggled to reduce crime In 2007 it ranked as the second most dangerous city by the Morgan Quitno rankings 87 In 2004 violent crime in Memphis reached a decade record low The next year it was ranked the fourth most dangerous city with a population of 500 000 or higher in the U S 88 Crime increased again in the first half of 2006 By 2014 Memphis crime had substantially decreased bringing the city s ranking up to eleventh in violent crime 89 Nationally cities follow similar trends and crime numbers tend to be cyclical Nationally other moderate sized cities were also suffering large rises in crime although crime in the largest cities continued to decrease or increased much less 90 91 better source needed In the first half of 2006 robbery of businesses increased 52 5 robbery of individuals increased 28 5 and homicides increased 18 over the same period of 2005 The Memphis Police Department responded with the initiation of Operation Blue C R U S H Crime Reduction Using Statistical History which targets crime hotspots and repeat offenders 92 Memphis ended 2005 with 154 murders and 2006 ended with 160 in 2007 there were 164 murders 2008 had 138 and 2009 had 132 Violent crimes dropped from 12 939 in 2008 to 12 047 Robbery dropped from 4 788 in 2008 to 4 137 in 2009 Aggravated assault dropped 53 870 in 2008 to 47 158 in 2009 FBI s UCR In 2006 and 2007 the Memphis metropolitan area ranked second most dangerous in the nation among cities with a population over 500 000 In 2006 the Memphis metropolitan area ranked number one in violent crimes for major cities around the U S according to the FBI s annual crime rankings whereas it had ranked second in 2005 93 Between 2006 and 2008 the crime rate fell by 16 while the first half of 2009 saw a reduction in serious crime of more than 10 from 2008 The Memphis Police Department s use of the FBI National Incident Based Reporting System a more detailed method of reporting crimes than what is used in many other major cities has been cited as a reason for Memphis s frequent appearance on lists of most dangerous U S cities 94 Homicide statistics released by the city in more recent years show another dramatic rise in murders in Memphis There were 140 homicides in the city in 2014 and 161 in 2015 95 96 In 2016 police officials recorded 228 murders a 63 increase since 2014 97 According to Michael Rallings the director of the Memphis Police Department investigations determined that one third of the murder victims in 2016 had been involved in gang activity 97 Economy EditMain article Economy of Memphis Tennessee Memphis products treemap 2020 The city s central geographic location has aided its business development On the Mississippi River and intersected by five major freight railroads and two Interstate Highways I 40 and I 55 Memphis is well positioned for commerce in the transportation and shipping industry Its access by water was key to its initial development with steamboats plying the Mississippi river Railroad construction strengthened its connection to other markets to the east and west Since the second half of the 20th century highways and interstates have played major roles as transportation corridors A third interstate I 69 is under construction and a fourth I 22 has recently been designated from the former High Priority Corridor X River barges are unloaded onto trucks and trains The city is home to Memphis International Airport the world s busiest cargo airport surpassing Hong Kong International Airport in 2021 Memphis serves as a primary hub for FedEx Express shipping As of 2014 update Memphis was the home of three Fortune 500 companies FedEx no 63 International Paper no 107 and AutoZone no 306 98 Other major corporations based in Memphis include Allenberg Cotton American Residential Services also known as ARS Rescue Rooter Baker Donelson Bearman Caldwell amp Berkowitz Cargill Cotton City Gear First Horizon National Corporation Fred s GTx Lenny s Sub Shop Mid America Apartments Perkins Restaurant and Bakery ServiceMaster True Temper Sports Varsity Brands and Verso Paper Corporations with major operations based in Memphis include Gibson guitars based in Nashville and Smith amp Nephew The Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis also has a branch in Memphis The entertainment and film industries have discovered Memphis in recent years Several major motion pictures most of which were recruited and assisted by the Memphis amp Shelby County Film and Television Commission 99 have been filmed in Memphis including Making the Grade 1984 Elvis and Me 1988 Great Balls of Fire 1988 Heart of Dixie 1989 Mystery Train 1989 The Silence of the Lambs 1991 Trespass 1992 The Gun in Betty Lou s Handbag 1992 The Firm 1993 The Delta 1996 The People Vs Larry Flynt 1996 The Rainmaker 1997 Cast Away 2000 21 Grams 2002 A Painted House 2002 Hustle amp Flow 2005 Forty Shades of Blue 2005 Walk the Line 2005 Black Snake Moan 2007 Nothing But the Truth 2008 Soul Men 2008 and The Grace Card 2011 The Blind Side 2009 was set in Memphis but filmed in Atlanta The 1992 television movie Memphis starring Memphis native Cybill Shepherd who also served as executive producer and writer was also filmed in Memphis Arts and culture EditMain article Culture of Memphis Tennessee Cultural events Edit One of the largest celebrations of the city is Memphis in May The month long series of events promotes Memphis s heritage and outreach of its people far beyond the city s borders The four main events are the Beale Street Music Festival International Week The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest and the Great River Run The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest is the largest pork barbecue cooking contest in the world In April downtown Memphis celebrates Africa in April Cultural Awareness Festival or simply Africa in April The festival was designed to celebrate the arts history culture and diversity of the African diaspora Africa in April is a three day festival with vendors markets fashion showcases blues showcases and an international diversity parade 100 During late May early June Memphis is home to the Memphis Italian Festival at Marquette Park The 2019 festival will be its 30th and has hosted musical acts local artisans and Italian cooking competitions It also presents chef demonstrations the Coors Light Competitive Bocce Tournament the Galtelli Cup Recreational Bocce Tournament a volleyball tournament and pizza tossing demonstrations This festival was started by Holy Rosary School and Parish and began inside the School parking lot in 1989 The Memphis Italian Festival is run almost completely by former and current Holy Rosary School and Church members and begins with a 5K run each year Carnival Memphis formerly known as the Memphis Cotton Carnival is an annual series of parties and festivities in June that salutes various aspects of Memphis and its industries An annual King and Queen of Carnival are secretly selected to reign over Carnival activities From 1935 to 1982 the African American community staged the Cotton Makers Jubilee it has merged with Carnival Memphis 101 A market and arts festival the Cooper Young Festival 102 is held annually in September in the Cooper Young district of Midtown Memphis The event draws artists from all over North America and includes local music art sales contests and displays Memphis sponsors several film festivals the Indie Memphis Film Festival Outflix and the Memphis International Film and Music Festival The Indie Memphis Film Festival is in its 14th year and was held April 27 28 2013 103 Recognized by MovieMaker Magazine as one of 25 Coolest Film Festivals 2009 and one of 25 Festivals Worth the Entry Fee 2011 Indie Memphis offers Memphis year round independent film programming including the Global Lens international film series IM Student Shorts student films and an outdoor concert film series at the historic Levitt Shell The Outflix Film Festival also in its 15th year was held September 7 13 2013 Outflix features a full week of LGBT cinema including short films features and documentaries The Memphis International Film and Music Festival is held in April it is in its 11th year and takes place at Malco s Ridgeway Four Mid South Pride is Tennessee s second largest LGBT pride event 104 105 On the weekend before Thanksgiving the Memphis International Jazz Festival is held in the South Main Historic Arts District in Downtown Memphis This festival promotes the important role Memphis has played in shaping Jazz nationally and internationally Acts such as George Coleman Herman Green Kirk Whalum and Marvin Stamm all come out of the rich musical heritage in Memphis Formerly titled the W C Handy Awards the International Blues Awards are presented by the Blues Foundation headquartered in Memphis for Blues music achievement Weeklong playing competitions are held as well as an awards banquet including a night of performance and celebration Music Edit Memphis is the home of founders and pioneers of various American music genres including Memphis soul Memphis blues gospel rock n roll rockabilly Memphis rap Buck crunk and sharecropper country music in contrast to the rhinestone country sound historically associated with Nashville Many musicians including Aretha Franklin Jerry Lee Lewis Johnny Cash Elvis Presley Carl Perkins Roy Orbison Booker T amp the M G s Otis Redding Isaac Hayes Shawn Lane Al Green Bobby Whitlock Rance Allen Percy Sledge Solomon Burke William Bell Sam amp Dave and B B King got their start in Memphis in the 1950s and 1960s Beale Street is a national historical landmark and shows the impact Memphis has had on American blues particularly after World War II as electric guitars took precedence over the original acoustic sound from the Mississippi Delta Sam Phillips s Sun Studio still stands and is open for tours Elvis Johnny Cash Jerry Lee Lewis Carl Perkins and Roy Orbison all made their first recordings there and were discovered by Phillips Many great blues artists recorded there such as W C Handy the Father of the Blues Stax Records created a classic 1960s soul music sound much grittier and horn based than the better known Motown from Detroit Booker T and the M G s were the label s backing band for most of the classic hits that came from Stax by Sam amp Dave Otis Redding Wilson Pickett and many more The sound was revisited in the 1980s in the Blues Brothers movie in which many of the musicians starred as themselves Memphis is also noted for its influence on the power pop musical genre in the 1970s Notable bands and musicians include Big Star Chris Bell Alex Chilton Tommy Hoehn The Scruffs and Prix 106 107 Several notable singers are from the Memphis area including Justin Timberlake K Michelle Kirk Whalum Ruth Welting Kid Memphis Kallen Esperian Julien Baker and Andrew VanWyngarden The Metropolitan Opera of New York had its first tour in Memphis in 1906 in the 1990s it decided to tour only larger cities Metropolitan Opera performances are now broadcast in HD at local movie theaters across the country Cuisine Edit Main article Memphis style barbecue Visual art Edit In addition to the Brooks Museum and Dixon Gallery and Gardens Memphis plays host to two burgeoning visual art areas one city sanctioned and the other organically formed The South Main Arts District is an arts neighborhood in south downtown Over the past 20 years the area has morphed from a derelict brothel and juke joint neighborhood to a gentrified well lit area sponsoring Trolley Night when arts patrons stroll down the street to see fire spinners DJs playing in front of clubs specialty shops and galleries 108 109 Not far from South Main Arts district is Medicine Factory an artist run organization 110 Another developing arts district in Memphis is Broad Avenue This east west avenue is undergoing neighborhood revitalization from the influx of craft and visual artists taking up residence and studios in the area 111 112 An art professor from Rhodes College holds small openings on the first floor of his home for local students and professional artists Odessa another art space on Broad Avenue hosts student art shows and local electronic music Other gallery spaces spring up for semi annual artwalks 113 114 Memphis also has non commercial visual arts organizations and spaces including local painter Pinkney Herbert s Marshall Arts gallery on Marshall Avenue near Sun Studios another arts neighborhood characterized by affordable rent 115 Literature Edit Well known writers from Memphis include Shelby Foote the noted Civil War historian Novelist John Grisham grew up in nearby DeSoto County Mississippi and sets many of his books in Memphis Many works of fiction and literature are set in Memphis These include The Reivers by William Faulkner 1962 September September by Shelby Foote 1977 Peter Taylor s The Old Forest and Other Stories 1985 and his Pulitzer Prize winning A Summons to Memphis 1986 The Firm 1991 and The Client 1993 both by John Grisham Memphis Afternoons a Memoir by James Conaway 1993 Plague of Dreamers by Steve Stern 1997 Cassina Gambrel Was Missing by William Watkins 1999 The Guardian by Beecher Smith 1999 We are Billion Year Old Carbon by Corey Mesler 2005 The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris and The Architect by James Williamson 2007 Tourism Edit Main article Tourism in Memphis Tennessee Points of interest Edit Peabody Hotel Beale Street a significant location in the city s history as well as in the history of the blues Street performers play live music and bars and clubs feature live entertainment Graceland The private residence of Elvis Presley Memphis Zoo features exhibits of mammals birds fish and amphibians Peabody Hotel known for the Peabody Ducks on the hotel rooftop Sun Studio a recording studio opened in 1950 it now also contains a museum Orpheum Theatre features Broadway shows Ballet Memphis and Opera Memphis The New Daisy Theatre concert venue located on Beale Street Mud Island Amphitheatre concert venue 116 Memphis Pyramid location of the largest Bass Pro Shops in the world an observation deck restaurants bowling alley aquarium and hotel 117 Other Memphis attractions include the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium FedExForum and Mississippi riverboat day cruises Museums and art collections Edit National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis 2012 Memphis Brooks Museum of Art Mud Island Mississippi River Park Stax Museum and Satellite Record Shop National Civil Rights Museum located in the Lorraine Motel and related buildings where Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated It includes a historical overview of the American civil rights movement and interpretation of historic and current issues Memphis Brooks Museum of Art the oldest and largest fine art museum in Tennessee 118 the collection includes Renaissance Baroque Impressionist and 20th century artists Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art contains a large collection of Asian jade art Asian art and Judaic art Dixon Gallery and Gardens focuses on French and American impressionism and contains the Stout Collection of 18th century German porcelain as well as a 17 acre 6 9 ha public garden Children s Museum of Memphis exhibits interactive and educational activities for children Graceland the home of Elvis Presley it attracts over 600 000 visitors annually and features two of Presley s airplanes his automobile and motorcycle collection and other memorabilia Graceland is listed on the National Register of Historic Places 119 Pink Palace Museum and Planetarium a science and historical museum it includes the third largest planetarium in the United States and an IMAX theater Beale Street a public exhibit honoring Memphis musicians singers writers and composers Mud Island a park with a walking trail featuring a scale model of the Mississippi River Mississippi River Museum a maritime museum on Mud Island that focuses on the history of the Mississippi River Victorian Village a historic district featuring Victorian era mansions some of which are open to the public as museums The Cotton Museum located on the old trading floor of the Memphis Cotton Exchange Metal Museum features exhibitions of metalwork and public programs featuring metalsmiths Stax Museum the former location of Stax Records Chucalissa Indian Village a Walls phase mound and plaza complex operated by the University of Memphis The village is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a National Historic Landmark The Southeast Indian Heritage Festival is held there annually 120 Burkle Estate a historic home now used as a museum of slavery and the anti slavery movement 121 Cemeteries Edit Memphis National Cemetery The Memphis National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in northeastern Memphis Historic Elmwood Cemetery is one of the oldest rural garden cemeteries in the South and contains the Carlisle S Page Arboretum Memorial Park Cemetery is noted for its sculptures by Mexican artist Dionicio Rodriguez Elvis Presley was originally buried in Forest Hill Cemetery the resting place of his backing band s bassist Bill Black After an attempted grave robbing Elvis s body was moved and reinterred at the grounds of Graceland Sports EditMain article Sports in Memphis Tennessee FedExForum during a Grizzlies game Current professional and major college teams Sports Franchise League Sport Founded Stadium capacity Memphis Grizzlies NBA Basketball 2001 FedExForum 18 100 Memphis Redbirds MiLB Baseball 1998 AutoZone Park 10 000 Memphis Hustle NBA G League Basketball 2017 Landers Center 8 400 Memphis 901 FC USLC Soccer 2018 AutoZone Park 10 000 Memphis Showboats USFL Football 2022 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 58 318 Memphis Tigers NCAA D1 Football 1920 Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium 58 318 Memphis Tigers NCAA D1 Basketball 1920 FedExForum 18 100 CBU Buccaneers NCAA D2 Baseball 1966 Nadicksbernd Field 800 The Memphis Grizzlies of the National Basketball Association is the only team from one of the big four major sports leagues in Memphis 122 The Memphis Redbirds of the Triple A East are a Minor League Baseball affiliate of the St Louis Cardinals 123 Memphis 901 FC is a professional soccer team that plays in the USL Championship division and plays their home matches at AutoZone ParkThe University of Memphis college basketball team the Memphis Tigers has a strong following in the city due to a history of competitive success The Tigers have competed in three NCAA Final Fours 1973 1985 2008 with the latter two appearances being vacated The current coach of the Memphis Tigers is Penny Hardaway Memphis is home to Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium the site of University of Memphis football the Liberty Bowl and the Southern Heritage Classic The annual St Jude Classic a regular part of the PGA Tour is also held in the city Each February the city hosts the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships and the Cellular South Cup which are men s ATP World Tour 500 series and WTA events respectively Memphis has a significant history in pro wrestling Jerry The King Lawler and Jimmy The Mouth of the South Hart are among the sport s most well known figures who came out of the city Sputnik Monroe a wrestler of the 1950s like Lawler promoted racial integration in the city Ric Flair also noted Memphis as his birthplace In the 1970s and early 1980s the former WFL franchise Memphis Southmen Memphis Grizzlies sued the NFL in an attempt to be accepted as an expansion franchise In 1993 the Memphis Hound Dogs was a proposed NFL expansion that was passed over in favor of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers The Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium also served as the temporary home of the former Tennessee Oilers now the Titans while the city of Nashville worked out stadium issues The city is also the site of Memphis International Raceway which held NASCAR events from 1998 to 2009 when Dover Motorsports closed it In 2011 it reopened under different ownership It no longer holds NASCAR races but the Arca Menards Series returned to the track in 2020 Parks and recreation EditMajor Memphis parks include W C Handy Park Tom Lee Park Audubon Park Overton Park including the Old Forest Arboretum 124 the Lichterman Nature Center a nature learning center the Memphis Botanic Garden 125 and Jesse H Turner Park Shelby Farms park located at the eastern edge of the city is one of the largest urban parks in the United States Law and government EditMain article Government of Memphis Tennessee See also List of mayors of Memphis Tennessee Beginning in 1963 Memphis adopted a mayor council form of government with 13 City Council members six elected at large from throughout the city and seven elected from geographic districts Following passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 civil rights activists challenged the at large electoral system in court because it made it more difficult for the minority to elect candidates of their choice at large voting favored candidates who could command a majority across the city In 1995 the city adopted a new plan The 13 Council positions are elected from nine geographic districts seven are single member districts and two elect three members each Jim Strickland a Democrat is the city s mayor elected on October 8 2015 He is a former Memphis city councilman Since the late 20th century regional discussions have recurred on the concept of consolidating unincorporated Shelby County and Memphis into a metropolitan government as Nashville Davidson County did in 1963 Consolidation was a referendum item on the 2010 ballots in both the city of Memphis and Shelby County under the state law for dual voting on such measures The referendum was controversial in both jurisdictions Black leaders including then Shelby County Commissioner Joe Ford and national civil rights leader Al Sharpton opposed the consolidation According to the plaintiffs expert Marcus Pohlmann these leaders tried to turn that referendum into a civil rights issue suggesting that for blacks to vote for consolidation was to give up hard won civil rights victories of the past 126 In October 2010 before the vote eight Shelby County citizens had filed a lawsuit in federal court against the state and the Shelby County Elections Commission against the dual voting requirement Plaintiffs argued that total votes for the referendum should have been counted together rather than as separate elections City voters narrowly supported the measure for consolidation with 50 8 in favor county voters overwhelmingly voted against the measure with 85 against 127 The state argued that with the election decided the lawsuit should be dismissed but the federal court disagreed 126 By late 2013 in pre trial actions both sides were trying to disqualify the other s experts in discussions of whether regional voting revealed racial polarization and whether voting on the referendum demonstrated racial bloc voting The experts for both sides have clashed on whether racial bloc voting is inevitable in local elections and whether that would require some kind of court remedy 126 The defendants expert Todd Donovan did not think that polarized voting as revealed for political candidates meant that African American voters and white voters have polarized interests when it comes to referendum choices on government administration taxation service provision and other policy questions 126 He noted In the absence of distinct political interests that create polarized blocs of referendum voters defined by race there is no cohesive racial minority voting interest that can be diluted by a referendum 126 In 2014 the federal district court dismissed the lawsuit on the grounds that the referendum would have failed when both jurisdictions votes were counted together In total voting 64 of voters opposed the consolidation In the last week of December 2014 the U S Sixth District Court of Appeals upheld that decision ruling that In this election the referendum for consolidation did not pass and would not have passed even if there had been no dual majority vote requirement with the vote counts combined 127 Before the referendum the decision was made by the city and county to exclude public school management and operations from the proposed consolidation As noted below in 2011 the Memphis city council voted to dissolve its city school board and consolidate with the Shelby County School System without the collaboration or agreement of Shelby County 128 The city had authority for this action under Tennessee state laws that differentiate between city and county powers Education EditMain article Education in Memphis Tennessee Early nursing class in Memphis The city is served by Shelby County Schools On March 8 2011 residents voted to dissolve the charter for Memphis City Schools effectively merging it with the Shelby County School District 129 After issues with state law and court challenges the merger took effect the start of the 2013 14 school year In Shelby County six incorporated cities voted to establish separate school systems in 2013 The Shelby County School System operates more than 200 elementary middle and high schools The Memphis area is also home to many private college prep schools Briarcrest Christian School co ed Christian Brothers High School boys Evangelical Christian School co ed First Assembly Christian School co ed St Mary s Episcopal School girls Hutchison School girls Lausanne Collegiate School co ed Memphis University School boys Saint Benedict at Auburndale co ed St Agnes Academy girls Immaculate Conception Cathedral School girls and Elliston Baptist Academy co ed Also included in this list is Memphis Harding Academy a co ed school affiliated with the Churches of Christ Colleges and universities in the city include the University of Memphis Rhodes College Christian Brothers University Memphis College of Art LeMoyne Owen College Baptist College of Health Sciences Memphis Theological Seminary Harding School of Theology Embry Riddle Aeronautical University Worldwide Memphis campus 130 Reformed Theological Seminary satellite campus William R Moore College of Technology Southern College of Optometry Southwest Tennessee Community College Tennessee Technology Center at Memphis Visible Music College Mid America Baptist Theological Seminary and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center Memphis also has campuses of several for profit post secondary institutions including Concorde Career College ITT Technical Institute Vatterott College 131 and University of Phoenix Remington College 132 is a local nonprofit post secondary institution The University of Tennessee College of Dentistry was founded in 1878 making it the oldest dental college in the South and the third oldest public college of dentistry in the United States 133 The Christian Brothers High School Band is the oldest high school band in the U S founded in 1872 134 Media EditSee also List of newspapers in Tennessee List of radio stations in Tennessee and List of television stations in Tennessee Newspapers Edit Title Locale Year est Frequency Publisher parent companyThe Commercial Appeal 135 Memphis 136 1840 137 Daily Gannett Company 138 Memphis Daily News Memphis 1886 Weekly or bi weeklyMemphis Flyer 1989 Weekly Contemporary Media Inc Memphis Tri State Defender 1951 139 Best Media Properties Inc Television Edit Nielsen Media Research currently defines Memphis and its surrounding metropolitan area as the 51st largest American media market 140 Despite Memphis proper s large size Memphis has always been a medium sized market the nearby suburban and rural areas are not much larger than the city itself Major broadcast television affiliate stations in the Memphis area include but are not limited to Channel Call sign Network Owner Subchannels3 WREG CBS Nexstar Newschannel 3 Anytime on 3 2 Antenna TV on 3 35 WMC NBC Gray Television Bounce TV on 5 2 Circle on 5 3 Grit on 5 4 WMC Plus on 5 510 WKNO PBS Mid South Public Communications Foundation WKNO 2 on 10 2 PBS Kids on 10 313 WHBQ Fox Imagicomm Communications Heroes amp Icons on 13 2 ION Mystery on 13 323 WTWV Independent Religious Christian Worldview Broadcasting Corporation24 WATN ABC Tegna Inc Laff on 24 2 Cozi TV on 24 330 WLMT The CW MeTV on 30 2 Start TV on 30 334 WWTW TCT Tri State Christian Television40 WBUY TBN Trinity Broadcasting Network Hillsong Channel on 40 2 Smile on 40 3 Enlace on 40 4 Positiv on 40 550 WPXX ION Inyo Broadcast Holdings Court TV Mystery on 50 2 Court TV on 50 3 Defy TV on 50 4 TrueReal on 50 5 HSN on 50 6Radio Edit Terrestrial broadcast radio stations in the Memphis area include but are not limited to FM stations Edit Call sign Frequency City of License 141 Owner Slogan Format 142 WQOX 0 88 5 FM Memphis Shelby County Schools Grades K 12 88 5 the Voice of SCS Urban adult contemporaryWYPL 0 89 3 FM Memphis Public Library amp Information Center Memphis Public Library Reading Radio Radio reading serviceWEVL 0 89 9 FM Southern Communication Volunteers Inc Volunteer Member Supported Radio FreeformWKNO 0 91 1 FM Mid South Public Communications Foundation WKNO NPR For the Mid South Public radio ClassicalWYXR 0 91 7 FM Crosstown Radio Partnership Inc FreeformWMFS 0 92 9 FM Bartlett Audacy Inc ESPN Radio SportsWLFP 0 94 1 FM Germantown The Wolf CountryWHAL 0 95 7 FM Hornlake Mississippi iHeartMedia Inc Hallelujah Urban gospelWHRK 0 97 1 FM Memphis K97 1 Hip hopWXMX 0 98 1 FM Millington Cumulus Media The Max RockWKIM 0 98 9 FM Munford The Bridge Adult contemporaryWMC 0 99 7 FM Memphis Audacy Inc FM 100 Hot adult contemporaryKJMS 0 101 1 FM Olive Branch Mississippi iHeartMedia Inc V101 Urban adult contemporaryKWNW 0 101 9 FM Crawfordsville Arkansas Kiss FM Top 40WEGR 0 102 7 FM Arlington Rock 102 7 Classic rockWRBO 0 103 5 FM Como Mississippi Cumulus Media 103 5 WBRO Urban adult contemporaryWRVR 0 104 5 FM Memphis Audacy Inc The River Adult contemporaryWGKX 0 105 9 FM Cumulus Media KIX 106 CountryKXHT 0 107 1 FM Marion Arkansas Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Hot Hip HopWHBQ 0 107 5 FM Germantown 107 5 WHBQ Classic HitsAM stations Edit Call sign Frequency City of License 143 Owner Format 142 WHBQ 00 560 AM Memphis Flinn Broadcasting Corporation SportsWREC 0 600 AM iHeartMedia Talk radioWCRV 0 640 AM Bott Radio Network Christian radioWMFS 0 680 AM Audacy Inc SportsKQPN 0 730 AM West Memphis Arkansas F W Robbert BroadcastingWMC 0 790 AM Memphis Audacy Inc WUMY 0 830 AM GMF Christian Media I LLC Spanish ChristianKWAM 0 990 AM Starnes Media Group TalkWGSF 0 1030 AM Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Regional MexicanWDIA 0 1070 AM iHeartMedia Urban oldiesWGUE 0 1180 AM Turrell Arkansas Butron Media Corporation Regional MexicanWMPS 0 1210 AM Bartlett Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Adult StandardsWMSO 0 1240 AM Southaven Mississippi Urban oldiesWLOK 0 1340 AM Memphis WLOK Radio Inc Urban gospelWLRM 0 1380 AM Millington F W Robbert Broadcasting BluesWOWW 0 1430 AM Germantown Flinn Broadcasting Corporation Classic hitsWBBP 0 1480 AM Memphis Bountiful Blessings Urban gospelWMQM 0 1600 AM Lakeland F W Robbert Broadcasting ChristianCultural references Edit Music Edit Memphis is the subject of numerous pop and country songs including The Memphis Blues by W C Handy Memphis Tennessee by Chuck Berry Night Train to Memphis by Roy Acuff Goin to Memphis by Paul Revere and the Raiders Queen of Memphis by Confederate Railroad Memphis Soul Stew by King Curtis Maybe It Was Memphis by Pam Tillis Graceland by Paul Simon Memphis Train by Rufus Thomas All the Way from Memphis by Mott the Hoople Wrong Side of Memphis by Trisha Yearwood Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again by Bob Dylan Memphis Skyline by Rufus Wainwright Sequestered in Memphis by The Hold Steady and Walking in Memphis by Marc Cohn In addition Memphis is mentioned in scores of other songs including Proud Mary by Creedence Clearwater Revival Honky Tonk Women by the Rolling Stones Dixie Chicken by Little Feat Who s Gonna Fill Their Shoes by George Jones Daisy Jane by America Life Is a Highway by Tom Cochrane Black Velvet by Alannah Myles Cities by Talking Heads Crazed Country Rebel by Hank Williams III Pride In the Name of Love by U2 M E M P H I S by the Disco Biscuits New New Minglewood Blues and Candyman by the Grateful Dead You Should Be Glad by Widespread Panic Roll With Me by 8Ball amp MJG Someday by Steve Earle and popularly recorded by Shawn Colvin and many others More than 1 000 commercial recordings of over 800 distinct songs contain Memphis in them The Memphis Rock N Soul Museum maintains an ever updated list of these on their website 144 Film and television Edit Many films are set in the American city including Black Snake Moan The Blind Side Cast Away Choices The Movie The Client Elvis The Firm Forty Shades of Blue Great Balls of Fire Hustle amp Flow Kill Switch Making the Grade Memphis Belle Mississippi Grind Mystery Train N Secure The Rainmaker The Silence of the Lambs Soul Men and Walk the Line Many of those and other films have also been filmed in Memphis including Black Snake Moan Walk the Line Hustle amp Flow Forty Shades of Blue 21 Grams A Painted House American Saint The Poor and Hungry Cast Away Woman s Story The Big Muddy The Rainmaker Finding Graceland The People vs Larry Flynt The Delta Teenage Tupelo A Family Thing Without Air The Firm The Client The Gun in Betty Lou s Handbag Trespass The Silence of the Lambs Great Balls of Fire Elvis and Me Mystery Train Leningrad Cowboys Go America Heart of Dixie The Contemporary Gladiator U2 Rattle and Hum Making the Grade The River Rat The River Hallelujah Elizabethtown 3000 Miles to Graceland A Face in the Crowd Undefeated Man on the Moon Nothing But the Truth Sore Losers Soul Men I Was a Zombie for the F B I I m From Hollywood The Grace Card This is Elvis Cookie s Fortune Open Five The Open Road In the Valley of Elah Walk Hard My Blueberry Nights Savage Country and Two Lane Blacktop 145 The television series Greenleaf Memphis Beat Quarry and Bluff City Law are set in the city LiteratureMany works of fiction and literature are set in Memphis These include The Reivers by William Faulkner 1962 September September by Shelby Foote 1977 Peter Taylor s The Old Forest and Other Stories 1985 and his Pulitzer Prize winning A Summons to Memphis 1986 The Firm 1991 and The Client 1993 both by John Grisham Memphis Afternoons a Memoir by James Conaway 1993 Plague of Dreamers by Steve Stern 1997 Cassina Gambrel Was Missing by William Watkins 1999 The Guardian by Beecher Smith 1999 We are Billion Year Old Carbon by Corey Mesler 2005 The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris and The Architect by James Williamson 2007 Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit Main article Transportation in Memphis Tennessee Highways Edit Interstate 40 Interstate 55 Interstate 22 Interstate 240 Interstate 269 and State Route 385 are the main expressways in the Memphis area Interstates 40 and 55 cross the Mississippi River at Memphis from the state of Arkansas 146 Interstate 69 is a proposed interstate that upon completion would connect Memphis to Canada and Mexico 147 I 40 is a coast to coast freeway that connects Memphis to Nashville and on to North Carolina to the east and Little Rock Arkansas Oklahoma City and the Greater Los Angeles Area to the west I 55 connects Memphis to St Louis and Chicago to the north and Jackson Mississippi and New Orleans to the south I 240 is the inner beltway which serves areas including Downtown Midtown South Memphis Memphis International Airport East Memphis and North Memphis 146 I 269 is the larger outer interstate loop immediately serving the suburbs of Millington Eads Arlington Collierville and Hernando Mississippi It was completed in 2018 148 Interstate 22 connects Memphis with Birmingham Alabama via northern Mississippi including Tupelo and northwestern Alabama While technically not entering the city of Memphis proper I 22 ends at I 269 in Byhalia Mississippi connecting it to the rest of the Memphis interstate system Interstate 69 is proposed to follow I 55 and I 240 through the city of Memphis Once completed I 69 will link Memphis with Port Huron Michigan via Indianapolis Indiana and Brownsville Texas via Shreveport Louisiana and Houston Texas 147 A new spur Interstate 555 also serves the Memphis metro area connecting it to Jonesboro Arkansas Other important federal highways though Memphis include the east west U S Route 70 U S Route 64 and U S Route 72 and the north south U S Route 51 and U S Route 61 146 The former is the historic highway north to Chicago via Cairo Illinois while the latter roughly parallels the Mississippi River for most of its course and crosses the Mississippi Delta region to the south with the Delta also legendary for Blues music RoadwaysMemphis maintains 6 800 lane miles of city roadways The city collaborated with Google Cloud Platform and SpringML in February 2019 to test machine learning ML to improve public services A key focus is pothole identification using TensorFlow technology 149 Public Works personnel completed 63 000 repairs with around 7 500 of those reported by citizens to 311 150 Railroads Edit Three bridges over the Mississippi A large volume of railroad freight moves through Memphis because of its two heavy duty Mississippi River railroad crossings which carry several major east west railroad freight lines and also because of the major north south railroad lines through Memphis which connect with such major cities as Chicago St Louis Indianapolis Louisville New Orleans Dallas Houston Mobile and Birmingham By the early 20th century Memphis had two major passenger railroad stations which made the city a regional hub for trains coming from the north east south and west After passenger railroad service declined heavily through the middle of the 20th century the Memphis Union Station was demolished in 1969 The Memphis Central Station 151 was eventually renovated and it still serves the city The only inter city passenger railroad service to Memphis is the daily City of New Orleans train operated by Amtrak which has one train northbound and one train southbound each day between Chicago and New Orleans Railroads common freight carriers Edit BNSF Railway BNSF Canadian National Railway CN through subsidiary Illinois Central Railroad IC CSX Transportation CSXT Kansas City Southern Railway KCS Norfolk Southern Railway NS including subsidiaries Alabama Great Southern Railroad AGS Central of Georgia Railroad CG Cincinnati New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway CNTP Tennessee Railway TENN and Tennessee Alabama and Georgia Railway TAG R J Corman Railroad Memphis Line RJCM Union Pacific Railroad UP Railroads passenger carriers Edit Amtrak AMTK Airports Edit FedEx aircraft at Memphis International Airport Memphis International Airport is the global SuperHub of FedEx Express and has the largest cargo operations by volume of any airport worldwide surpassing Hong Kong International Airport in 2021 152 153 Memphis International ranks as the 41st busiest passenger airport in the US and served as a hub for Northwest Airlines later Delta Air Lines until September 3 2013 154 and had 4 39 million boarding passengers enplanements in 2011 an 11 9 decrease over the previous year 155 Delta has reduced its flights at Memphis by approximately 65 since its 2008 merger with Northwest Airlines and operates an average of 30 daily flights as of December 2013 with two international destinations Cancun seasonally Toronto year round Delta Air Lines announced the closing of its Memphis pilot and crew base in 2012 Other airlines providing passenger service are Southwest Airlines American Airlines United Airlines Allegiant Frontier Air Canada and Southern Vacations Express 156 There are also general aviation airports in the Memphis Metropolitan Area including the Millington Regional Jetport located at the former Naval Air Station in Millington Tennessee River port Edit Main article Port of Memphis Memphis has the second busiest cargo port on the Mississippi River which is also the fourth busiest inland port in the United States 157 The International Port of Memphis covers both the Tennessee and Arkansas sides of the Mississippi River from river mile 725 km 1167 to mile 740 km 1191 158 A focal point of the river port is the industrial park on President s Island just south of Downtown Memphis Bridges Edit Four railroad and highway bridges cross the Mississippi River at Memphis In order of their opening years these are the Frisco Bridge 1892 single track rail the Harahan Bridge 1916 a road rail bridge until 1949 currently carries double track rail the Memphis Arkansas Memorial Bridge Highway 1949 later incorporated into Interstate 55 and the Hernando de Soto Bridge Interstate 40 1973 A bicycle pedestrian walkway opened along the Harahan Bridge in late 2016 utilizing the former westbound roadway 159 160 161 Utilities Edit Memphis s primary utility provider is the Memphis Light Gas and Water Division MLGW This is the largest three service municipal utility in the United States providing electricity natural gas and pure water service to all residents of Shelby County Prior to that Memphis was served by two primary electric companies which were merged into the Memphis Power Company 162 The City of Memphis bought the private company in 1939 to form MLGW 162 163 which was an early customer of electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority TVA In 1954 the Dixon Yates contract was proposed to make more power available to the city from the TVA but the contract was cancelled it had been an issue for the Democrats in the 1954 Congressional elections MLGW still buys most of its power from TVA and the company pumps its own fresh water from the Memphis Aquifer using more than 180 water wells Health care Edit St Jude Children s Research Hospital The Memphis and Shelby County region supports numerous hospitals including the Methodist and Baptist Memorial health systems two of the nation s largest private hospitals Until the 1960s and the end of segregation most hospitals only served white patients One of the few hospitals for African Americans in Memphis in those times was Collins Chapel Connectional Hospital whose historic building now houses a homeless shelter 164 Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare the largest healthcare provider in the Memphis region and the fourth largest employer as of 2018 165 operates seven hospitals and several rural clinics Methodist Healthcare operates among others the Le Bonheur Children s Hospital which offers primary level 1 pediatric trauma care as well as a nationally recognized pediatric brain tumor program Methodist Healthcare also operates Methodist University Hospital a 617 bed facility 1 mile southeast of Le Bonheur Baptist Memorial Healthcare operates fifteen hospitals three in Memphis including Baptist Memorial Hospital and with a merger in 2018 became the largest healthcare system in the mid South 166 According to Health Care Market Guide s annual studies Mid Southerners have named Baptist Memorial their preferred hospital choice for quality The St Jude Children s Research Hospital leading pediatric treatment and research facility focused on children s catastrophic diseases resides in Memphis The institution was conceived and built by entertainer Danny Thomas in 1962 as a tribute to St Jude Thaddeus patron saint of impossible hopeless and difficult causes Memphis is also home to Regional One Healthcare 167 which is locally referred to as The Med In recent years the hospital has experienced severe funding difficulties that nearly led to a reduction or elimination of emergency room services In July 2010 The Med received approximately 40 6 million in federal and local funding to keep the Elvis Presley Trauma Center operational Memphis is home to Delta Medical Center of Memphis 168 which is the only employee owned medical facility in North America Individual health insurance marketplace insurers are limited with Bright Health and Cigna offering coverage in the area 169 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Memphis TennesseeTwin towns sister cities EditMemphis has three sister cities as per Sister Cities International 170 Kanifing Gambia Kaolack Senegal Shoham Israel See also Edit United States portal North America portal Tennessee portal Cities portal1865 Memphis earthquake Greater Memphis Chamber Memphis Mafia Memphis Summer Storm of 2003 List of tallest buildings in Memphis List of U S cities with large Black populations List of municipalities in Tennessee USS Memphis 6 shipsNotes Edit Copied content from Schering Plough see that page s history for attribution Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for Memphis were kept at downtown from January 1872 to December 1939 and at Memphis Int l since January 1940 70 a b From 15 sampleReferences Edit ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2022 a b Census Population API United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 15 2022 2020 Population and Housing State Data United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 22 2021 ZIP Code Lookup USPS Archived from the original on January 1 2008 Retrieved October 3 2014 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 a b 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announced https www cnn com 2023 01 31 us tyre nichols investigation tuesday index html Retrieved on Jan 31 2023 Salahieh Nouran Jan 31 2023 Everyone involved in fatal Tyre Nichols encounter is being scrutinized prosecutor says as more firings are announced https www cnn com 2023 01 31 us tyre nichols investigation tuesday index html Retrieved on Jan 31 2023 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Demographic Profile Data G001 Memphis city Tennessee United States Census Bureau Retrieved September 7 2012 a b Annexations and De Annexations Shelby County TN Official Website www shelbycountytn gov Retrieved January 19 2020 Eads and River Bottoms will be de annexed from Memphis added to Shelby Co WMC TV Retrieved January 19 2020 Memphis Light Gas and Water Website About Our Services Mlgw com Archived from the original on July 16 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map Agricultural Research Center PRISM Climate Group Oregon State University Archived from the original on February 27 2014 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Normals for MEMPHIS WSCMO AP TN 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved March 10 2014 Average Percent Sunshine through 2009 National Climatic Data Center Retrieved November 16 2012 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 Memphis city Tennessee State amp County Quickfacts United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 14 2020 Memphis city Tennessee State amp County QuickFacts U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 7 2015 Retrieved July 13 2017 Memphis city QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau Quickfacts census gov Archived from the original on February 7 2015 Retrieved April 30 2015 a b Census data Memphis ranks as poorest city in United States Archived from the original on September 26 2011 Retrieved September 23 2011 a b Jimmie Covington Memphis Region s Demographic Trends Advance Smart City Memphis website June 9 2011 accessed February 20 2015 Bird s eye view of the city of Memphis Tennessee 1870 Hdl loc gov 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Fortune 500 Companies Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved March 19 2016 Memphis amp Shelby County Film and Television Commission Filmmemphis org Retrieved November 15 2016 Africa In April Africa In April Cultural Awareness Festival Inc Retrieved September 10 2012 Cotton Carnival Memphismuseums org Retrieved July 2 2010 permanent dead link Cooper Young Festival How it Redefined Community micromemphis com Retrieved June 20 2013 14th Annual On Location MEMPHIS International Film amp Music Fest Wraps Up Its Weekend Announces Category Winners Onlocationmemphis org Archived from the original on July 23 2013 Retrieved June 13 2013 Thousands attend Mid South Pride September 28 2019 Nashville PRIDE Festival Retrieved May 4 2021 Reager J D September 1 2011 Kill Kill by The Scruffs Memphis Flyer Retrieved December 27 2017 Trakin Roy July 29 2014 Big Star s 1 Record and Radio City to Be Re Mastered and Reissued by Stax Records The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved December 27 2017 Jacobson Kelsey Boutique hotel restaurant slated for South Main WMC Action News 5 Memphis Tennessee WMC Action News 5 Retrieved July 13 2017 South Main Artspace Lofts Exploring Our Town Arts gov December 13 2011 Retrieved July 13 2017 Rozzell Jessalyn The Medicine Factory Downtown Memphis art studios event space amp gallery Medicine Factory Retrieved November 6 2022 Broad Avenue Arts District Broadavearts com Retrieved July 13 2017 Kontji Anthony October 11 2016 The 9 01 The Memphis renaissance the new generation Commercialappeal com Retrieved July 13 2017 Bailey Thomas October 29 2015 80 spaces relieve parking pressure in Broad district Archive commercialappeal com Retrieved July 13 2017 Broad Avenue Spring Art Walk 4 22 Choose901 com Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved July 13 2017 The space to create brings art to the Edge Highgroundnews com Retrieved July 13 2017 Susanna Henighan Potter April 1 2009 Moon Tennessee Avalon Travel p 36 ISBN 978 1 59880 114 9 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2014 accessed February 21 2015 a b Clay Bailey Appellate court dismisses challenge of dual vote requirement for consolidated government Commercial Appeal December 31 2014 accessed February 21 2015 MAKING A REGIONAL DISTRICT MEMPHIS CITY SCHOOLS DISSOLVES INTO ITS SUBURBS Archived February 21 2015 at the Wayback Machine Columbia Law Review March 2012 McMillin Zack March 8 2011 Memphis voters OK school charter surrender The Commercial Appeal Retrieved March 9 2011 Find a Location Embry Riddle Worldwide Archived June 9 2010 at the Wayback Machine Worldwide erau edu Retrieved on August 16 2013 Career College in Memphis Dividend TN Vatterott Vatterott edu September 26 2014 Archived from the original on December 2 2016 Retrieved November 15 2016 Remington College Community Involvement 3 Lives Blood Drive Adopt Our School Community remingtoncollege edu Retrieved July 2 2010 Univ Tennessee College of Dentistry Archived from the original on August 23 2000 Retrieved July 13 2017 Bolton Patrick 2011 The Christian Brothers Band The Oldest High School Band in America 1872 1947 Christian Brothers Archives Master s Thesis Southern Press The South in the Building of the Nation Vol 7 Richmond VA Southern Historical Publication Society 1909 pp 402 436 hdl 2027 yale 39002004114386 Date of establishment of leading Southern newspapers Members Knoxville Tennessee Press Association Archived from the original on March 21 2017 Retrieved March 21 2017 Federal Writers Project 1939 sfn error no target CITEREFFederal Writers Project1939 help Gannett Co Inc Our Brands Tennessee McLean Virginia retrieved March 27 2017 US Newspaper Directory Tennessee Chronicling America Washington DC Library of Congress Retrieved March 21 2017 Nielsen DMA Rankings 2019 MediaTracks Communications Retrieved June 28 2019 FM Query FM Radio Technical Information Audio Division FCC USA Archived from the original on August 25 2009 a b Station Information on File at Nielsen SIP www arbitron com AM Query AM Radio Technical Information Audio Division FCC USA Archived from the original on August 25 2009 Over 1 000 Songs Memphisrocknsoul org Archived from the original on June 23 2015 Retrieved November 15 2016 Gill Gene Filmed in Memphis On Location in the Historic City Historic memphis com Retrieved June 22 2016 a b c Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization 2018 Shelby County PDF Map Tennessee Department of Transportation a b Interstate 69 Corridor Timeline tn gov tdot Tennessee Department of Transportation Retrieved May 8 2020 Garland Max October 26 2018 I 269 s completion marked with ribbon cutting in DeSoto County opening its final stretch The Commercial Appeal Retrieved May 5 2020 Baolin Liu SpringML February 2019 Partnership with City of Memphis to Improve City Services SpringML com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Rodriguez Michael April 25 2019 Machine Learning for Improved Services Potholes LinkedIn com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Christian Brothers University Archived from the original on September 26 2015 Retrieved July 13 2017 Report MEM Busiest Cargo Airport In the World Memphisflyer com Retrieved July 26 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Memphis International Is World s Busiest Cargo Airport Airportindustry news com April 23 2021 Retrieved July 26 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Delta to Leave Memphis Hub Analyst Blog Nasdaq com Retrieved on August 16 2013 RITA BTS Transtats Transtats bts gov February 7 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 Delta Air Lines plans additional cuts to service at Memphis International The Commercial Appeal Retrieved on August 16 2013 Top US Inland Ports for 2003 PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 25 2009 Retrieved July 2 2010 Port of Memphis website About Page Portofmemphis com Archived from the original on March 7 2010 Retrieved July 2 2010 Charlier Tom June 11 2016 Historic Frisco Bridge getting extensive makeover by BNSF Archive commercialappeal com Retrieved July 13 2017 Big River Crossing opens Saturday Commercialappeal com Retrieved July 13 2017 The Harahan Bridge Opens Bike Ped Memphis Bikepedmemphis wordpress com October 22 2016 Retrieved July 13 2017 a b A History of Performance Memphis Light Gas and Water Division Retrieved July 30 2012 Re Memphis Power amp Light Co amp Tennessee Valley Authority 1 F P C 809 FPC 1939 Historic Collins Chapel reopens as safe haven for homeless after renovations Fox 13 News April 19 2021 Archived from the original on April 20 2021 Largest Memphis Area Employers Business Journal Retrieved May 18 2019 Baptist Memorial and Mississippi Baptist create largest system in the region Modern Healthcare May 1 2017 Retrieved May 18 2019 Home Regional One Health Regional One Health The med org Retrieved July 13 2017 Delta Medical Center Homepage Deltamedcenter com Retrieved July 13 2017 Tennessee health insurance marketplace history and news of the state s exchange Obamacare enrollment healthinsurance org December 29 2018 Retrieved May 18 2019 Memphis Tennessee sister cities org Retrieved February 17 2014 Further reading EditBiles Roger Memphis In the Great Depression U of Tennessee Press 1986 Dowdy G Wayne 2010 Crusades for Freedom Memphis and the Political Transformation of the American South Jackson Mississippi USA University Press of Mississippi Haynes Stephen R 2012 The Last Segregated Hour The Memphis Kneel Ins and the Campaign for Southern Church Desegregation New York USA Oxford University Press McPherson Larry E amp Wilson Charles Reagan 2002 Memphis Rushing Wanda 2009 Memphis and the Paradox of Place Globalization in the American South Chapel Hill North Carolina USA University of North Carolina Press 2009 Rushing Wanda 2009 Memphis Cotton Fields Cargo Planes amp Biotechnology inSouthern Spaces online August 28 see Memphis Cotton Fields Cargo Planes and Biotechnology Southern Spaces accessed December 2 2015 Rushing Wanda June 2017 No place for a feminist intersectionality and the Problem South SWS Presidential Address Gender amp Society 31 3 293 309 doi 10 1177 0891243217701083 S2CID 2643962 Thomas Wendi C March 30 2018 How Memphis Gave Up on Dr King s Dream The New York Times Williams Charles 2013 African American Life and Culture in Orange Mound Case Study of a Black Community in Memphis Tennessee 1890 1980 Lanham Maryland USA Rowman amp Littlefield Lexington Books Weeks Charles A 2010 Paths River and Other from Nogales to San Fernando de las Barrancas Chapter 9 inPaths to a Middle Ground The Diplomacy of Natchez Boukfouka Nogales and San Fernando de Las Barrancas 1791 1795 Tuscaloosa Alabama USA University of Alabama Press pp 126 145 ISBN 978 0 8173 5645 3 Retrieved December 2 2015 External links EditMemphis Tennessee at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Travel information from Wikivoyage Official website Memphis Convention amp Visitors Bureau Memphis Chamber of Commerce Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Memphis Tennessee amp oldid 1147524079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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