fbpx
Wikipedia

Mississippi

Mississippi (/ˌmɪsɪˈsɪpi/ (listen)) is a state in the Southeastern region of the United States, bordered to the north by Tennessee; to the east by Alabama; to the south by the Gulf of Mexico; to the southwest by Louisiana; and to the northwest by Arkansas. Mississippi's western boundary is largely defined by the Mississippi River. Mississippi is the 32nd largest and 35th-most populous of the 50 U.S. states and has the lowest per-capita income in the United States. Jackson is both the state's capital and largest city. Greater Jackson is the state's most populous metropolitan area, with a population of 591,978 in 2020.[6]

Mississippi
Nickname(s)
"The Magnolia State" and "The Hospitality State"
Motto(s)
Virtute et armis (Latin)
(English: "By valor and arms")
Anthem: "Go, Mississippi"
Map of the United States with Mississippi highlighted
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodMississippi Territory
Admitted to the UnionDecember 10, 1817 (20th)
Capital
(and largest city)
Jackson
Largest metroGreater Jackson
Government
 • GovernorTate Reeves (R)
 • Lieutenant GovernorDelbert Hosemann (R)
LegislatureMississippi Legislature
 • Upper houseState Senate
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives
U.S. senatorsRoger Wicker (R)
Cindy Hyde-Smith (R)
U.S. House delegation1: Trent Kelly (R)
2: Bennie Thompson (D)
3: Michael Guest (R)
4: Mike Ezell (R) (list)
Area
 • Total48,430 sq mi (125,443 km2)
 • Land46,952 sq mi (121,607 km2)
 • Water1,521 sq mi (3,940 km2)  3%
 • Rank32nd
Dimensions
 • Length340 mi (545 km)
 • Width170 mi (275 km)
Elevation
300 ft (90 m)
Highest elevation807 ft (246.0 m)
Lowest elevation0 ft (0 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total2,963,914[3]
 • Rank35th
 • Density63.5/sq mi (24.5/km2)
  • Rank32nd
 • Median household income
US$43,567 [4]
 • Income rank
50th
DemonymMississippian
Language
 • Official languageEnglish
Time zoneUTC−06:00 (Central)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−05:00 (CDT)
USPS abbreviation
MS
ISO 3166 codeUS-MS
Trad. abbreviationMiss.
Latitude30°12′ N to 35° N
Longitude88°06′ W to 91°39′ W
Websitewww.ms.gov
Mississippi state symbols
Living insignia
Bird
Butterfly
Fish
FlowerMagnolia
Insect
MammalWhite-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
Reptile
Tree
Inanimate insignia
BeverageMilk
Colorsred and blue
DanceClogging
FoodSweet potato
GemstoneEmerald
MineralGold
RockGranite
Shell


SloganVirtute et armis (Latin)
ToyTeddy Bear[5]
State route marker
State quarter
Released in 2002
Lists of United States state symbols

On December 10, 1817, Mississippi became the 20th state admitted to the Union. By 1860, Mississippi was the nation's top cotton-producing state and slaves accounted for 55% of the state population.[7] Mississippi declared its secession from the Union on January 9, 1861, and was one of the seven original Confederate States, which constituted the largest slaveholding states in the nation. Following the Civil War, it was restored to the Union on February 23, 1870.[8]

Until the Great Migration of the 1930s, African Americans were a majority of Mississippi's population. In 2020, 37.6% of Mississippi's population was African American, the highest percentage of any state. Mississippi was the site of many prominent events during the civil rights movement, including the Ole Miss riot of 1962 by white students objecting to desegregation, the 1963 assassination of Medgar Evers, and the 1964 Freedom Summer murders of three activists working on voting rights.

Mississippi frequently ranks low among U.S. states in measures of health, education, and development, while ranking high in measures of poverty.[9][10][11][12] Top economic industries in Mississippi today are agriculture and forestry. Mississippi produces more than half of the country's farm-raised catfish, and is also a top producer of sweet potatoes, cotton and pulpwood. Other main industries in Mississippi include advanced manufacturing, utilities, transportation, and health services.[13]

Mississippi is almost entirely within the Gulf coastal plain, and generally consists of lowland plains and low hills. The northwest remainder of the state consists of the Mississippi Delta, a section of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. Mississippi's highest point is Woodall Mountain at 807 feet (246 m) above sea level adjacent to the Cumberland Plateau; the lowest is the Gulf of Mexico. Mississippi has a humid subtropical climate classification.

Etymology

The state's name is derived from the Mississippi River, which flows along and defines its western boundary. European-American settlers named it after the Ojibwe word ᒥᓯ-ᓰᐱ misi-ziibi (English: great river).

History

Near 10,000 BC Native Americans or Paleo-Indians arrived in what today is referred to as the American South.[14] Paleo-Indians in the South were hunter-gatherers who pursued the megafauna that became extinct following the end of the Pleistocene age. In the Mississippi Delta, Native American settlements and agricultural fields were developed on the natural levees, higher ground in the proximity of rivers. The Native Americans developed extensive fields near their permanent villages. Together with other practices, they created some localized deforestation but did not alter the ecology of the Mississippi Delta as a whole.[15]

After thousands of years, succeeding cultures of the Woodland and Mississippian culture eras developed rich and complex agricultural societies, in which surplus supported the development of specialized trades. Both were mound builder cultures. Those of the Mississippian culture were the largest and most complex, constructed beginning about 950 AD. The peoples had a trading network spanning the continent from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast. Their large earthworks, which expressed their cosmology of political and religious concepts, still stand throughout the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys.

 
Choctaw Village near the Chefuncte, by Francois Bernard, 1869, Peabody Museum—Harvard University. The women are preparing dye in order to color cane strips for making baskets.

Descendant Native American tribes of the Mississippian culture in the Southeast include the Chickasaw and Choctaw. Other tribes who inhabited the territory of Mississippi (and whose names were honored by colonists in local towns) include the Natchez, the Yazoo, and the Biloxi.

The first major European expedition into the territory that became Mississippi was that of the Spanish explorer, Hernando de Soto, who passed through the northeast part of the state in 1540, in his second expedition to the New World.

Colonial era

In April 1699, French colonists established the first European settlement at Fort Maurepas (also known as Old Biloxi), built in the vicinity of present-day Ocean Springs on the Gulf Coast. It was settled by Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville. In 1716, the French founded Natchez on the Mississippi River (as Fort Rosalie); it became the dominant town and trading post of the area. The French called the greater territory "New France"; the Spanish continued to claim part of the Gulf coast area (east of Mobile Bay) of present-day southern Alabama, in addition to the entire area of present-day Florida. The British assumed control of the French territory after the French and Indian War.

 
Pushmataha, Choctaw Principal Chief

During the colonial era, European settlers imported enslaved Africans to work on cash crop plantations. Under French and Spanish rule, there developed a class of free people of color (gens de couleur libres), mostly multiracial descendants of European men and enslaved or free black women, and their mixed-race children. In the early days the French and Spanish colonists were chiefly men. Even as more European women joined the settlements, the men had interracial unions among women of African descent (and increasingly, multiracial descent), both before and after marriages to European women. Often the European men would help their multiracial children get educated or gain apprenticeships for trades, and sometimes they settled property on them; they often freed the mothers and their children if enslaved, as part of contracts of plaçage. With this social capital, the free people of color became artisans, and sometimes educated merchants and property owners, forming a third class between the Europeans and most enslaved Africans in the French and Spanish settlements, although not so large a free community as in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana.

After Great Britain's victory in the French and Indian War (Seven Years' War), the French surrendered the Mississippi area to them under the terms of the Treaty of Paris (1763). They also ceded their areas to the north that were east of the Mississippi River, including the Illinois Country and Quebec. After the Peace of Paris (1783), the lower third of Mississippi came under Spanish rule as part of West Florida. In 1819 the United States completed the purchase of West Florida and all of East Florida in the Adams–Onís Treaty, and in 1822 both were merged into the Florida Territory.

United States territory

After the American Revolution (1775–83), Britain ceded this area to the new United States of America. The Mississippi Territory was organized on April 7, 1798, from territory ceded by Georgia and South Carolina to the United States. Their original colonial charters theoretically extended west to the Pacific Ocean. The Mississippi Territory was later twice expanded to include disputed territory claimed by both the United States and Spain.

From 1800 to about 1830, the United States purchased some lands (Treaty of Doak's Stand) from Native American tribes for new settlements of European Americans. The latter were mostly migrants from other Southern states, particularly Virginia and North Carolina, where soils were exhausted.[16] New settlers kept encroaching on Choctaw land, and they pressed the federal government to expel the Native Americans. On September 27, 1830, the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was signed between the U.S. Government and the Choctaw. The Choctaw agreed to sell their traditional homelands in Mississippi and Alabama, for compensation and removal to reservations in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). This opened up land for sale to European-American migrant settlement.

Article 14 in the treaty allowed those Choctaw who chose to remain in the states to become U.S. citizens, as they were considered to be giving up their tribal membership. They were the second major Native American ethnic group to do so (some Cherokee were the first, who chose to stay in North Carolina and other areas during rather than join the removal).[17][18] Today their descendants include approximately 9,500 persons identifying as Choctaw, who live in Neshoba, Newton, Leake, and Jones counties. The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians reorganized in the 20th century and is a Federally recognized tribe.

Many slaveholders brought enslaved African Americans with them or purchased them through the domestic slave trade, especially in New Orleans. Through the trade, an estimated nearly one million slaves were forcibly transported to the Deep South, including Mississippi, in an internal migration that broke up many slave families of the Upper South, where planters were selling excess slaves. The Southerners imposed slave laws in the Deep South and restricted the rights of free blacks.

Beginning in 1822, slaves in Mississippi were protected by law from cruel and unusual punishment by their owners.[19] The Southern slave codes made the willful killing of a slave illegal in most cases.[20] For example, the 1860 Mississippi case of Oliver v. State charged the defendant with murdering his own slave.[21]

 
D'Evereux Hall in Natchez. Built in 1840, the mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Statehood to Civil War

Mississippi became the 20th state on December 10, 1817. David Holmes was the first governor.[22] The state was still occupied as ancestral land by several Native American tribes, including Choctaw, Natchez, Houma, Creek, and Chickasaw.[23][24]

Plantations were developed primarily along the major rivers, where the waterfront provided access to the major transportation routes. This is also where early towns developed, linked by the steamboats that carried commercial products and crops to markets. The remainder of Native American ancestral land remained largely undeveloped but was sold through treaties until 1826, when the Choctaws and Chickasaws refused to sell more land.[25] The combination of the Mississippi state legislature's abolition of Choctaw Tribal Government in 1829,[26] President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act and the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek of 1830,[27] the Choctaw were effectively forced to sell their land and were transported to Oklahoma Territory. The forced migration of the Choctaw, together with other southeastern tribes removed as a result of the Act, became known as the Trail of Tears.

When cotton was king during the 1850s, Mississippi plantation owners—especially those of the Delta and Black Belt central regions—became wealthy due to the high fertility of the soil, the high price of cotton on the international market, and free labor gained through their holding enslaved African Americans. They used some of their profits to buy more cotton land and more slaves. The planters' dependence on hundreds of thousands of slaves for labor and the severe wealth imbalances among whites, played strong roles both in state politics and in planters' support for secession. Mississippi was a slave society, with the economy dependent on slavery. The state was thinly settled, with population concentrated in the riverfront areas and towns.

By 1860, the enslaved African-American population numbered 436,631 or 55% of the state's total of 791,305 persons. Fewer than 1000 were free people of color.[28] The relatively low population of the state before the American Civil War reflected the fact that land and villages were developed only along the riverfronts, which formed the main transportation corridors. Ninety percent of the Delta bottomlands were still frontier and undeveloped.[29] The state needed many more settlers for development. The land further away from the rivers was cleared by freedmen and white migrants during Reconstruction and later.[29]

Civil War to 20th century

 
Confederate lines, Vicksburg, May 19, 1863. Shows assault by US 1st Battalion, 13th Infantry.

On January 9, 1861, Mississippi became the second state to declare its secession from the Union, and it was one of the founding members of the Confederate States. The first six states to secede were those with the highest number of slaves. During the war, Union and Confederate forces struggled for dominance on the Mississippi River, critical to supply routes and commerce. More than 80,000 Mississippians fought in the Civil War for the Confederate Army. Around 17,000 black and 545 white Mississippians would serve in the Union Army. Pockets of Unionism in Mississippi were in places such as the northeastern corner of the state and Jones County, where Newton Knight, formed a revolt with Unionist leanings, known as the "Free State of Jones."[30] Union General Ulysses S. Grant's long siege of Vicksburg finally gained the Union control of the river in 1863.

In the postwar period, freedmen withdrew from white-run churches to set up independent congregations. The majority of blacks left the Southern Baptist Convention, sharply reducing its membership. They created independent black Baptist congregations. By 1895 they had established numerous black Baptist state associations and the National Baptist Convention of black churches.[31]

In addition, independent black denominations, such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church (established in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the early 19th century) and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (established in New York City), sent missionaries to the South in the postwar years. They quickly attracted hundreds of thousands of converts and founded new churches across the South. Southern congregations brought their own influences to those denominations as well.[31][32]

During Reconstruction, the first Mississippi constitutional convention in 1868, with delegates both black and white, framed a constitution whose major elements would be maintained for 22 years.[33] The convention was the first political organization in the state to include African-American representatives, 17 among the 100 members (32 counties had black majorities at the time). Some among the black delegates were freedmen, but others were educated free blacks who had migrated from the North. The convention adopted universal suffrage; did away with property qualifications for suffrage or for office, a change that also benefited both blacks and poor whites; provided for the state's first public school system; forbade race distinctions in the possession and inheritance of property; and prohibited limiting civil rights in travel.[33] Under the terms of Reconstruction, Mississippi was restored to the Union on February 23, 1870.

Because the Mississippi Delta contained so much fertile bottomland that had not been developed before the American Civil War, 90 percent of the land was still frontier. After the Civil War, tens of thousands of migrants were attracted to the area by higher wages offered by planters trying to develop land. In addition, black and white workers could earn money by clearing the land and selling timber, and eventually advance to ownership. The new farmers included many freedmen, who by the late 19th century achieved unusually high rates of land ownership in the Mississippi bottomlands. In the 1870s and 1880s, many black farmers succeeded in gaining land ownership.[29]

 
The legislature of the state of Mississippi in 1890

Around the start of the 20th century, two-thirds of the Mississippi farmers who owned land in the Delta were African American.[29] But many had become overextended with debt during the falling cotton prices of the difficult years of the late 19th century. Cotton prices fell throughout the decades following the Civil War. As another agricultural depression lowered cotton prices into the 1890s, numerous African-American farmers finally had to sell their land to pay off debts, thus losing the land which they had developed by hard, personal labor.[29]

Democrats had regained control of the state legislature in 1875, after a year of expanded violence against blacks and intimidation of whites in what was called the "white line" campaign, based on asserting white supremacy. Democratic whites were well armed and formed paramilitary organizations such as the Red Shirts to suppress black voting. From 1874 to the elections of 1875, they pressured whites to join the Democrats, and conducted violence against blacks in at least 15 known "riots" in cities around the state to intimidate blacks. They killed a total of 150 blacks, although other estimates place the death toll at twice as many. A total of three white Republicans and five white Democrats were reported killed. In rural areas, deaths of blacks could be covered up. Riots (better described as massacres of blacks) took place in Vicksburg, Clinton, Macon, and in their counties, as well-armed whites broke up black meetings and lynched known black leaders, destroying local political organizations.[34] Seeing the success of this deliberate "Mississippi Plan", South Carolina and other states followed it and also achieved white Democratic dominance. In 1877 by a national compromise, the last of federal troops were withdrawn from the region.

Even in this environment, black Mississippians continued to be elected to local office. However, black residents were deprived of all political power after white legislators passed a new state constitution in 1890 specifically to "eliminate the nigger from politics", according to the state's Democratic governor, James K. Vardaman.[35] It erected barriers to voter registration and instituted electoral provisions that effectively disenfranchised most black Mississippians and many poor whites. Estimates are that 100,000 black and 50,000 white men were removed from voter registration rolls in the state over the next few years.[36]

 
Child workers, Pass Christian, 1911, by Lewis Hine

The loss of political influence contributed to the difficulties of African Americans in their attempts to obtain extended credit in the late 19th century. Together with imposition of Jim Crow and racial segregation laws, whites increased violence against blacks, lynching mostly men, through the period of the 1890s and extending to 1930. Cotton crops failed due to boll weevil infestation and successive severe flooding in 1912 and 1913, creating crisis conditions for many African Americans. With control of the ballot box and more access to credit, white planters bought out such farmers, expanding their ownership of Delta bottomlands. They also took advantage of new railroads sponsored by the state.[29]

20th century to present

In 1900, blacks made up more than half of the state's population. By 1910, a majority of black farmers in the Delta had lost their land and became sharecroppers. By 1920, the third generation after freedom, most African Americans in Mississippi were landless laborers again facing poverty.[29] Starting about 1913, tens of thousands of black Americans left Mississippi for the North in the Great Migration to industrial cities such as St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Philadelphia and New York. They sought jobs, better education for their children, the right to vote, relative freedom from discrimination, and better living. In the migration of 1910–1940, they left a society that had been steadily closing off opportunity. Most migrants from Mississippi took trains directly north to Chicago and often settled near former neighbors.

Blacks also faced violence in the form of lynching, shooting, and the burning of churches. In 1923, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People stated "the Negro feels that life is not safe in Mississippi and his life may be taken with impunity at any time upon the slightest pretext or provocation by a white man".[37]

 
Mexican American boy and African American man at the Knowlton Plantation, Perthshire, Mississippi, in 1939, by Marion Post Wolcott
 
Dancing at a juke joint near Clarksdale, Mississippi, in 1939, by Marion Post Wolcott

In the early 20th century, some industries were established in Mississippi, but jobs were generally restricted to whites, including child workers. The lack of jobs also drove some southern whites north to cities such as Chicago and Detroit, seeking employment, where they also competed with European immigrants. The state depended on agriculture, but mechanization put many farm laborers out of work.

By 1900, many white ministers, especially in the towns, subscribed to the Social Gospel movement, which attempted to apply Christian ethics to social and economic needs of the day. Many strongly supported Prohibition, believing it would help alleviate and prevent many sins.[38] Mississippi became a dry state in 1908 by an act of the state legislature.[39] It remained dry until the legislature passed a local option bill in 1966.[40]

African-American Baptist churches grew to include more than twice the number of members as their white Baptist counterparts. The African-American call for social equality resonated throughout the Great Depression in the 1930s and World War II in the 1940s.

The Second Great Migration from the South started in the 1940s, lasting until 1970. Almost half a million people left Mississippi in the second migration, three-quarters of them black. Nationwide during the first half of the 20th century, African Americans became rapidly urbanized and many worked in industrial jobs. The Second Great Migration included destinations in the West, especially California, where the buildup of the defense industry offered higher-paying jobs to both African Americans and whites.

Blacks and whites in Mississippi generated rich, quintessentially American music traditions: gospel music, country music, jazz, blues and rock and roll. All were invented, promulgated or heavily developed by Mississippi musicians, many of them African American, and most came from the Mississippi Delta. Many musicians carried their music north to Chicago, where they made it the heart of that city's jazz and blues.

So many African Americans left in the Great Migration that after the 1930s, they became a minority in Mississippi. In 1960 they made up 42% of the state's population.[41] The whites maintained their discriminatory voter registration processes established in 1890, preventing most blacks from voting, even if they were well educated. Court challenges were not successful until later in the century. After World War II, African-American veterans returned with renewed commitment to be treated as full citizens of the United States and increasingly organized to gain enforcement of their constitutional rights.

The Civil Rights movement had many roots in religion, and the strong community of churches helped supply volunteers and moral purpose for their activism. Mississippi was a center of activity, based in black churches, to educate and register black voters, and to work for integration. In 1954 the state had created the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission, a tax-supported agency, chaired by the Governor, that claimed to work for the state's image but effectively spied on activists and passed information to the local White Citizens' Councils to suppress black activism. White Citizens Councils had been formed in many cities and towns to resist integration of schools following the unanimous 1954 United States Supreme Court ruling (Brown v. Board of Education) that segregation of public schools was unconstitutional. They used intimidation and economic blackmail against activists and suspected activists, including teachers and other professionals. Techniques included loss of jobs and eviction from rental housing.

In the summer of 1964 students and community organizers from across the country came to help register black voters in Mississippi and establish Freedom Schools. The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party was established to challenge the all-white Democratic Party of the Solid South. Most white politicians resisted such changes. Chapters of the Ku Klux Klan and its sympathizers used violence against activists, most notably the murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner in 1964 during the Freedom Summer campaign. This was a catalyst for Congressional passage the following year of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Mississippi earned a reputation in the 1960s as a reactionary state.[42][43]

After decades of disenfranchisement, African Americans in the state gradually began to exercise their right to vote again for the first time since the 19th century, following the passage of federal civil rights legislation in 1964 and 1965, which ended de jure segregation and enforced constitutional voting rights. Registration of African-American voters increased and black candidates ran in the 1967 elections for state and local offices. The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party fielded some candidates. Teacher Robert G. Clark of Holmes County was the first African American to be elected to the State House since Reconstruction. He continued as the only African American in the state legislature until 1976 and was repeatedly elected into the 21st century, including three terms as Speaker of the House.[44]

In 1966, the state was the last to repeal officially statewide prohibition of alcohol. Before that, Mississippi had taxed the illegal alcohol brought in by bootleggers. Governor Paul Johnson urged repeal and the sheriff "raided the annual Junior League Mardi Gras ball at the Jackson Country Club, breaking open the liquor cabinet and carting off the Champagne before a startled crowd of nobility and high-ranking state officials".[45]

On August 17, 1969, Category 5 Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi coast, killing 248 people and causing US$1.5 billion in damage (1969 dollars).

Mississippi ratified the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, in March 1984, which had already entered into force by August 1920; granting women the right to vote.[46]

In 1987, 20 years after the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled in 1967's Loving v. Virginia that a similar Virginian law was unconstitutional, Mississippi repealed its ban on interracial marriage (also known as miscegenation), which had been enacted in 1890. It also repealed the segregationist-era poll tax in 1989. In 1995, the state symbolically ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, which had abolished slavery in 1865. Though ratified in 1995, the state never officially notified the Federal Archivist, which kept the ratification unofficial until 2013, when Ken Sullivan contacted the office of Secretary of State of Mississippi, Delbert Hosemann, who agreed to file the paperwork and make it official.[47][48][49] In 2009, the legislature passed a bill to repeal other discriminatory civil rights laws, which had been enacted in 1964, the same year as the federal Civil Rights Act, but ruled unconstitutional in 1967 by federal courts. Republican Governor Haley Barbour signed the bill into law.[50]

The end of legal segregation and Jim Crow led to the integration of some churches, but most today remain divided along racial and cultural lines, having developed different traditions. After the Civil War, most African Americans left white churches to establish their own independent congregations, particularly Baptist churches, establishing state associations and a national association by the end of the century. They wanted to express their own traditions of worship and practice.[51] In more diverse communities, such as Hattiesburg, some churches have multiracial congregations.[52]

On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina, though a Category 3 storm upon final landfall, caused even greater destruction across the entire 90 miles (145 km) of the Mississippi Gulf Coast from Louisiana to Alabama.

 
The previous flag of Mississippi, used until June 30, 2020, featured the Confederate battle flag.

The previous flag of Mississippi, used until June 30, 2020, featured the Confederate battle flag. Mississippi became the last state to remove the Confederate battle flag as an official state symbol on June 30, 2020, when Governor Tate Reeves signed a law officially retiring the second state flag. The current flag, The "New Magnolia" flag, was selected via referendum as part of the general election on November 3, 2020.[53][54] It officially became the state flag on January 11, 2021, after being signed into law by the state legislature and governor.

Geography

 
 
Bottomland hardwood swamp near Ashland
 
Map of the Mississippi Delta Region (outlined in green)

Mississippi is bordered to the north by Tennessee, to the east by Alabama, to the south by Louisiana and a narrow coast on the Gulf of Mexico; and to the west, across the Mississippi River, by Louisiana and Arkansas.

In addition to its namesake, major rivers in Mississippi include the Big Black River, the Pearl River, the Yazoo River, the Pascagoula River, and the Tombigbee River. Major lakes include Ross Barnett Reservoir, Arkabutla, Sardis, and Grenada, with the largest being Sardis Lake.

Mississippi is entirely composed of lowlands, the highest point being Woodall Mountain, at 807 ft (246 m) above sea level, in the northeastern part of the state. The lowest point is sea level at the Gulf Coast. The state's mean elevation is 300 ft (91 m) above sea level.

Most of Mississippi is part of the East Gulf Coastal Plain. The coastal plain is generally composed of low hills, such as the Pine Hills in the south and the North Central Hills. The Pontotoc Ridge and the Fall Line Hills in the northeast have somewhat higher elevations. Yellow-brown loess soil is found in the western parts of the state. The northeast is a region of fertile black earth uplands, a geology that extend into the Alabama Black Belt.

The coastline includes large bays at Bay St. Louis, Biloxi, and Pascagoula. It is separated from the Gulf of Mexico proper by the shallow Mississippi Sound, which is partially sheltered by Petit Bois Island, Horn Island, East and West Ship Islands, Deer Island, Round Island, and Cat Island.

The northwest remainder of the state consists of the Mississippi Delta, a section of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. The plain is narrow in the south and widens north of Vicksburg. The region has rich soil, partly made up of silt which had been regularly deposited by the flood waters of the Mississippi River.

Areas under the management of the National Park Service include:[55]

Major cities and towns

 
Map with all counties and their county seats

Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 50,000 (United States Census Bureau as of 2017):[56]

  1. Jackson (166,965)
  2. Gulfport (71,822)
  3. Southaven (54,031)

Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 20,000 but fewer than 50,000 (United States Census Bureau as of 2017):[56]

  1. Hattiesburg (46,377)
  2. Biloxi (45,908)
  3. Tupelo (38,114)
  4. Meridian (37,940)
  5. Olive Branch (37,435)
  6. Greenville (30,686)
  7. Horn Lake (27,095)
  8. Pearl (26,534)
  9. Madison (25,627)
  10. Starkville (25,352)
  11. Clinton (25,154)
  12. Ridgeland (24,266)
  13. Columbus (24,041)
  14. Brandon (23,999)
  15. Oxford (23,639)
  16. Vicksburg (22,489)
  17. Pascagoula (21,733)

Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 10,000 but fewer than 20,000 (United States Census Bureau as of 2017):[56]

  1. Gautier (18,512)
  2. Laurel (18,493)
  3. Ocean Springs (17,682)
  4. Hernando (15,981)
  5. Clarksdale (15,732)
  6. Long Beach (15,642)
  7. Natchez (14,886)
  8. Corinth (14,643)
  9. Greenwood (13,996)
  10. Moss Point (13,398)
  11. McComb (13,267)
  12. Bay St. Louis (13,043)
  13. Canton (12,725)
  14. Grenada (12,267)
  15. Brookhaven (12,173)
  16. Cleveland (11,729)
  17. Byram (11,671)
  18. D'Iberville (11,610)
  19. Picayune (11,008)
  20. West Point (10,675)
  21. Yazoo City (11,018)
  22. Petal (10,633)

(See: Lists of cities, towns and villages, census-designated places, metropolitan areas, micropolitan areas, and counties in Mississippi)

Climate

 
Köppen climate types of Mississippi, using 1991-2020 climate normals

Mississippi has a humid subtropical climate with long, hot and humid summers, and short, mild winters. Temperatures average about 81 °F (27 °C) in July and about 42 °F (6 °C) in January. The temperature varies little statewide in the summer; however, in winter, the region near Mississippi Sound is significantly warmer than the inland portion of the state. The recorded temperature in Mississippi has ranged from −19 °F (−28 °C), in 1966, at Corinth in the northeast, to 115 °F (46 °C), in 1930, at Holly Springs in the north. Heavy snowfall rarely occurs, but isn't unheard of, such as during the New Year's Eve 1963 snowstorm. Yearly precipitation generally increases from north to south, with the regions closer to the Gulf being the most humid. Thus, Clarksdale, in the northwest, gets about 50 in (1,300 mm) of precipitation annually and Biloxi, in the south, about 61 in (1,500 mm). Small amounts of snow fall in northern and central Mississippi; snow is occasional in the southern part of the state.

 
Hurricanes Camille (left) and Katrina from satellite imagery, as they approached the Mississippi Gulf Coast

The late summer and fall is the seasonal period of risk for hurricanes moving inland from the Gulf of Mexico, especially in the southern part of the state. Hurricane Camille in 1969 and Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which killed 238 people in the state, were the most devastating hurricanes to hit the state. Both caused nearly total storm surge destruction of structures in and around Gulfport, Biloxi, and Pascagoula.

As in the rest of the Deep South, thunderstorms are common in Mississippi, especially in the southern part of the state. On average, Mississippi has around 27 tornadoes annually; the northern part of the state has more tornadoes earlier in the year and the southern part a higher frequency later in the year. Two of the five deadliest tornadoes in United States history have occurred in the state. These storms struck Natchez, in southwest Mississippi (see The Great Natchez Tornado) and Tupelo, in the northeast corner of the state. About seven F5 tornadoes have been recorded in the state.

Monthly normal high and low temperatures (°F) for various Mississippi cities
City Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Gulfport 61/43 64/46 70/52 77/59 84/66 89/72 91/74 91/74 87/70 79/60 70/51 63/45
Jackson 55/35 60/38 68/45 75/52 82/61 89/68 91/71 91/70 86/65 77/52 66/43 58/37
Meridian 58/35 63/38 70/44 77/50 84/60 90/67 93/70 93/70 88/64 78/51 68/43 60/37
Tupelo 50/30 56/34 65/41 74/48 81/58 88/66 91/70 91/68 85/62 75/49 63/40 54/33
Source:[57]
Climate data for Mississippi (1980–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °F (°C) 54.3
(12.4)
58.7
(14.8)
67.2
(19.6)
75.2
(24.0)
82.6
(28.1)
88.9
(31.6)
91.4
(33.0)
91.5
(33.1)
86.3
(30.2)
76.9
(24.9)
66.5
(19.2)
56.6
(13.7)
74.7
(23.7)
Average low °F (°C) 33.3
(0.7)
36.7
(2.6)
43.8
(6.6)
51.3
(10.7)
60.3
(15.7)
67.6
(19.8)
70.6
(21.4)
69.7
(20.9)
63
(17)
51.9
(11.1)
43.1
(6.2)
35.7
(2.1)
52.3
(11.2)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 5.0
(130)
5.2
(130)
5.1
(130)
5.0
(130)
5.1
(130)
4.4
(110)
4.5
(110)
3.9
(99)
3.6
(91)
4.1
(100)
4.9
(120)
5.7
(140)
56.5
(1,420)
Source: USA.com[58]


Climate change

Climate change in Mississippi encompasses the effects of climate change, attributed to man-made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, in the U.S. state of Mississippi.

Studies show that Mississippi is among a string of "Deep South" states that will experience the worst effects of climate change in the United States.[59] The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports:

"In the coming decades, Mississippi will become warmer, and both floods and droughts may be more severe. Unlike most of the nation, Mississippi did not become warmer during the last 50 to 100 years. But soils have become drier, annual rainfall has increased, more rain arrives in heavy downpours, and sea level is rising about one inch every seven years. The changing climate is likely to increase damages from tropical storms, reduce crop yields, harm livestock, increase the number of unpleasantly hot days, and increase the risk of heat stroke and other heat-related illnesses".[60]

Ecology, flora, and fauna

 
Leaving Tennessee on US Highway 61
 
Clark Creek Natural Area, Wilkinson County

Mississippi is heavily forested, with over half of the state's area covered by wild or cultivated trees. The southeastern part of the state is dominated by longleaf pine, in both uplands and lowland flatwoods and Sarracenia bogs. The Mississippi Alluvial Plain, or Delta, is primarily farmland and aquaculture ponds but also has sizeable tracts of cottonwood, willows, bald cypress, and oaks. A belt of loess extends north to south in the western part of the state, where the Mississippi Alluvial Plain reaches the first hills; this region is characterized by rich, mesic mixed hardwood forests, with some species disjunct from Appalachian forests.[61] Two bands of historical prairie, the Jackson Prairie and the Black Belt, run northwest to southeast in the middle and northeastern part of the state. Although these areas have been highly degraded by conversion to agriculture, a few areas remain, consisting of grassland with interspersed woodland of eastern redcedar, oaks, hickories, osage-orange, and sugarberry. The rest of the state, primarily north of Interstate 20 not including the prairie regions, consists of mixed pine-hardwood forest, common species being loblolly pine, oaks (e.g., water oak), hickories, sweetgum, and elm. Areas along large rivers are commonly inhabited by bald cypress, water tupelo, water elm, and bitter pecan. Commonly cultivated trees include loblolly pine, longleaf pine, cherrybark oak, and cottonwood.

There are approximately 3000 species of vascular plants known from Mississippi.[62] As of 2018, a project funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation aims to update that checklist of plants with museum (herbarium) vouchers and create an online atlas of each species's distribution.[63]

About 420 species of birds are known to inhabit Mississippi.

Mississippi has one of the richest fish faunas in the United States, with 204 native fish species.[64]

Mississippi also has a rich freshwater mussel fauna, with about 90 species in the primary family of native mussels (Unionidae).[65] Several of these species were extirpated during the construction of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.

Mississippi is home to 63 crayfish species, including at least 17 endemic species.[66]

Mississippi is home to eight winter stonefly species.[67]

Ecological problems

Flooding

Due to seasonal flooding, possible from December to June, the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers and their tributaries created a fertile floodplain in the Mississippi Delta. The river's flooding created natural levees, which planters had built higher to try to prevent flooding of land cultivated for cotton crops. Temporary workers built levees along the Mississippi River on top of the natural levees that formed from dirt deposited after the river flooded.

From 1858 to 1861, the state took over levee building, accomplishing it through contractors and hired labor. In those years, planters considered their slaves too valuable to hire out for such dangerous work. Contractors hired gangs of Irish immigrant laborers to build levees and sometimes clear land. Many of the Irish were relatively recent immigrants from the famine years who were struggling to get established.[68] Before the American Civil War, the earthwork levees averaged six feet in height, although in some areas they reached twenty feet.

Flooding has been an integral part of Mississippi history, but clearing of the land for cultivation and to supply wood fuel for steamboats took away the absorption of trees and undergrowth. The banks of the river were denuded, becoming unstable and changing the character of the river. After the Civil War, major floods swept down the valley in 1865, 1867, 1874 and 1882. Such floods regularly overwhelmed levees damaged by Confederate and Union fighting during the war, as well as those constructed after the war.[69] In 1877, the state created the Mississippi Levee District for southern counties.

In 1879, the United States Congress created the Mississippi River Commission, whose responsibilities included aiding state levee boards in the construction of levees. Both white and black transient workers were hired to build the levees in the late 19th century. By 1882, levees averaged seven feet in height, but many in the southern Delta were severely tested by the flood that year.[69] After the 1882 flood, the levee system was expanded. In 1884, the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta Levee District was established to oversee levee construction and maintenance in the northern Delta counties; also included were some counties in Arkansas which were part of the Delta.[70]

Flooding overwhelmed northwestern Mississippi in 1912–1913, causing heavy damage to the levee districts. Regional losses and the Mississippi River Levee Association's lobbying for a flood control bill helped gain passage of national bills in 1917 and 1923 to provide federal matching funds for local levee districts, on a scale of 2:1. Although U.S. participation in World War I interrupted funding of levees, the second round of funding helped raise the average height of levees in the Mississippi-Yazoo Delta to 22 feet (6.7 m) in the 1920s.[71] Scientists now understand the levees have increased the severity of flooding by increasing the flow speed of the river and reducing the area of the floodplains. The region was severely damaged due to the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, which broke through the levees. There were losses of millions of dollars in property, stock and crops. The most damage occurred in the lower Delta, including Washington and Bolivar counties.[72]

Even as scientific knowledge about the Mississippi River has grown, upstream development and the consequences of the levees have caused more severe flooding in some years. Scientists now understand that the widespread clearing of land and building of the levees have changed the nature of the river. Such work removed the natural protection and absorption of wetlands and forest cover, strengthening the river's current. The state and federal governments have been struggling for the best approaches to restore some natural habitats in order to best interact with the original riverine ecology.

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18007,600
181031,306311.9%
182075,448141.0%
1830136,62181.1%
1840375,651175.0%
1850606,52661.5%
1860791,30530.5%
1870827,9224.6%
18801,131,59736.7%
18901,289,60014.0%
19001,551,27020.3%
19101,797,11415.8%
19201,790,618−0.4%
19302,009,82112.2%
19402,183,7968.7%
19502,178,914−0.2%
19602,178,1410.0%
19702,216,9121.8%
19802,520,63813.7%
19902,573,2162.1%
20002,844,65810.5%
20102,967,2974.3%
20202,961,279−0.2%
Source: 1910–2020[73]
 
Mississippi population density map

Mississippi's population has remained from 2 million people at the 1930 U.S. census, to 2.9 million at the 2020 census.[74] In contrast with Alabama to its east, and Louisiana to its west, Mississippi has been the slowest growing of the three Gulf coast states by population.[75] According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Mississippi's center of population is located in Leake County, in the town of Lena.[76]

From 2000 to 2010, the United States Census Bureau reported that Mississippi had the highest rate of increase in people identifying as mixed-race, up 70 percent in the decade; it amounts to a total of 1.1 percent of the population.[52] In addition, Mississippi led the nation for most of the last decade in the growth of mixed marriages among its population. The total population has not increased significantly, but is young. Some of the above change in identification as mixed-race is due to new births. But, it appears mostly to reflect those residents who have chosen to identify as more than one race, who in earlier years may have identified by just one race and/or ethnicity. A binary racial system had been in place since slavery times and the days of official government racial segregation. In the civil rights era, people of African descent banded together in an inclusive community to achieve political power and gain restoration of their civil rights.

As the demographer William H. Frey noted, "In Mississippi, I think it's [identifying as mixed race] changed from within."[52] Historically in Mississippi, after Indian removal in the 1830s, the major groups were designated as black (African American), who were then mostly enslaved, and white (primarily European American). Matthew Snipp, also a demographer, commented on the increase in the 21st century in the number of people identifying as being of more than one race: "In a sense, they're rendering a more accurate portrait of their racial heritage that in the past would have been suppressed."[52]

After having accounted for a majority of the state's population since well before the American Civil War and through the 1930s, today African Americans constitute approximately 37.8 percent of the state's population. Most have ancestors who were enslaved, with many forcibly transported from the Upper South in the 19th century to work on the area's new plantations. Many of these slaves were mixed race, with European ancestors, as there were many children born into slavery with white fathers. Some also have Native American ancestry.[77] During the first half of the 20th century, a total of nearly 400,000 African Americans left the state during the Great Migration, for opportunities in the North, Midwest and West. They became a minority in the state for the first time since early in its development.[78]

Race and ethnicity

 
Map of counties in Mississippi by racial plurality, per the 2020 U.S. census
Legend
Racial and ethnic composition as of the 2020 census
Race and ethnicity[74] Alone Total
White (non-Hispanic) 55.4% 55.4
 
57.9% 57.9
 
African American (non-Hispanic) 36.4% 36.4
 
37.6% 37.6
 
Hispanic or Latino[b] 3.6% 3.6
 
Asian 1.1% 1.1
 
1.5% 1.5
 
Native American 0.5% 0.5
 
1.6% 1.6
 
Pacific Islander 0.04% 0.04
 
0.1% 0.1
 
Other 0.2% 0.2
 
0.7% 0.7
 
Historical racial and ethnic composition from 1990-2010
Racial composition 1990[79] 2000[80] 2010[81]
White 63.5% 61.4% 59.1%
Black 35.6% 36.3% 37.0%
Asian 0.5% 0.7% 0.9%
Native 0.3% 0.4% 0.5%
Other race 0.1% 0.5% 1.3%
Two or more races 0.7% 1.2%

Americans of Scots-Irish, English and Scottish ancestry are present throughout the state. It is believed that there are more people with such ancestry than identify as such on the census, in part because their immigrant ancestors are more distant in their family histories. English, Scottish and Scots-Irish are generally the most under-reported ancestry groups in both the South Atlantic states and the East South Central states. The historian David Hackett Fischer estimated that a minimum 20% of Mississippi's population is of English ancestry, though the figure is probably much higher, and another large percentage is of Scottish ancestry. Many Mississippians of such ancestry identify simply as American on questionnaires, because their families have been in North America for centuries.[82][83] In the 1980 U.S. census, 656,371 Mississippians of a total of 1,946,775 identified as being of English ancestry, making them 38% of the state at the time.[84]

The state in 2010 had the highest proportion of African Americans in the nation. The African American percentage of population has begun to increase due mainly to a younger population than the whites (the total fertility rates of the two races are approximately equal). Due to patterns of settlement and whites putting their children in private schools, in almost all of Mississippi's public school districts, a majority of students are African American. African Americans are the majority ethnic group in the northwestern Yazoo Delta, and the southwestern and the central parts of the state. These are areas where, historically, African Americans owned land as farmers in the 19th century following the Civil War, or worked on cotton plantations and farms.[85]

People of French Creole ancestry form the largest demographic group in Hancock County on the Gulf Coast. The African American, Choctaw (mostly in Neshoba County), and Chinese American portions of the population are also almost entirely native born.

The Chinese first came to Mississippi as contract workers from Cuba and California in the 1870s, and they originally worked as laborers on the cotton plantations. However, most Chinese families came later between 1910 and 1930 from other states, and most operated small family-owned groceries stores in the many small towns of the Delta.[86] In these roles, the ethnic Chinese carved out a niche in the state between black and white, where they were concentrated in the Delta. These small towns have declined since the late 20th century, and many ethnic Chinese have joined the exodus to larger cities, including Jackson. Their population in the state overall has increased in the 21st century.[87][88][89][90]

In the early 1980s many Vietnamese immigrated to Mississippi and other states along the Gulf of Mexico, where they became employed in fishing-related work.[91]

As of 2011, 53.8% of Mississippi's population younger than age 1 were minorities, meaning that they had at least one parent who was not non-Hispanic white.[92]

Birth data

Note: Births in table don't add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.

Live Births by Single Race/Ethnicity of Mother
Race 2013[93] 2014[94] 2015[95] 2016[96] 2017[97] 2018[98] 2019[99] 2020[100]
White: 20,818 (53.9%) 20,894 (53.9%) 20,730 (54.0%) ... ... ... ... ...
> non-Hispanic White 19,730 (51.0%) 19,839 (51.3%) 19,635 (51.1%) 19,411 (51.2%) 18,620 (49.8%) 18,597 (50.2%) 18,229 (49.8%) 17,648 (49.8%)
Black 17,020 (44.0%) 17,036 (44.0%) 16,846 (43.9%) 15,879 (41.9%) 16,087 (43.1%) 15,797 (42.7%) 15,706 (42.9%) 15,155 (42.7%)
Asian 504 (1.3%) 583 (1.5%) 559 (1.5%) 475 (1.3%) 502 (1.3%) 411 (1.1%) 455 (1.2%) 451 (1.3%)
American Indian 292 (0.7%) 223 (0.6%) 259 (0.7%) 215 (0.6%) 225 (0.6%) 238 (0.6%) 242 (0.7%) 252 (0.7%)
Hispanic (of any race) 1,496 (3.9%) 1,547 (4.0%) 1,613 (4.2%) 1,664 (4.4%) 1,650 (4.4%) 1,666 (4.5%) 1,709 (4.7%) 1,679 (4.7%)
Total Mississippi 38,634 (100%) 38,736 (100%) 38,394 (100%) 37,928 (100%) 37,357 (100%) 37,000 (100%) 36,636 (100%) 35,473 (100%)
  • Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.

LGBT community

The 2010 United States census counted 6,286 same-sex unmarried-partner households in Mississippi, an increase of 1,512 since the 2000 United States census.[101] Of those same-sex couples roughly 33% contained at least one child, giving Mississippi the distinction of leading the nation in the percentage of same-sex couples raising children.[102] Mississippi has the largest percentage of African American same-sex couples among total households. The state capital, Jackson, ranks tenth in the nation in concentration of African American same-sex couples. The state ranks fifth in the nation in the percentage of Hispanic same-sex couples among all Hispanic households and ninth in the highest concentration of same-sex couples who are seniors.[103]

Language

Top 10 non-English languages spoken in Mississippi
Language Percentage of population
(as of 2010)[104]
Spanish 1.9%
French 0.4%
German, Vietnamese, and Choctaw (tied) 0.2%
Korean, Chinese, Tagalog, Italian (tied) 0.1%

In 2000, 96.4% of Mississippi residents five years old and older spoke only English in the home, a decrease from 97.2% in 1990.[105] English is largely Southern American English, with some South Midland speech in northern and eastern Mississippi. There is a common absence of final /r/, particularly in the elderly natives and African Americans, and the lengthening and weakening of the diphthongs /aɪ/ and /ɔɪ/ as in 'ride' and 'oil'. South Midland terms in northern Mississippi include: tow sack (burlap bag), dog irons (andirons), plum peach (clingstone peach), snake doctor (dragonfly), and stone wall (rock fence).[105]

Religion

Religion in Mississippi (2020)[106]
Religion Percent
Protestant
67%
Catholic
12%
Other Christian
1%
Unaffiliated
15%
Other faith
1%

Under French and Spanish rule beginning in the 17th century, European colonists were mostly Roman Catholics. The growth of the cotton culture after 1815 brought in tens of thousands of Anglo-American settlers each year, most of whom were Protestants from Southeastern states. Due to such migration, there was rapid growth in the number of Protestant denominations and churches, especially among the Methodists, Presbyterians and Baptists.[107]

 
Liberty Baptist Church, Amite County

The revivals of the Great Awakening in the late 18th and early 19th centuries initially attracted the "plain folk" by reaching out to all members of society, including women and blacks. Both slaves and free blacks were welcomed into Methodist and Baptist churches. Independent black Baptist churches were established before 1800 in Virginia, Kentucky, South Carolina and Georgia, and later developed in Mississippi as well.

In the post-Civil War years, religion became more influential as the South became known as the "Bible Belt". By 2014, the Pew Research Center determined 83% of its population was Christian.[108] In a separate study by the Public Religion Research Institute in 2020, 80% of the population was Christian.[109]

Since the 1970s, fundamentalist conservative churches have grown rapidly, fueling Mississippi's conservative political trends among whites.[107] In 1973 the Presbyterian Church in America attracted numerous conservative congregations. As of 2010, Mississippi remained a stronghold of the denomination, which originally was brought by Scots immigrants. The state has the highest adherence rate of the PCA in 2010, with 121 congregations and 18,500 members. It is among the few states where the PCA has higher membership than the PC(USA).[110]

According to the Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA), in 2010 the Southern Baptist Convention had 907,384 adherents and was the largest religious denomination in the state, followed by the United Methodist Church with 204,165, and the Roman Catholic Church with 112,488.[111] Other religions have a small presence in Mississippi; as of 2010, there were 5,012 Muslims; 4,389 Hindus; and 816 of the Baháʼí Faith.[111]

According to the Pew Research Center in 2014, with evangelical Protestantism as the predominant Christian affiliation, the Southern Baptist Convention remained the largest denomination in the state.[108] Non-denominational Evangelicals were the second-largest, followed by historically African American denominations such as the National Baptist Convention, USA and Progressive National Baptist Convention.

Public opinion polls have consistently ranked Mississippi as the most religious state in the United States, with 59% of Mississippians considering themselves "very religious". The same survey also found that 11% of the population were non-Religious.[112] In a 2009 Gallup poll, 63% of Mississippians said that they attended church weekly or almost weekly—the highest percentage of all states (U.S. average was 42%, and the lowest percentage was in Vermont at 23%).[113] Another 2008 Gallup poll found that 85% of Mississippians considered religion an important part of their daily lives, the highest figure among all states (U.S. average 65%).[114]

Health

The state is ranked 50th or last place among all the states for health care, according to the Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit foundation working to advance performance of the health care system.[115]

Mississippi has the highest rate of infant and neonatal deaths of any U.S. state. Age-adjusted data also shows Mississippi has the highest overall death rate, and the highest death rate from heart disease, hypertension and hypertensive renal disease, influenza and pneumonia.[116]

In 2011, Mississippi (and Arkansas) had the fewest dentists per capita in the United States.[117]

For three years in a row, more than 30 percent of Mississippi's residents have been classified as obese. In a 2006 study, 22.8 percent of the state's children were classified as such. Mississippi had the highest rate of obesity of any U.S. state from 2005 to 2008, and also ranks first in the nation for high blood pressure, diabetes, and adult inactivity.[118][119] In a 2008 study of African-American women, contributing risk factors were shown to be: lack of knowledge about body mass index (BMI), dietary behavior, physical inactivity and lack of social support, defined as motivation and encouragement by friends.[120] A 2002 report on African-American adolescents noted a 1999 survey which suggests that a third of children were obese, with higher ratios for those in the Delta.[121]

The study stressed that "obesity starts in early childhood extending into the adolescent years and then possibly into adulthood". It noted impediments to needed behavioral modification, including the Delta likely being "the most underserved region in the state" with African Americans the major ethnic group; lack of accessibility and availability of medical care; and an estimated 60% of residents living below the poverty level. Additional risk factors were that most schools had no physical education curriculum and nutrition education is not emphasized. Previous intervention strategies may have been largely ineffective due to not being culturally sensitive or practical.[121] A 2006 survey found nearly 95 percent of Mississippi adults considered childhood obesity to be a serious problem.[122]

A 2017 study found that Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi was the leading health insurer with 53% followed by UnitedHealth Group at 13%.[123]

Economy

 
A Mississippi U.S. quarter

The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that Mississippi's total state product in 2010 was $98 billion.[124] GDP growth was .5 percent in 2015 and is estimated to be 2.4 in 2016 according to Dr. Darrin Webb, the state's chief economist, who noted it would make two consecutive years of positive growth since the recession.[125] Per capita personal income in 2006 was $26,908, the lowest per capita personal income of any state, but the state also has the nation's lowest living costs. 2015 data records the adjusted per capita personal income at $40,105.[125] Mississippians consistently rank as one of the highest per capita in charitable contributions.[126]

At 56 percent, the state has one of the lowest workforce participation rates in the country. Approximately 70,000 adults are disabled, which is 10 percent of the workforce.[125]

Mississippi's rank as one of the poorest states is related to its dependence on cotton agriculture before and after the Civil War, late development of its frontier bottomlands in the Mississippi Delta, repeated natural disasters of flooding in the late 19th and early 20th century that required massive capital investment in levees, and ditching and draining the bottomlands, and slow development of railroads to link bottomland towns and river cities.[127] In addition, when Democrats regained control of the state legislature, they passed the 1890 constitution that discouraged corporate industrial development in favor of rural agriculture, a legacy that would slow the state's progress for years.[128]

Before the Civil War, Mississippi was the fifth-wealthiest state in the nation, its wealth generated by the labor of slaves in cotton plantations along the rivers.[129] Slaves were counted as property and the rise in the cotton markets since the 1840s had increased their value. By 1860, a majority—55 percent—of the population of Mississippi was enslaved.[130] Ninety percent of the Delta bottomlands were undeveloped and the state had low overall density of population.

 
Sharecropper's daughter, Lauderdale County, 1935

Largely due to the domination of the plantation economy, focused on the production of agricultural cotton, the state's elite was reluctant to invest in infrastructure such as roads and railroads. They educated their children privately. Industrialization did not reach many areas until the late 20th century. The planter aristocracy, the elite of antebellum Mississippi, kept the tax structure low for their own benefit, making only private improvements. Before the war the most successful planters, such as Confederate President Jefferson Davis, owned riverside properties along the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers in the Mississippi Delta. Away from the riverfronts, most of the Delta was undeveloped frontier.

During the Civil War, 30,000 Mississippi soldiers, mostly white, died from wounds and disease, and many more were left crippled and wounded. Changes to the labor structure and an agricultural depression throughout the South caused severe losses in wealth. In 1860 assessed valuation of property in Mississippi had been more than $500 million, of which $218 million (43 percent) was estimated as the value of slaves. By 1870, total assets had decreased in value to roughly $177 million.[131]

Poor whites and landless former slaves suffered the most from the postwar economic depression. The constitutional convention of early 1868 appointed a committee to recommend what was needed for relief of the state and its citizens. The committee found severe destitution among the laboring classes.[132] It took years for the state to rebuild levees damaged in battles. The upset of the commodity system impoverished the state after the war. By 1868 an increased cotton crop began to show possibilities for free labor in the state, but the crop of 565,000 bales produced in 1870 was still less than half of prewar figures.[133]

Blacks cleared land, selling timber and developing bottomland to achieve ownership. In 1900, two-thirds of farm owners in Mississippi were blacks, a major achievement for them and their families. Due to the poor economy, low cotton prices and difficulty of getting credit, many of these farmers could not make it through the extended financial difficulties. Two decades later, the majority of African Americans were sharecroppers. The low prices of cotton into the 1890s meant that more than a generation of African Americans lost the result of their labor when they had to sell their farms to pay off accumulated debts.[29]

After the Civil War, the state refused for years to build human capital by fully educating all its citizens. In addition, the reliance on agriculture grew increasingly costly as the state suffered loss of cotton crops due to the devastation of the boll weevil in the early 20th century, devastating floods in 1912–1913 and 1927, collapse of cotton prices after 1920, and drought in 1930.[127]

It was not until 1884, after the flood of 1882, that the state created the Mississippi-Yazoo Delta District Levee Board and started successfully achieving longer-term plans for levees in the upper Delta.[70] Despite the state's building and reinforcing levees for years, the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 broke through and caused massive flooding of 27,000 square miles (70,000 km2) throughout the Delta, homelessness for hundreds of thousands, and millions of dollars in property damages. With the Depression coming so soon after the flood, the state suffered badly during those years. In the Great Migration, hundreds of thousands of African Americans migrated North and West for jobs and chances to live as full citizens.

Entertainment and tourism

The legislature's 1990 decision to legalize casino gambling along the Mississippi River and the Gulf Coast has led to increased revenues and economic gains for the state. Gambling towns in Mississippi have attracted increased tourism: they include the Gulf Coast resort towns of Bay St. Louis, Gulfport and Biloxi, and the Mississippi River towns of Tunica (the third largest gaming area in the United States), Greenville, Vicksburg and Natchez.

Before Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, Mississippi was the second-largest gambling state in the Union, after Nevada and ahead of New Jersey.[citation needed] An estimated $500,000 per day in tax revenue was lost following Hurricane Katrina's severe damage to several coastal casinos in Biloxi in August 2005.[134] Because of the destruction from this hurricane, on October 17, 2005, Governor Haley Barbour signed a bill into law that allows casinos in Hancock and Harrison counties to rebuild on land (but within 800 feet (240 m) of the water). The only exception is in Harrison County, where the new law states that casinos can be built to the southern boundary of U.S. Route 90.[citation needed]

In 2012, Mississippi had the sixth largest gambling revenue of any state, with $2.25 billion.[135] The federally recognized Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians has established a gaming casino on its reservation, which yields revenue to support education and economic development.[citation needed]

Momentum Mississippi, a statewide, public–private partnership dedicated to the development of economic and employment opportunities in Mississippi, was adopted in 2005.[136]

Manufacturing

 

Mississippi, like the rest of its southern neighbors, is a right-to-work state. It has some major automotive factories, such as the Toyota Mississippi Plant in Blue Springs and a Nissan Automotive plant in Canton. The latter produces the Nissan Titan.

Taxation

Mississippi collects personal income tax in three tax brackets, ranging from 3% to 5%. The retail sales tax rate in Mississippi is 7%. Tupelo levies a local sales tax of 2.5%.[137] State sales tax growth was 1.4 percent in 2016 and estimated to be slightly less in 2017.[125] For purposes of assessment for ad valorem taxes, taxable property is divided into five classes.[138]

On August 30, 2007, a report by the United States Census Bureau indicated that Mississippi was the poorest state in the country. Major cotton farmers in the Delta have large, mechanized plantations, and they receive the majority of extensive federal subsidies going to the state, yet many other residents still live as poor, rural, landless laborers. The state's sizable poultry industry has faced similar challenges in its transition from family-run farms to large mechanized operations.[139] Of $1.2 billion from 2002 to 2005 in federal subsidies to farmers in the Bolivar County area of the Delta, only 5% went to small farmers. There has been little money apportioned for rural development. Small towns are struggling. More than 100,000 people have left the region in search of work elsewhere.[140] The state had a median household income of $34,473.[141]

Employment

As of December 2018, the state's unemployment rate was 4.7%, the seventh highest in the country after Arizona (4.9%), Louisiana (4.9%), New Mexico (5.0%), West Virginia (5.1%), District of Columbia (5.4%) and Alaska (6.5%).[142]

Federal subsidies and spending

With Mississippi's fiscal conservatism, in which Medicaid, welfare, food stamps, and other social programs are often cut, eligibility requirements are tightened, and stricter employment criteria are imposed, Mississippi ranks as having the second-highest ratio of spending to tax receipts of any state. In 2005, Mississippi citizens received approximately $2.02 per dollar of taxes in the way of federal spending. This ranks the state second-highest nationally, and represents an increase from 1995, when Mississippi received $1.54 per dollar of taxes in federal spending and was 3rd highest nationally.[143] This figure is based on federal spending after large portions of the state were devastated by Hurricane Katrina, requiring large amounts of federal aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). However, from 1981 to 2005, it was at least number four in the nation for federal spending vs. taxes received.[144]

A proportion of federal spending in Mississippi is directed toward large federal installations such as Camp Shelby, John C. Stennis Space Center, Meridian Naval Air Station, Columbus Air Force Base, and Keesler Air Force Base. Three of these installations are located in the area affected by Hurricane Katrina.

Politics and government

 
Five Governors of Mississippi in 1976, from left: Ross Barnett, James P. Coleman, William L. Waller, John Bell Williams, and Paul B. Johnson Jr.

As with all other U.S. states and the federal government, Mississippi's government is based on the separation of legislative, executive and judicial power. Executive authority in the state rests with the Governor, currently Tate Reeves (R). The lieutenant governor, currently Delbert Hosemann (R), is elected on a separate ballot. Both the governor and lieutenant governor are elected to four-year terms of office. Unlike the federal government, but like many other U.S. states, most of the heads of major executive departments are elected by the citizens of Mississippi rather than appointed by the governor.

Mississippi is one of five states that elects its state officials in odd-numbered years (the others are Kentucky, Louisiana, New Jersey and Virginia). Mississippi holds elections for these offices every four years, always in the year preceding presidential elections.

In a 2020 study, Mississippi was ranked as the 4th hardest state for citizens to vote in.[145]

Laws

In 2004, Mississippi voters approved a state constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage and prohibiting Mississippi from recognizing same-sex marriages performed elsewhere. The amendment passed 86% to 14%, the largest margin in any state.[146][147] Same-sex marriage became legal in Mississippi on June 26, 2015, when the United States Supreme Court invalidated all state-level bans on same-sex marriage as unconstitutional in the landmark case Obergefell v. Hodges.[148]

With the passing of HB 1523 in April 2016, from July it became legal in Mississippi to refuse service to same-sex couples, based on one's religious beliefs.[149][150] The bill has become the subject of controversy.[151] A federal judge blocked the law in July of that year;[152] however, it was challenged, and a federal appeals court ruled in favor of the law in October 2017.[153][154]

Mississippi is one of the most anti-abortion states in the United States. A 2014 poll by Pew Research Center found that 59% of the state's population thinks abortion should be illegal in all/most cases, while only 36% of the state's population thinks abortion should be legal in all/most cases.[155]

Mississippi has banned sanctuary cities.[156] Mississippi is one of thirty-one states which practice capital punishment (see also: capital punishment in Mississippi).

Section 265 of the Constitution of the State of Mississippi declares that "No person who denies the existence of a Supreme Being shall hold any office in this state."[157] However, this religious test restriction was held to be unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in Torcaso v. Watkins (1961).

Gun laws in Mississippi are among the most permissive in the country, with no license or background check required to openly carry handguns in most places in the state.

In 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 6−3 decision in Jones v. Mississippi that a Mississippi law allowing mandatory sentencing of children to life imprisonment without parole is valid and that states and judges can impose such sentences without separately deciding if the child can be rehabilitated.

Political alignment

 
Treemap of the popular vote by county, 2016 presidential election

Mississippi led the South in developing a disenfranchising constitution, passing it in 1890. By raising barriers to voter registration, the state legislature disenfranchised most blacks and many poor whites, excluding them from politics until the late 1960s. It established a one-party state dominated by white Democrats, particularly those politicians who supported poor whites and farmers. Although the state was dominated by one party, there were a small number of Democrats who fought against most legislative measures that disenfranchised most blacks.[158] They also side with the small group of Mississippi Republicans that still existed in the state and Republicans at the federal level on legislative measures that benefited them.

Most blacks were still disenfranchised under the state's 1890 constitution and discriminatory practices, until passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and concerted grassroots efforts to achieve registration and encourage voting.[citation needed] In the 1980s, whites divided evenly between the parties. In the 1990s, those voters largely shifted their allegiance to the Republican Party, first for national and then for state offices.[159]

In 2019, a lawsuit was filed against an 1890 election law known as The Mississippi Plan, which requires that candidates must win the popular vote and a majority of districts.[160] In the following year, 79% of Mississippians voted to remove the requirement of doing so.[161]

Transportation

Air

Mississippi has six airports with commercial passenger service, the busiest in Jackson (Jackson-Evers International Airport).

Roads

Mississippi is the only American state where people in cars may legally consume beer. Some localities have laws restricting the practice.[162] In 2018, the state was ranked number eight in the Union in terms of impaired driving deaths.[163]

 
The Vicksburg Bridge carries I-20 and U.S. 80 across the Mississippi River at Vicksburg.

Mississippi is served by nine interstate highways:

and fourteen main U.S. Routes:

as well as a system of State Highways.

Rail

Mississippi passenger rail

Passenger

Amtrak provides scheduled passenger service along two routes, the Crescent and City of New Orleans. Prior to severe damage from Hurricane Katrina, the Sunset Limited traversed the far south of the state; the route originated in Los Angeles, California and it terminated in Florida.

Freight

All but two of the United States Class I railroads serve Mississippi (the exceptions are the Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific):

Water

Major rivers

Major bodies of water

 
The Ross Barnett Reservoir at sunset
  • Arkabutla Lake 19,550 acres (79.1 km2) of water; constructed and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District[164]
  • Bay Springs Lake 6,700 acres (27 km2) of water and 133 miles (214 km) of shoreline; constructed and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  • Grenada Lake 35,000 acres (140 km2) of water; became operational in 1954; constructed and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District[165]
  • Ross Barnett Reservoir 33,000 acres (130 km2) of water; named for Ross Barnett, the 52nd Governor of Mississippi; became operational in 1966; constructed and managed by The Pearl River Valley Water Supply District, a state agency; provides water supply for the City of Jackson.
  • Sardis Lake 98,520 acres (398.7 km2) of water; became operational in October 1940; constructed and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District[166]
  • Enid Lake 44,000 acres (180 km2) of water; constructed and managed by the U.S. Army

Education

 

Until the Civil War era, Mississippi had a small number of schools and no educational institutions for African Americans. The first school for black students was not established until 1862.

During Reconstruction in 1871, black and white Republicans drafted a constitution that was the first to provide for a system of free public education in the state. The state's dependence on agriculture and resistance to taxation limited the funds it had available to spend on any schools. In the early 20th century, there were still few schools in rural areas, particularly for black children. With seed money from the Julius Rosenwald Fund, many rural black communities across Mississippi raised matching funds and contributed public funds to build new schools for their children. Essentially, many black adults taxed themselves twice and made significant sacrifices to raise money for the education of children in their communities, in many cases donating land and/or labor to build such schools.[167]

Blacks and whites attended separate, segregated public schools in Mississippi until the late 1960s, although such segregation had been declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court in its 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of Education. In the majority-black Mississippi Delta counties, white parents worked through White Citizens' Councils to set up private segregation academies, where they enrolled their children. Often funding declined for the public schools.[168] But in the state as a whole, only a small minority of white children were withdrawn from public schools. State officials believed they needed to maintain public education to attract new businesses. Many black parents complained that they had little representation in school administration, and that many of their former administrators and teachers had been pushed out. They have had to work to have their interests and children represented.[168]

In the late 1980s, Mississippi's 954 public schools enrolled about 369,500 elementary and 132,500 secondary students. Some 45,700 students attended private schools.

In the 21st century, 91% of white children and most of the black children in the state attend public schools.[169] In 2008, Mississippi was ranked last among the fifty states in academic achievement by the American Legislative Exchange Council's Report Card on Education,[170] with the lowest average ACT scores and sixth-lowest spending per pupil in the nation. In contrast, Mississippi had the 17th-highest average SAT scores in the nation. As an explanation, the Report noted that 92% of Mississippi high school graduates took the ACT, but only 3% of graduates took the SAT, apparently a self-selection of higher achievers. This breakdown compares to the national average of high school graduates taking the ACT and SAT, of 43% and 45%, respectively.[170]

Generally prohibited in the West at large, school corporal punishment is not unusual in Mississippi, with 31,236 public school students[c] paddled at least one time circa 2016.[171] A greater percentage of students were paddled in Mississippi than in any other state, according to government data for the 2011–2012 school year.[171]

In 2007, Mississippi students scored the lowest of any state on the National Assessments of Educational Progress in both math and science.[172]

Jackson, the state's capital city, is the site of the state residential school for deaf and hard of hearing students. The Mississippi School for the Deaf was established by the state legislature in 1854 before the civil war.

Culture

 

While Mississippi has been especially known for its music and literature, it has embraced other forms of art. Its strong religious traditions have inspired striking works by outsider artists who have been shown nationally.[citation needed]

Jackson established the USA International Ballet Competition, which is held every four years. This ballet competition attracts the most talented young dancers from around the world.[173]

The Magnolia Independent Film Festival, still held annually in Starkville, is the first and oldest in the state.

George Ohr, known as the "Mad Potter of Biloxi" and the father of abstract expressionism in pottery, lived and worked in Biloxi, MS.

Music

Musicians of the state's Delta region were historically significant to the development of the blues. Although by the end of the 19th century, two-thirds of the farm owners were black, continued low prices for cotton and national financial pressures resulted in most of them losing their land. More problems built up with the boll weevil infestation, when thousands of agricultural jobs were lost.

Jimmie Rodgers, a native of Meridian and guitarist/singer/songwriter known as the "Father of Country Music", played a significant role in the development of the blues. He and Chester Arthur Burnett were friends and admirers of each other's music. Their friendship and respect is an important example of Mississippi's musical legacy. While the state has had a reputation for being racist, Mississippi musicians created new forms by combining and creating variations on musical traditions from African American traditions, and the musical traditions of white Southerners strongly shaped by Scots-Irish and other styles.

The state is creating a Mississippi Blues Trail, with dedicated markers explaining historic sites significant to the history of blues music, such as Clarksdale's Riverside Hotel, where Bessie Smith died after her auto accident on Highway 61. The Riverside Hotel is just one of many historical blues sites in Clarksdale. The Delta Blues Museum there is visited by tourists from all over the world. Close by is "Ground Zero", a contemporary blues club and restaurant co-owned by actor Morgan Freeman.

Elvis Presley, who created a sensation in the 1950s as a crossover artist and contributed to rock 'n' roll, was a native of Tupelo. From opera star Leontyne Price to the alternative rock band 3 Doors Down, to gulf and western singer Jimmy Buffett, modern rock/jazz/world music guitarist-producer Clifton Hyde, to rappers David Banner, Big K.R.I.T. and Afroman, Mississippi musicians have been significant in all genres.

Sports

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  2. ^ Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry.
  3. ^ Please note this figure refers to only the number of students paddled, regardless of whether a student was spanked multiple times in a year, and does not refer to the number of instances of corporal punishment, which would be substantially higher.

References

  1. ^ "Knob Reset". NGS Data Sheet. National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, United States Department of Commerce.
  2. ^ a b . United States Geological Survey. 2001. Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
  3. ^ Bureau, US Census (2021-04-26). "2020 Census Apportionment Results". The United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  4. ^ "Median Annual Household Income". census.gov. Retrieved January 27, 2020.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ "3-3-43 - State toy". 2010 Mississippi Code. Justia. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  6. ^ "2020 Population and Housing State Data". Census.gov. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  7. ^ "Cotton in a Global Economy: Mississippi (1800-1860) | Mississippi History Now". mshistorynow.mdah.state.ms.us. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  8. ^ Richter, William L. (William Lee), 1942- (2009). The A to Z of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Richter, William L. (William Lee), 1942-. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810863361. OCLC 435767707.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ . americashealthrankings.org. Archived from the original on April 24, 2016. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  11. ^ "State Median Household Income Patterns: 1990–2010". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 6, 2012.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. ^ "Sub-national HDI—Subnational HDI—Global Data Lab". globaldatalab.org. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  13. ^ Mississippi Rankings and Facts. U.S. News. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  14. ^ Prentice, Guy (2003). . Southeast Chronicles. Archived from the original on December 2, 2007. Retrieved February 11, 2008.
  15. ^ Mikko Saikku (January 28, 2010). "Bioregional Approach to Southern History: The Yazoo-Mississippi Delta". Southern Spaces. doi:10.18737/M7QK5T. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  16. ^ Wynne, Ben (2007). Mississippi (On-The-Road Histories). p. 12. ISBN 978-1566566667.
  17. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved April 16, 2008.
  18. ^ Baird, W. David (1973). "The Choctaws Meet the Americans, 1783 to 1843". The Choctaw People. United States: Indian Tribal Series. p. 36. ASIN B001G42A16. Library of Congress 73-80708.
  19. ^ Bond, Bradley (2005). Mississippi: A Documentary History. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 68. ISBN 978-1617034305.
  20. ^ Morris, Thomas D. (1999). Southern Slavery and the Law, 1619–1860. University of North Carolina Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0807864302.
  21. ^ Fede, Andrew (2012). People Without Rights (Routledge Revivals): An Interpretation of the Fundamentals of the Law of Slavery in the U.S. South. Routledge. p. 79. ISBN 978-1136716102.
  22. ^ McCain, William D (1967). "The Administrations of David Holmes, Governor of the Mississippi Territory, 1809–1817". Journal of Mississippi History. 29 (3): 328–347.
  23. ^ "Site Builder". www.thomaslegion.net.
  24. ^ "US Southern Colonies Spanish La Florida WEST" (JPEG).
  25. ^ "1826 Refusal of Chickasaws and Choctaws" (PDF). choctawnation.com.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on June 22, 2018. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  27. ^ "1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek" (PDF). Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  28. ^ . Fisher.lib.virginia.edu. Archived from the original on August 23, 2007. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h John C. Willis, Forgotten Time: The Yazoo-Mississippi Delta after the Civil War. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2000, ISBN 978-0813919829.
  30. ^ Rothman, Lily. (June 23, 2016). Free State of Jones: Why You Probably Hadn't Heard the Real Free State of Jones Story Before. Time. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  31. ^ a b James T. Campbell (1995). Songs of Zion: The African Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States and South Africa. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 978-0-19-536005-9.
  32. ^ "The Church in the Southern Black Community". Documenting the South. University of North Carolina. 2004. Retrieved January 15, 2009.
  33. ^ a b DuBois, W. E. B. (1998). Black Reconstruction in America, 1860–1880. New York: The Free Press. p. 437.
  34. ^ Wharton, V. L. (1941). "The Race Issue in the Overthrow of Reconstruction in Mississippi: A Paper Read before the American Historical Association, 1940". Phylon. 2 (4): 362–370. doi:10.2307/271241. JSTOR 271241.
  35. ^ McMillen, Neil R. (1990). "The Politics of the Disfranchised". Dark Journey: Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-252-06156-1.
  36. ^ Stephen Edward Cresswell, Rednecks, Redeemers and Race: Mississippi after Reconstruction, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2006, p. 124, ISBN 978-1578068470.
  37. ^ "The Louisville Leader. Louisville, Kentucky". Louisville Leader Collection. library.louisville.edu. May 19, 1923. Retrieved May 28, 2016.
  38. ^ Randy J. Sparks. Religion in Mississippi (online edition). Rice University (2001).
  39. ^ The Anti-Prohibition Manual: A Summary of Facts and Figures Dealing with Prohibition, 1917. Cincinnati, Ohio: National Association of Distillers and Wholesale Dealers. 1917. p. 8. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  40. ^ Tracy, Janice Branch (2015). Mississippi Moonshine Politics: How Bootleggers & the Law Kept a Dry State Soaked. Arcadia Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 978-1625852885. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  41. ^ Historical Census Browser, 1960 United States Census, University of Virginia August 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 13, 2008
  42. ^ Joseph Crespino, "Mississippi as Metaphor: State, Region and Nation in Historical Imagination", Southern Spaces, October 23, 1996, accessed October 1, 2013
  43. ^ Michael Schenkler, "Memories of Queens College and an American Tragedy", Queens Press, October 18, 2002 January 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 15, 2008
  44. ^ "Robert G. Clark, 26 October 2000 (video)", The Morris W. H. (Bill) Collins Speaker Series, Mississippi State University, accessed June 10, 2015
  45. ^ "Mississippi: Bourbon Borealis", Time, February 11, 1966.
  46. ^ Spruill, Marjorie Julian; Spruill Wheeler, Jesse. "Mississippi Women and the Woman Suffrage Amendment". Mississippi Historical Society. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  47. ^ "After oversight, Mississippi ratifies 13th Amendment abolishing slavery almost 150 years after its adoption". Daily News. New York. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  48. ^ "Mississippi Officially Abolishes Slavery, Ratifies 13th Amendment". ABC News. February 7, 2013. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  49. ^ "Mississippi fixes oversight, formally ratifies 13th Amendment on slavery". Fox News. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  50. ^ "Segregationist Mississippi laws repealed". The Clarion-Ledger.[dead link]
  51. ^ John Blake (July 30, 2008). "Segregated Sundays". CNN. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  52. ^ a b c d Susan Saulny, "Black and White and Married in the Deep South: A Shifting Image", The New York Times, March 20, 2011, accessed October 25, 2012
  53. ^ Pettus, Emily Wagster; Press, Associated (June 30, 2020). . Houston Chronicle. Archived from the original on July 28, 2020. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  54. ^ Avery, Dan (November 4, 2020). "Mississippi voters decide to replace Confederate-themed state flag". NBC News. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  55. ^ "Mississippi". National Park Service. Retrieved July 16, 2008.
  56. ^ a b c "Archived copy". Retrieved March 2, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2013   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  57. ^ . ustravelweather.com. Archived from the original on November 21, 2015. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  58. ^ "Climatological Information for Mississippi". USA.com. 2003.
  59. ^ Meyer, Robinson (June 29, 2017). "The American South Will Bear the Worst of Climate Change's Costs". The Atlantic.
  60. ^ "What Climate Change Means for Mississippi" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency. August 2016.
  61. ^ Delcourt, Hazel R.; Delcourt, Paul A. (1975). "The Blufflands: Pleistocene pathway into the Tunica Hills". The American Midland Naturalist. 94 (2): 385–400. doi:10.2307/2424434. JSTOR 2424434.
  62. ^ McCook, Lucile M.; Kartesz, John. . University of Mississippi—Pullen Herbarium. Archived from the original on March 23, 2018. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
  63. ^ "Magnolia grandiFLORA: The digital herbarium for Mississippi". Magnolia grandiFLORA. Mississippi Herbarium Consortium. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
  64. ^ Ross, Stephen T. (2002). Inland Fishes of Mississippi. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1578062461.
  65. ^ Jones, Robert L.; Slack, William T.; Hartfield, Paul D. (2005). "The freshwater mussels (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Unionidae) of Mississippi". Southeastern Naturalist. 4 (1): 77–92. doi:10.1656/1528-7092(2005)004[0077:TFMMBU]2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 3878159. S2CID 86592258.
  66. ^ "Mississippi Crayfishes". Crayfishes of Mississippi. U.S. Forest Service, Southern Research Station. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  67. ^ Nations, Tina M.; Stark, Bill P.; Hicks, Matthew B. (2007). "The winter stoneflies (Plecoptera: Capniidae) of Mississippi" (PDF). Illiesia. 3 (9): 70–94. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  68. ^ Roediger, David R. (1999). The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class. New York: Verso. p. 146. ISBN 978-1859842409.
  69. ^ a b Solomon, John Otto (1999). The Final Frontiers, 1880–1930: Settling the Southern Bottomlands. Westport: Greenwood Press. pp. 10–11.
  70. ^ a b . Leveeboard.org. Archived from the original on May 13, 2008. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  71. ^ Solomon, John Otto (1999). The Final Frontiers, 1880–1930: Settling the Southern Bottomlands. Westport: Greenwood Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-0313289637.
  72. ^ Solomon (1999). The Final Frontiers. p. 70.
  73. ^ . Census.gov. United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
  74. ^ a b "Race and Ethnicity in the United States: 2010 Census and 2020 Census". census.gov. United States Census Bureau. August 12, 2021. Retrieved 2021-09-26.
  75. ^ "QuickFacts: Alabama; Louisiana; Mississippi". U.S. Census Bureau.
  76. ^ . United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on December 12, 2001. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  77. ^ . Quickfacts.census.gov. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  78. ^ U.S. Census Quick Facts: Mississippi, July 1, 2019
  79. ^ . Archived from the original on December 24, 2014. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  80. ^ "Population of Mississippi: Census 2010 and 2000 Interactive Map, Demographics, Statistics, Quick Facts". Retrieved April 2, 2021.[permanent dead link]
  81. ^ "2010 Census Data". Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  82. ^ David Hackett Fischer, Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America, New York: Oxford University Press, 1989, pp.602–645
  83. ^ Dominic Pulera (2004). Sharing the Dream: White Males in Multicultural America. A&C Black. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-8264-1643-8.
  84. ^ "Ancestry of the Population by State: 1980—Table 3" (PDF). Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  85. ^ James C. Cobb, The Most Southern Place on Earth: The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity (1994) p. 244
  86. ^ Wong, Vivian Wu (Summer 1996). "Somewhere between White and Black: The Chinese in Mississippi". OAH Magazine of History. 10 (4): 33–36. doi:10.1093/maghis/10.4.33. JSTOR 25163098.
  87. ^ Thornell, John G. 2008. "A Culture in Decline: The Mississippi Delta Chinese", Southeast Review of Asian Studies 30: 196–202
  88. ^ Loewen, James W. 1971. The Mississippi Chinese: Between Black and White, Cambridge: Harvard University Press
  89. ^ Quan, Robert Seto. 1982. Lotus Among the Magnolias: The Mississippi Chinese, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi
  90. ^ Jung, John. 2011. Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton: Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocers., Yin & Yang Press.
  91. ^ Judge, Phoebe. "Vietnamese Shrimpers May Lose Way Of Life Again". NPR. May 16, 2010. Retrieved on March 26, 2013.
  92. ^ Exner, Rich (June 3, 2012). "Americans under age 1 now mostly minorities, but not in Ohio: Statistical Snapshot". The Plain Dealer.
  93. ^ "National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 64, Number 1, January 15, 2015" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  94. ^ "National Vital Statistics Reports, Volume 64, Number 12, December 23, 2015" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  95. ^ "National Vital Statistics Reports, Volume 66, Number 1, January 5, 2017" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  96. ^ "National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 67, Number 1, January 31, 2018" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  97. ^ (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  98. ^ "Data" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved December 21, 2019.
  99. ^ "Data" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  100. ^ "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
  101. ^ "Census.gov: Married-Couple and Unmarried-Partner Households 2000" (PDF). Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  102. ^ "Mississippi leads nation in same-sex child rearing". Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal. August 26, 2011. Archived from the original on July 13, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  103. ^ Ost, Jason. . Urban.org. Archived from the original on August 5, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  104. ^ " "Mississippi—Languages". city-data.com. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  105. ^ a b "Mississippi—Languages". city-data.com. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  106. ^ "Public Religion Research Institute Study". Public Religion Research Institute. 2020. Retrieved November 26, 2022.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  107. ^ a b . Mshistory.k12.ms.us. Archived from the original on October 8, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  108. ^ a b "Adults in Mississippi". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. May 11, 2015.
  109. ^ "PRRI – American Values Atlas". ava.prri.org. Retrieved 2022-11-26.
  110. ^ "Presbyterian Church in America—Religious Groups—The Association of Religion Data Archives". Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  111. ^ a b "The Association of Religion Data Archives | State Membership Report". www.thearda.com. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
  112. ^ Frank Newport (March 27, 2012). "Mississippi is The Most Religious U.S. State". Gallup.
  113. ^ Mississippians Go to Church the Most; Vermonters, Least. Gallup.com. Retrieved on April 12, 2014.
  114. ^ State of the States: Importance of Religion. Gallup.com. Retrieved on April 12, 2014.
  115. ^ . Commonwealthfund.org. August 3, 2009. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  116. ^ "Deaths: Final Data for 2013, table 18" (PDF). CDC/National Center for Health Statistics. May 30, 2014.
  117. ^ "Health, United States, 2014" (PDF). U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. May 2015.
  118. ^ Ronni Mott (December 3, 2008). "We-the-Fat". Jackson Free Press. Retrieved December 20, 2008.
  119. ^ Thomas M. Maugh (August 28, 2007). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 28, 2019. Retrieved August 28, 2007.
  120. ^ Victor Sutton, PhD, and Sandra Hayes, MPH, Bureau of Health Data and Research, Mississippi Department of Health (October 29, 2008). . American Public Health Association: APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing at 2008 136th Annual Meeting. Archived from the original on August 11, 2011. Retrieved December 20, 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  121. ^ a b Gail D. Hughes, DrPH, MPH and Gloria Areghan, MSN both with Department of Preventive Medicine-Epidemiology, University of Mississippi Medical Centre; Bern'Nadette Knight, MSPH with Department of General Internal Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center and Abiodun A. Oyebola, MD with Department of Public Health, Jackson State University (November 11, 2008). "Obesity and the African American Adolescent, The Mississippi Delta Report". American Public Health Association: 2002 130th Annual APHA Meeting. Retrieved December 20, 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  122. ^ Lei Zhang, PhD MBA, Office of Health Data and Research, Mississippi State Department of Health; Jerome Kolbo, PhD ACSW, College of Health, Bonnie Harbaugh, PhD RN, School of Nursing and Charkarra Anderson-Lewis, PhD MPH, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Southern Mississippi (October 29, 2008). . American Public Health Association: : APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing at 2008 136th Annual Meeting. Archived from the original on August 11, 2011. Retrieved December 20, 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  123. ^ "Competition in health insurance research". American Medical Association. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  124. ^ "GDP by State". Greyhill Advisors. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
  125. ^ a b c d Pender, 2017.
  126. ^ . Catalogueforphilanthropy.org. Archived from the original on December 4, 2002. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  127. ^ a b John Otto Solomon,The Final Frontiers, 1880–1930: Settling the Southern Bottomlands. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1999, pp.10–11, 42–43, 50–51, and 70
  128. ^ Naipaul, V.S. (1990). A Turn in the South. Vintage. p. 216. ISBN 978-0679724889. The people who wrote the constitution wanted the state to remain 'a pastoral state, an agricultural state'. They didn't want big business or the corporations coming in, encouraging 'unfavorable competition for jobs with the agricultural community'.
  129. ^ "Mississippi Almanac Entry". The New York Times. July 15, 2004. Archived from the original on May 26, 2012. Retrieved May 12, 2010., The New York Times Travel Almanac (2004)
  130. ^ "Historical Census Browser". Fisher.lib.virginia.edu. Retrieved July 30, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  131. ^ W. E. B. DuBois,Black Reconstruction in America, 1860–1880. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1935; reprint New York: The Free Press, 1998, p. 432
  132. ^ Du Bois (1935), Black Reconstruction, p. 437
  133. ^ Du Bois (1935), Black Reconstruction, pp. 432, 434
  134. ^ Katrina Stats. City of Biloxi. Retrieved October 1, 2013.
  135. ^ 2013 edition of State of the States: The AGA Survey of Casino Entertainment October 19, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. American Gaming Association. Retrieved October 1, 2013.
  136. ^ "Mississippi Direct Financial Incentives 2011—Mississippi, Momentum Mississippi". Area Development Online. March 2011. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  137. ^ . The Tax Foundation. September 22, 2011. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  138. ^ . Mississippi Department of Revenue. Archived from the original on July 4, 2014. Retrieved June 30, 2014.
  139. ^ Stuesse, Angela and Laura Helton. "Low-Wage Legacies, Race, and the Golden Chicken in Mississippi: Where Contemporary Immigration Meets African American Labor History", Southern Spaces, December 31, 2013, . Archived from the original on August 14, 2014. Retrieved August 13, 2014..
  140. ^ Gilbert M. Gaul and Dan Morgan (June 19, 2007), "A Slow Demise in the Delta: US Farm Subsidies Favor Big Over Small and White Over Blacks", The Washington Post, accessed March 29, 2008
  141. ^ Les Christie (August 30, 2007). . CNNMoney.com. Archived from the original on September 14, 2007. Retrieved September 22, 2007.
  142. ^ "Unemployment Rates for States, Seasonally Adjusted, December 2018". Local Area Unemployment Statistics. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. March 2, 2019. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  143. ^ "Tax Foundation". Tax Foundation. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  144. ^ "Federal Taxes Paid Vs Federal Spending Received State 1981–2005". October 19, 2007.
  145. ^ J. Pomante II, Michael; Li, Quan (15 Dec 2020). "Cost of Voting in the American States: 2020". Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy. 19 (4): 503–509. doi:10.1089/elj.2020.0666. S2CID 225139517. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  146. ^ "Amendment banning gay marriage passes". USA Today. November 2, 2004. Retrieved October 12, 2007.
  147. ^ "Voters pass all 11 bans on gay marriage". NBC News. Associated Press. November 3, 2004. Retrieved December 7, 2007.
  148. ^ "Mississippi's Ban on Gay Marriage Officially Lifted". Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  149. ^ "LGBT couples can be refused service under new Mississippi law". The Guardian. April 5, 2016. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  150. ^ "Mississippi law opens a new front in the battle over gay rights". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  151. ^ "Mississippi passes controversial 'religious freedom' bill". BBC News. April 5, 2016.
  152. ^ Park, Madison (July 1, 2016). "Judge blocks controversial Mississippi law". CNN.com. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  153. ^ Willie James Inman (October 4, 2017). "Major religious freedom law set to take effect, unless Supreme Court intervenes". foxnews.com. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  154. ^ Campbell, Larrison (October 1, 2017). "'Religious freedom law', House Bill 1523, will take effect Oct. 6; appeal planned". mississippitoday.org. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  155. ^ "Religion in America: U.S. Religious Data, Demographics and Statistics". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  156. ^ Shoichet, Catherine E. (May 9, 2019). "Florida is about to ban sanctuary cities. At least 11 other states have, too". CNN.
  157. ^ "Mississippi State Constitution". Retrieved February 15, 2011.
  158. ^ Sansing, David G. (2013). A place called Mississippi. Paul E. Binford. Atlanta, Georgia. ISBN 978-1-56733-244-5. OCLC 861987177.
  159. ^ Alexander P. Lamis (1999). Southern Politics in the 1990s. LSU Press. p. 425. ISBN 9780807166772.
  160. ^ "Black Voters Sue Over Mississippi's Jim Crow-Era Election Law". NPR.org. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  161. ^ Rozier, Alex (31 December 2020). "Interactive: How Mississippians voted for 2020 candidates and ballot measures". Mississippi Today. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  162. ^ Phillips, Owen (April 28, 2016). "Riding in Cars with Beers". Retrieved April 26, 2019.
  163. ^ Woodell, Brody (20 December 2018). "Which states have the MOST and the LEAST drunk driving deaths". WQAD. Retrieved April 26, 2019.
  164. ^ . Archived from the original on July 15, 2007.
  165. ^ . Archived from the original on March 10, 2007.
  166. ^ . Archived from the original on March 10, 2007.
  167. ^ James D. Anderson,The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860–1935. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1988, pp. 160–161
  168. ^ a b Bolton, Charles C. The Hardest Deal of All: The Battle Over School Integration in Mississippi, 1870–1980. University Press of Mississippi, 2005, pp. 136, 178–179. ISBN 1604730609, 9781604730609.
  169. ^ Bolton (2005). The Hardest Deal of All. pp. 178–179.
  170. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2011.
  171. ^ a b Farrell, Colin (February 2016). "Corporal punishment in US schools". World Corporal Punishment Research. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  172. ^ Dillon, Sam (November 14, 2007). "Study Compares States' Math and Science Scores With Other Countries'". The New York Times. Retrieved May 12, 2010., The New York Times (2007)
  173. ^ . Usaibc.com. Archived from the original on September 25, 2007. Retrieved July 30, 2010.

Further reading

  • Busbee, Westley F. Mississippi: A History (2005).
  • Gonzales, Edmond, ed. A Mississippi Reader: Selected Articles from the Journal of Mississippi History (1980)
  • Krane, Dale and Stephen D. Shaffer. Mississippi Government & Politics: Modernizers versus Traditionalists (1992), government textbook
  • Loewen, James W. and Charles Sallis, eds. Mississippi: Conflict and Change (2nd ed. 1980), high school textbook
  • McLemore, Richard, ed. A History of Mississippi 2 vols. (1973), thorough coverage by scholars
  • Mitchell, Dennis J., A New History of Mississippi (2014)
  • Ownby, ted et al. eds. The Mississippi Encyclopedia (2017)
  • Skates, John Ray. Mississippi: A Bicentennial History (1979), popular
  • Sparks, Randy J. Religion in Mississippi (2001) 374 pp online edition
  • Swain, Martha H. ed. Mississippi Women: Their Histories, Their Lives (2003). 17 short biographies

External links

  • Official website
  • Mississippi Travel and Tourism
  • Mississippi Development Authority
  • The "Mississippi Believe It" Campaign
  • USDA Mississippi State Facts
  • University Press of Mississippi
  • Ecoregions of Mississippi
  • Mississippi at Curlie
  • Mississippi as Metaphor State, Region, and Nation in Historical Imagination", Southern Spaces, October 23, 2006.
  •   Geographic data related to Mississippi at OpenStreetMap
  • , an annotated list of searchable databases compiled by the Government Documents Roundtable of the American Library Association.
Preceded by List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union
Admitted on December 10, 1817 (20th)
Succeeded by

Coordinates: 33°N 90°W / 33°N 90°W / 33; -90 (State of Mississippi)

mississippi, this, article, about, state, river, river, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, state, southeastern, region, united, states, bordered, north, tennessee, east, alabama, south, gulf, mexico, southwest, louisiana, northwest, arkansas, western, bounda. This article is about the U S state For the river see Mississippi River For other uses see Mississippi disambiguation Mississippi ˌ m ɪ s ɪ ˈ s ɪ p i listen is a state in the Southeastern region of the United States bordered to the north by Tennessee to the east by Alabama to the south by the Gulf of Mexico to the southwest by Louisiana and to the northwest by Arkansas Mississippi s western boundary is largely defined by the Mississippi River Mississippi is the 32nd largest and 35th most populous of the 50 U S states and has the lowest per capita income in the United States Jackson is both the state s capital and largest city Greater Jackson is the state s most populous metropolitan area with a population of 591 978 in 2020 6 MississippiStateFlagSealNickname s The Magnolia State and The Hospitality State Motto s Virtute et armis Latin English By valor and arms Anthem Go Mississippi Map of the United States with Mississippi highlightedCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodMississippi TerritoryAdmitted to the UnionDecember 10 1817 20th Capital and largest city JacksonLargest metroGreater JacksonGovernment GovernorTate Reeves R Lieutenant GovernorDelbert Hosemann R LegislatureMississippi Legislature Upper houseState Senate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesU S senatorsRoger Wicker R Cindy Hyde Smith R U S House delegation1 Trent Kelly R 2 Bennie Thompson D 3 Michael Guest R 4 Mike Ezell R list Area Total48 430 sq mi 125 443 km2 Land46 952 sq mi 121 607 km2 Water1 521 sq mi 3 940 km2 3 Rank32ndDimensions Length340 mi 545 km Width170 mi 275 km Elevation300 ft 90 m Highest elevation Woodall Mountain 1 2 a 807 ft 246 0 m Lowest elevation Gulf of Mexico 2 0 ft 0 m Population 2020 Total2 963 914 3 Rank35th Density63 5 sq mi 24 5 km2 Rank32nd Median household incomeUS 43 567 4 Income rank50thDemonymMississippianLanguage Official languageEnglishTime zoneUTC 06 00 Central Summer DST UTC 05 00 CDT USPS abbreviationMSISO 3166 codeUS MSTrad abbreviationMiss Latitude30 12 N to 35 NLongitude88 06 W to 91 39 WWebsitewww wbr ms wbr govMississippi state symbolsFlag of MississippiLiving insigniaBirdNorthern mockingbird Mimus polyglottos ButterflySpicebush swallowtail Papilio troilus FishLargemouth bass Micropterus salmoides FlowerMagnoliaInsectWestern honey bee Apis mellifera MammalWhite tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus ReptileAmerican alligator Alligator mississippiensis TreeSouthern magnolia Magnolia grandiflora Inanimate insigniaBeverageMilkColorsred and blueDanceCloggingFoodSweet potatoGemstoneEmeraldMineralGoldRockGraniteShellEastern oyster Crassostrea virginica SloganVirtute et armis Latin ToyTeddy Bear 5 State route markerState quarterReleased in 2002Lists of United States state symbolsOn December 10 1817 Mississippi became the 20th state admitted to the Union By 1860 Mississippi was the nation s top cotton producing state and slaves accounted for 55 of the state population 7 Mississippi declared its secession from the Union on January 9 1861 and was one of the seven original Confederate States which constituted the largest slaveholding states in the nation Following the Civil War it was restored to the Union on February 23 1870 8 Until the Great Migration of the 1930s African Americans were a majority of Mississippi s population In 2020 37 6 of Mississippi s population was African American the highest percentage of any state Mississippi was the site of many prominent events during the civil rights movement including the Ole Miss riot of 1962 by white students objecting to desegregation the 1963 assassination of Medgar Evers and the 1964 Freedom Summer murders of three activists working on voting rights Mississippi frequently ranks low among U S states in measures of health education and development while ranking high in measures of poverty 9 10 11 12 Top economic industries in Mississippi today are agriculture and forestry Mississippi produces more than half of the country s farm raised catfish and is also a top producer of sweet potatoes cotton and pulpwood Other main industries in Mississippi include advanced manufacturing utilities transportation and health services 13 Mississippi is almost entirely within the Gulf coastal plain and generally consists of lowland plains and low hills The northwest remainder of the state consists of the Mississippi Delta a section of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain Mississippi s highest point is Woodall Mountain at 807 feet 246 m above sea level adjacent to the Cumberland Plateau the lowest is the Gulf of Mexico Mississippi has a humid subtropical climate classification Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Colonial era 2 2 United States territory 2 3 Statehood to Civil War 2 4 Civil War to 20th century 2 5 20th century to present 3 Geography 3 1 Major cities and towns 3 2 Climate 3 2 1 Climate change 3 3 Ecology flora and fauna 3 4 Ecological problems 3 4 1 Flooding 4 Demographics 4 1 Race and ethnicity 4 2 Birth data 4 3 LGBT community 4 4 Language 4 5 Religion 5 Health 6 Economy 6 1 Entertainment and tourism 6 2 Manufacturing 6 3 Taxation 6 4 Employment 6 5 Federal subsidies and spending 7 Politics and government 7 1 Laws 7 2 Political alignment 8 Transportation 8 1 Air 8 2 Roads 8 3 Rail 8 3 1 Passenger 8 3 2 Freight 8 4 Water 8 4 1 Major rivers 8 4 2 Major bodies of water 9 Education 10 Culture 10 1 Music 10 2 Sports 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology EditThe state s name is derived from the Mississippi River which flows along and defines its western boundary European American settlers named it after the Ojibwe word ᒥᓯ ᓰᐱ misi ziibi English great river History EditMain article History of Mississippi Near 10 000 BC Native Americans or Paleo Indians arrived in what today is referred to as the American South 14 Paleo Indians in the South were hunter gatherers who pursued the megafauna that became extinct following the end of the Pleistocene age In the Mississippi Delta Native American settlements and agricultural fields were developed on the natural levees higher ground in the proximity of rivers The Native Americans developed extensive fields near their permanent villages Together with other practices they created some localized deforestation but did not alter the ecology of the Mississippi Delta as a whole 15 After thousands of years succeeding cultures of the Woodland and Mississippian culture eras developed rich and complex agricultural societies in which surplus supported the development of specialized trades Both were mound builder cultures Those of the Mississippian culture were the largest and most complex constructed beginning about 950 AD The peoples had a trading network spanning the continent from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast Their large earthworks which expressed their cosmology of political and religious concepts still stand throughout the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys Choctaw Village near the Chefuncte by Francois Bernard 1869 Peabody Museum Harvard University The women are preparing dye in order to color cane strips for making baskets Descendant Native American tribes of the Mississippian culture in the Southeast include the Chickasaw and Choctaw Other tribes who inhabited the territory of Mississippi and whose names were honored by colonists in local towns include the Natchez the Yazoo and the Biloxi The first major European expedition into the territory that became Mississippi was that of the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto who passed through the northeast part of the state in 1540 in his second expedition to the New World Colonial era Edit Main articles New France Louisiana New France French and Indian War Treaty of Paris 1763 New Spain West Florida Indian Reserve 1763 American Revolutionary War Treaty of Paris 1783 and Spanish West Florida In April 1699 French colonists established the first European settlement at Fort Maurepas also known as Old Biloxi built in the vicinity of present day Ocean Springs on the Gulf Coast It was settled by Pierre Le Moyne d Iberville In 1716 the French founded Natchez on the Mississippi River as Fort Rosalie it became the dominant town and trading post of the area The French called the greater territory New France the Spanish continued to claim part of the Gulf coast area east of Mobile Bay of present day southern Alabama in addition to the entire area of present day Florida The British assumed control of the French territory after the French and Indian War Pushmataha Choctaw Principal Chief During the colonial era European settlers imported enslaved Africans to work on cash crop plantations Under French and Spanish rule there developed a class of free people of color gens de couleur libres mostly multiracial descendants of European men and enslaved or free black women and their mixed race children In the early days the French and Spanish colonists were chiefly men Even as more European women joined the settlements the men had interracial unions among women of African descent and increasingly multiracial descent both before and after marriages to European women Often the European men would help their multiracial children get educated or gain apprenticeships for trades and sometimes they settled property on them they often freed the mothers and their children if enslaved as part of contracts of placage With this social capital the free people of color became artisans and sometimes educated merchants and property owners forming a third class between the Europeans and most enslaved Africans in the French and Spanish settlements although not so large a free community as in the city of New Orleans Louisiana After Great Britain s victory in the French and Indian War Seven Years War the French surrendered the Mississippi area to them under the terms of the Treaty of Paris 1763 They also ceded their areas to the north that were east of the Mississippi River including the Illinois Country and Quebec After the Peace of Paris 1783 the lower third of Mississippi came under Spanish rule as part of West Florida In 1819 the United States completed the purchase of West Florida and all of East Florida in the Adams Onis Treaty and in 1822 both were merged into the Florida Territory United States territory Edit Main articles Seminole Wars Adams Onis Treaty Organic act List of organic acts and Mississippi Territory After the American Revolution 1775 83 Britain ceded this area to the new United States of America The Mississippi Territory was organized on April 7 1798 from territory ceded by Georgia and South Carolina to the United States Their original colonial charters theoretically extended west to the Pacific Ocean The Mississippi Territory was later twice expanded to include disputed territory claimed by both the United States and Spain From 1800 to about 1830 the United States purchased some lands Treaty of Doak s Stand from Native American tribes for new settlements of European Americans The latter were mostly migrants from other Southern states particularly Virginia and North Carolina where soils were exhausted 16 New settlers kept encroaching on Choctaw land and they pressed the federal government to expel the Native Americans On September 27 1830 the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was signed between the U S Government and the Choctaw The Choctaw agreed to sell their traditional homelands in Mississippi and Alabama for compensation and removal to reservations in Indian Territory now Oklahoma This opened up land for sale to European American migrant settlement Article 14 in the treaty allowed those Choctaw who chose to remain in the states to become U S citizens as they were considered to be giving up their tribal membership They were the second major Native American ethnic group to do so some Cherokee were the first who chose to stay in North Carolina and other areas during rather than join the removal 17 18 Today their descendants include approximately 9 500 persons identifying as Choctaw who live in Neshoba Newton Leake and Jones counties The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians reorganized in the 20th century and is a Federally recognized tribe Many slaveholders brought enslaved African Americans with them or purchased them through the domestic slave trade especially in New Orleans Through the trade an estimated nearly one million slaves were forcibly transported to the Deep South including Mississippi in an internal migration that broke up many slave families of the Upper South where planters were selling excess slaves The Southerners imposed slave laws in the Deep South and restricted the rights of free blacks Beginning in 1822 slaves in Mississippi were protected by law from cruel and unusual punishment by their owners 19 The Southern slave codes made the willful killing of a slave illegal in most cases 20 For example the 1860 Mississippi case of Oliver v State charged the defendant with murdering his own slave 21 D Evereux Hall in Natchez Built in 1840 the mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Statehood to Civil War Edit Main articles Admission to the Union and List of U S states by date of admission to the Union Mississippi became the 20th state on December 10 1817 David Holmes was the first governor 22 The state was still occupied as ancestral land by several Native American tribes including Choctaw Natchez Houma Creek and Chickasaw 23 24 Plantations were developed primarily along the major rivers where the waterfront provided access to the major transportation routes This is also where early towns developed linked by the steamboats that carried commercial products and crops to markets The remainder of Native American ancestral land remained largely undeveloped but was sold through treaties until 1826 when the Choctaws and Chickasaws refused to sell more land 25 The combination of the Mississippi state legislature s abolition of Choctaw Tribal Government in 1829 26 President Andrew Jackson s Indian Removal Act and the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek of 1830 27 the Choctaw were effectively forced to sell their land and were transported to Oklahoma Territory The forced migration of the Choctaw together with other southeastern tribes removed as a result of the Act became known as the Trail of Tears When cotton was king during the 1850s Mississippi plantation owners especially those of the Delta and Black Belt central regions became wealthy due to the high fertility of the soil the high price of cotton on the international market and free labor gained through their holding enslaved African Americans They used some of their profits to buy more cotton land and more slaves The planters dependence on hundreds of thousands of slaves for labor and the severe wealth imbalances among whites played strong roles both in state politics and in planters support for secession Mississippi was a slave society with the economy dependent on slavery The state was thinly settled with population concentrated in the riverfront areas and towns By 1860 the enslaved African American population numbered 436 631 or 55 of the state s total of 791 305 persons Fewer than 1000 were free people of color 28 The relatively low population of the state before the American Civil War reflected the fact that land and villages were developed only along the riverfronts which formed the main transportation corridors Ninety percent of the Delta bottomlands were still frontier and undeveloped 29 The state needed many more settlers for development The land further away from the rivers was cleared by freedmen and white migrants during Reconstruction and later 29 Civil War to 20th century Edit Main articles Ordinance of Secession Confederate States of America Mississippi in the American Civil War and Reconstruction era Confederate lines Vicksburg May 19 1863 Shows assault by US 1st Battalion 13th Infantry On January 9 1861 Mississippi became the second state to declare its secession from the Union and it was one of the founding members of the Confederate States The first six states to secede were those with the highest number of slaves During the war Union and Confederate forces struggled for dominance on the Mississippi River critical to supply routes and commerce More than 80 000 Mississippians fought in the Civil War for the Confederate Army Around 17 000 black and 545 white Mississippians would serve in the Union Army Pockets of Unionism in Mississippi were in places such as the northeastern corner of the state and Jones County where Newton Knight formed a revolt with Unionist leanings known as the Free State of Jones 30 Union General Ulysses S Grant s long siege of Vicksburg finally gained the Union control of the river in 1863 In the postwar period freedmen withdrew from white run churches to set up independent congregations The majority of blacks left the Southern Baptist Convention sharply reducing its membership They created independent black Baptist congregations By 1895 they had established numerous black Baptist state associations and the National Baptist Convention of black churches 31 In addition independent black denominations such as the African Methodist Episcopal Church established in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in the early 19th century and the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church established in New York City sent missionaries to the South in the postwar years They quickly attracted hundreds of thousands of converts and founded new churches across the South Southern congregations brought their own influences to those denominations as well 31 32 During Reconstruction the first Mississippi constitutional convention in 1868 with delegates both black and white framed a constitution whose major elements would be maintained for 22 years 33 The convention was the first political organization in the state to include African American representatives 17 among the 100 members 32 counties had black majorities at the time Some among the black delegates were freedmen but others were educated free blacks who had migrated from the North The convention adopted universal suffrage did away with property qualifications for suffrage or for office a change that also benefited both blacks and poor whites provided for the state s first public school system forbade race distinctions in the possession and inheritance of property and prohibited limiting civil rights in travel 33 Under the terms of Reconstruction Mississippi was restored to the Union on February 23 1870 Because the Mississippi Delta contained so much fertile bottomland that had not been developed before the American Civil War 90 percent of the land was still frontier After the Civil War tens of thousands of migrants were attracted to the area by higher wages offered by planters trying to develop land In addition black and white workers could earn money by clearing the land and selling timber and eventually advance to ownership The new farmers included many freedmen who by the late 19th century achieved unusually high rates of land ownership in the Mississippi bottomlands In the 1870s and 1880s many black farmers succeeded in gaining land ownership 29 The legislature of the state of Mississippi in 1890 Around the start of the 20th century two thirds of the Mississippi farmers who owned land in the Delta were African American 29 But many had become overextended with debt during the falling cotton prices of the difficult years of the late 19th century Cotton prices fell throughout the decades following the Civil War As another agricultural depression lowered cotton prices into the 1890s numerous African American farmers finally had to sell their land to pay off debts thus losing the land which they had developed by hard personal labor 29 Democrats had regained control of the state legislature in 1875 after a year of expanded violence against blacks and intimidation of whites in what was called the white line campaign based on asserting white supremacy Democratic whites were well armed and formed paramilitary organizations such as the Red Shirts to suppress black voting From 1874 to the elections of 1875 they pressured whites to join the Democrats and conducted violence against blacks in at least 15 known riots in cities around the state to intimidate blacks They killed a total of 150 blacks although other estimates place the death toll at twice as many A total of three white Republicans and five white Democrats were reported killed In rural areas deaths of blacks could be covered up Riots better described as massacres of blacks took place in Vicksburg Clinton Macon and in their counties as well armed whites broke up black meetings and lynched known black leaders destroying local political organizations 34 Seeing the success of this deliberate Mississippi Plan South Carolina and other states followed it and also achieved white Democratic dominance In 1877 by a national compromise the last of federal troops were withdrawn from the region Even in this environment black Mississippians continued to be elected to local office However black residents were deprived of all political power after white legislators passed a new state constitution in 1890 specifically to eliminate the nigger from politics according to the state s Democratic governor James K Vardaman 35 It erected barriers to voter registration and instituted electoral provisions that effectively disenfranchised most black Mississippians and many poor whites Estimates are that 100 000 black and 50 000 white men were removed from voter registration rolls in the state over the next few years 36 Child workers Pass Christian 1911 by Lewis Hine The loss of political influence contributed to the difficulties of African Americans in their attempts to obtain extended credit in the late 19th century Together with imposition of Jim Crow and racial segregation laws whites increased violence against blacks lynching mostly men through the period of the 1890s and extending to 1930 Cotton crops failed due to boll weevil infestation and successive severe flooding in 1912 and 1913 creating crisis conditions for many African Americans With control of the ballot box and more access to credit white planters bought out such farmers expanding their ownership of Delta bottomlands They also took advantage of new railroads sponsored by the state 29 20th century to present Edit In 1900 blacks made up more than half of the state s population By 1910 a majority of black farmers in the Delta had lost their land and became sharecroppers By 1920 the third generation after freedom most African Americans in Mississippi were landless laborers again facing poverty 29 Starting about 1913 tens of thousands of black Americans left Mississippi for the North in the Great Migration to industrial cities such as St Louis Chicago Detroit Cleveland Philadelphia and New York They sought jobs better education for their children the right to vote relative freedom from discrimination and better living In the migration of 1910 1940 they left a society that had been steadily closing off opportunity Most migrants from Mississippi took trains directly north to Chicago and often settled near former neighbors Blacks also faced violence in the form of lynching shooting and the burning of churches In 1923 the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People stated the Negro feels that life is not safe in Mississippi and his life may be taken with impunity at any time upon the slightest pretext or provocation by a white man 37 Mexican American boy and African American man at the Knowlton Plantation Perthshire Mississippi in 1939 by Marion Post Wolcott Dancing at a juke joint near Clarksdale Mississippi in 1939 by Marion Post Wolcott In the early 20th century some industries were established in Mississippi but jobs were generally restricted to whites including child workers The lack of jobs also drove some southern whites north to cities such as Chicago and Detroit seeking employment where they also competed with European immigrants The state depended on agriculture but mechanization put many farm laborers out of work By 1900 many white ministers especially in the towns subscribed to the Social Gospel movement which attempted to apply Christian ethics to social and economic needs of the day Many strongly supported Prohibition believing it would help alleviate and prevent many sins 38 Mississippi became a dry state in 1908 by an act of the state legislature 39 It remained dry until the legislature passed a local option bill in 1966 40 African American Baptist churches grew to include more than twice the number of members as their white Baptist counterparts The African American call for social equality resonated throughout the Great Depression in the 1930s and World War II in the 1940s The Second Great Migration from the South started in the 1940s lasting until 1970 Almost half a million people left Mississippi in the second migration three quarters of them black Nationwide during the first half of the 20th century African Americans became rapidly urbanized and many worked in industrial jobs The Second Great Migration included destinations in the West especially California where the buildup of the defense industry offered higher paying jobs to both African Americans and whites Blacks and whites in Mississippi generated rich quintessentially American music traditions gospel music country music jazz blues and rock and roll All were invented promulgated or heavily developed by Mississippi musicians many of them African American and most came from the Mississippi Delta Many musicians carried their music north to Chicago where they made it the heart of that city s jazz and blues So many African Americans left in the Great Migration that after the 1930s they became a minority in Mississippi In 1960 they made up 42 of the state s population 41 The whites maintained their discriminatory voter registration processes established in 1890 preventing most blacks from voting even if they were well educated Court challenges were not successful until later in the century After World War II African American veterans returned with renewed commitment to be treated as full citizens of the United States and increasingly organized to gain enforcement of their constitutional rights The Civil Rights movement had many roots in religion and the strong community of churches helped supply volunteers and moral purpose for their activism Mississippi was a center of activity based in black churches to educate and register black voters and to work for integration In 1954 the state had created the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission a tax supported agency chaired by the Governor that claimed to work for the state s image but effectively spied on activists and passed information to the local White Citizens Councils to suppress black activism White Citizens Councils had been formed in many cities and towns to resist integration of schools following the unanimous 1954 United States Supreme Court ruling Brown v Board of Education that segregation of public schools was unconstitutional They used intimidation and economic blackmail against activists and suspected activists including teachers and other professionals Techniques included loss of jobs and eviction from rental housing In the summer of 1964 students and community organizers from across the country came to help register black voters in Mississippi and establish Freedom Schools The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party was established to challenge the all white Democratic Party of the Solid South Most white politicians resisted such changes Chapters of the Ku Klux Klan and its sympathizers used violence against activists most notably the murders of Chaney Goodman and Schwerner in 1964 during the Freedom Summer campaign This was a catalyst for Congressional passage the following year of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Mississippi earned a reputation in the 1960s as a reactionary state 42 43 After decades of disenfranchisement African Americans in the state gradually began to exercise their right to vote again for the first time since the 19th century following the passage of federal civil rights legislation in 1964 and 1965 which ended de jure segregation and enforced constitutional voting rights Registration of African American voters increased and black candidates ran in the 1967 elections for state and local offices The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party fielded some candidates Teacher Robert G Clark of Holmes County was the first African American to be elected to the State House since Reconstruction He continued as the only African American in the state legislature until 1976 and was repeatedly elected into the 21st century including three terms as Speaker of the House 44 In 1966 the state was the last to repeal officially statewide prohibition of alcohol Before that Mississippi had taxed the illegal alcohol brought in by bootleggers Governor Paul Johnson urged repeal and the sheriff raided the annual Junior League Mardi Gras ball at the Jackson Country Club breaking open the liquor cabinet and carting off the Champagne before a startled crowd of nobility and high ranking state officials 45 On August 17 1969 Category 5 Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi coast killing 248 people and causing US 1 5 billion in damage 1969 dollars Mississippi ratified the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in March 1984 which had already entered into force by August 1920 granting women the right to vote 46 In 1987 20 years after the U S Supreme Court had ruled in 1967 s Loving v Virginia that a similar Virginian law was unconstitutional Mississippi repealed its ban on interracial marriage also known as miscegenation which had been enacted in 1890 It also repealed the segregationist era poll tax in 1989 In 1995 the state symbolically ratified the Thirteenth Amendment which had abolished slavery in 1865 Though ratified in 1995 the state never officially notified the Federal Archivist which kept the ratification unofficial until 2013 when Ken Sullivan contacted the office of Secretary of State of Mississippi Delbert Hosemann who agreed to file the paperwork and make it official 47 48 49 In 2009 the legislature passed a bill to repeal other discriminatory civil rights laws which had been enacted in 1964 the same year as the federal Civil Rights Act but ruled unconstitutional in 1967 by federal courts Republican Governor Haley Barbour signed the bill into law 50 The end of legal segregation and Jim Crow led to the integration of some churches but most today remain divided along racial and cultural lines having developed different traditions After the Civil War most African Americans left white churches to establish their own independent congregations particularly Baptist churches establishing state associations and a national association by the end of the century They wanted to express their own traditions of worship and practice 51 In more diverse communities such as Hattiesburg some churches have multiracial congregations 52 On August 29 2005 Hurricane Katrina though a Category 3 storm upon final landfall caused even greater destruction across the entire 90 miles 145 km of the Mississippi Gulf Coast from Louisiana to Alabama The previous flag of Mississippi used until June 30 2020 featured the Confederate battle flag The previous flag of Mississippi used until June 30 2020 featured the Confederate battle flag Mississippi became the last state to remove the Confederate battle flag as an official state symbol on June 30 2020 when Governor Tate Reeves signed a law officially retiring the second state flag The current flag The New Magnolia flag was selected via referendum as part of the general election on November 3 2020 53 54 It officially became the state flag on January 11 2021 after being signed into law by the state legislature and governor Geography Edit Bottomland hardwood swamp near Ashland Map of the Mississippi Delta Region outlined in green Mississippi is bordered to the north by Tennessee to the east by Alabama to the south by Louisiana and a narrow coast on the Gulf of Mexico and to the west across the Mississippi River by Louisiana and Arkansas In addition to its namesake major rivers in Mississippi include the Big Black River the Pearl River the Yazoo River the Pascagoula River and the Tombigbee River Major lakes include Ross Barnett Reservoir Arkabutla Sardis and Grenada with the largest being Sardis Lake Mississippi is entirely composed of lowlands the highest point being Woodall Mountain at 807 ft 246 m above sea level in the northeastern part of the state The lowest point is sea level at the Gulf Coast The state s mean elevation is 300 ft 91 m above sea level Most of Mississippi is part of the East Gulf Coastal Plain The coastal plain is generally composed of low hills such as the Pine Hills in the south and the North Central Hills The Pontotoc Ridge and the Fall Line Hills in the northeast have somewhat higher elevations Yellow brown loess soil is found in the western parts of the state The northeast is a region of fertile black earth uplands a geology that extend into the Alabama Black Belt The coastline includes large bays at Bay St Louis Biloxi and Pascagoula It is separated from the Gulf of Mexico proper by the shallow Mississippi Sound which is partially sheltered by Petit Bois Island Horn Island East and West Ship Islands Deer Island Round Island and Cat Island The northwest remainder of the state consists of the Mississippi Delta a section of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain The plain is narrow in the south and widens north of Vicksburg The region has rich soil partly made up of silt which had been regularly deposited by the flood waters of the Mississippi River Areas under the management of the National Park Service include 55 Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site near Baldwyn Gulf Islands National Seashore Natchez National Historical Park in Natchez Natchez Trace National Scenic Trail in Tupelo Natchez Trace Parkway Tupelo National Battlefield in Tupelo Vicksburg National Military Park and Cemetery in VicksburgMajor cities and towns Edit Map with all counties and their county seats Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 50 000 United States Census Bureau as of 2017 56 Jackson 166 965 Gulfport 71 822 Southaven 54 031 Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 20 000 but fewer than 50 000 United States Census Bureau as of 2017 56 Hattiesburg 46 377 Biloxi 45 908 Tupelo 38 114 Meridian 37 940 Olive Branch 37 435 Greenville 30 686 Horn Lake 27 095 Pearl 26 534 Madison 25 627 Starkville 25 352 Clinton 25 154 Ridgeland 24 266 Columbus 24 041 Brandon 23 999 Oxford 23 639 Vicksburg 22 489 Pascagoula 21 733 Mississippi City Population Rankings of at least 10 000 but fewer than 20 000 United States Census Bureau as of 2017 56 Gautier 18 512 Laurel 18 493 Ocean Springs 17 682 Hernando 15 981 Clarksdale 15 732 Long Beach 15 642 Natchez 14 886 Corinth 14 643 Greenwood 13 996 Moss Point 13 398 McComb 13 267 Bay St Louis 13 043 Canton 12 725 Grenada 12 267 Brookhaven 12 173 Cleveland 11 729 Byram 11 671 D Iberville 11 610 Picayune 11 008 West Point 10 675 Yazoo City 11 018 Petal 10 633 See Lists of cities towns and villages census designated places metropolitan areas micropolitan areas and counties in Mississippi Climate Edit Koppen climate types of Mississippi using 1991 2020 climate normals Mississippi has a humid subtropical climate with long hot and humid summers and short mild winters Temperatures average about 81 F 27 C in July and about 42 F 6 C in January The temperature varies little statewide in the summer however in winter the region near Mississippi Sound is significantly warmer than the inland portion of the state The recorded temperature in Mississippi has ranged from 19 F 28 C in 1966 at Corinth in the northeast to 115 F 46 C in 1930 at Holly Springs in the north Heavy snowfall rarely occurs but isn t unheard of such as during the New Year s Eve 1963 snowstorm Yearly precipitation generally increases from north to south with the regions closer to the Gulf being the most humid Thus Clarksdale in the northwest gets about 50 in 1 300 mm of precipitation annually and Biloxi in the south about 61 in 1 500 mm Small amounts of snow fall in northern and central Mississippi snow is occasional in the southern part of the state Hurricanes Camille left and Katrina from satellite imagery as they approached the Mississippi Gulf Coast The late summer and fall is the seasonal period of risk for hurricanes moving inland from the Gulf of Mexico especially in the southern part of the state Hurricane Camille in 1969 and Hurricane Katrina in 2005 which killed 238 people in the state were the most devastating hurricanes to hit the state Both caused nearly total storm surge destruction of structures in and around Gulfport Biloxi and Pascagoula As in the rest of the Deep South thunderstorms are common in Mississippi especially in the southern part of the state On average Mississippi has around 27 tornadoes annually the northern part of the state has more tornadoes earlier in the year and the southern part a higher frequency later in the year Two of the five deadliest tornadoes in United States history have occurred in the state These storms struck Natchez in southwest Mississippi see The Great Natchez Tornado and Tupelo in the northeast corner of the state About seven F5 tornadoes have been recorded in the state Monthly normal high and low temperatures F for various Mississippi citiesCity Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov DecGulfport 61 43 64 46 70 52 77 59 84 66 89 72 91 74 91 74 87 70 79 60 70 51 63 45Jackson 55 35 60 38 68 45 75 52 82 61 89 68 91 71 91 70 86 65 77 52 66 43 58 37Meridian 58 35 63 38 70 44 77 50 84 60 90 67 93 70 93 70 88 64 78 51 68 43 60 37Tupelo 50 30 56 34 65 41 74 48 81 58 88 66 91 70 91 68 85 62 75 49 63 40 54 33Source 57 Climate data for Mississippi 1980 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high F C 54 3 12 4 58 7 14 8 67 2 19 6 75 2 24 0 82 6 28 1 88 9 31 6 91 4 33 0 91 5 33 1 86 3 30 2 76 9 24 9 66 5 19 2 56 6 13 7 74 7 23 7 Average low F C 33 3 0 7 36 7 2 6 43 8 6 6 51 3 10 7 60 3 15 7 67 6 19 8 70 6 21 4 69 7 20 9 63 17 51 9 11 1 43 1 6 2 35 7 2 1 52 3 11 2 Average precipitation inches mm 5 0 130 5 2 130 5 1 130 5 0 130 5 1 130 4 4 110 4 5 110 3 9 99 3 6 91 4 1 100 4 9 120 5 7 140 56 5 1 420 Source USA com 58 Climate change Edit These paragraphs are an excerpt from Climate change in Mississippi edit Climate change in Mississippi encompasses the effects of climate change attributed to man made increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide in the U S state of Mississippi Studies show that Mississippi is among a string of Deep South states that will experience the worst effects of climate change in the United States 59 The United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA reports In the coming decades Mississippi will become warmer and both floods and droughts may be more severe Unlike most of the nation Mississippi did not become warmer during the last 50 to 100 years But soils have become drier annual rainfall has increased more rain arrives in heavy downpours and sea level is rising about one inch every seven years The changing climate is likely to increase damages from tropical storms reduce crop yields harm livestock increase the number of unpleasantly hot days and increase the risk of heat stroke and other heat related illnesses 60 Ecology flora and fauna Edit Leaving Tennessee on US Highway 61 Clark Creek Natural Area Wilkinson County Mississippi is heavily forested with over half of the state s area covered by wild or cultivated trees The southeastern part of the state is dominated by longleaf pine in both uplands and lowland flatwoods and Sarracenia bogs The Mississippi Alluvial Plain or Delta is primarily farmland and aquaculture ponds but also has sizeable tracts of cottonwood willows bald cypress and oaks A belt of loess extends north to south in the western part of the state where the Mississippi Alluvial Plain reaches the first hills this region is characterized by rich mesic mixed hardwood forests with some species disjunct from Appalachian forests 61 Two bands of historical prairie the Jackson Prairie and the Black Belt run northwest to southeast in the middle and northeastern part of the state Although these areas have been highly degraded by conversion to agriculture a few areas remain consisting of grassland with interspersed woodland of eastern redcedar oaks hickories osage orange and sugarberry The rest of the state primarily north of Interstate 20 not including the prairie regions consists of mixed pine hardwood forest common species being loblolly pine oaks e g water oak hickories sweetgum and elm Areas along large rivers are commonly inhabited by bald cypress water tupelo water elm and bitter pecan Commonly cultivated trees include loblolly pine longleaf pine cherrybark oak and cottonwood There are approximately 3000 species of vascular plants known from Mississippi 62 As of 2018 a project funded by the U S National Science Foundation aims to update that checklist of plants with museum herbarium vouchers and create an online atlas of each species s distribution 63 About 420 species of birds are known to inhabit Mississippi Mississippi has one of the richest fish faunas in the United States with 204 native fish species 64 Mississippi also has a rich freshwater mussel fauna with about 90 species in the primary family of native mussels Unionidae 65 Several of these species were extirpated during the construction of the Tennessee Tombigbee Waterway Mississippi is home to 63 crayfish species including at least 17 endemic species 66 Mississippi is home to eight winter stonefly species 67 Ecological problems Edit Flooding Edit Further information List of Mississippi River floods Due to seasonal flooding possible from December to June the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers and their tributaries created a fertile floodplain in the Mississippi Delta The river s flooding created natural levees which planters had built higher to try to prevent flooding of land cultivated for cotton crops Temporary workers built levees along the Mississippi River on top of the natural levees that formed from dirt deposited after the river flooded From 1858 to 1861 the state took over levee building accomplishing it through contractors and hired labor In those years planters considered their slaves too valuable to hire out for such dangerous work Contractors hired gangs of Irish immigrant laborers to build levees and sometimes clear land Many of the Irish were relatively recent immigrants from the famine years who were struggling to get established 68 Before the American Civil War the earthwork levees averaged six feet in height although in some areas they reached twenty feet Flooding has been an integral part of Mississippi history but clearing of the land for cultivation and to supply wood fuel for steamboats took away the absorption of trees and undergrowth The banks of the river were denuded becoming unstable and changing the character of the river After the Civil War major floods swept down the valley in 1865 1867 1874 and 1882 Such floods regularly overwhelmed levees damaged by Confederate and Union fighting during the war as well as those constructed after the war 69 In 1877 the state created the Mississippi Levee District for southern counties In 1879 the United States Congress created the Mississippi River Commission whose responsibilities included aiding state levee boards in the construction of levees Both white and black transient workers were hired to build the levees in the late 19th century By 1882 levees averaged seven feet in height but many in the southern Delta were severely tested by the flood that year 69 After the 1882 flood the levee system was expanded In 1884 the Yazoo Mississippi Delta Levee District was established to oversee levee construction and maintenance in the northern Delta counties also included were some counties in Arkansas which were part of the Delta 70 Flooding overwhelmed northwestern Mississippi in 1912 1913 causing heavy damage to the levee districts Regional losses and the Mississippi River Levee Association s lobbying for a flood control bill helped gain passage of national bills in 1917 and 1923 to provide federal matching funds for local levee districts on a scale of 2 1 Although U S participation in World War I interrupted funding of levees the second round of funding helped raise the average height of levees in the Mississippi Yazoo Delta to 22 feet 6 7 m in the 1920s 71 Scientists now understand the levees have increased the severity of flooding by increasing the flow speed of the river and reducing the area of the floodplains The region was severely damaged due to the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 which broke through the levees There were losses of millions of dollars in property stock and crops The most damage occurred in the lower Delta including Washington and Bolivar counties 72 Even as scientific knowledge about the Mississippi River has grown upstream development and the consequences of the levees have caused more severe flooding in some years Scientists now understand that the widespread clearing of land and building of the levees have changed the nature of the river Such work removed the natural protection and absorption of wetlands and forest cover strengthening the river s current The state and federal governments have been struggling for the best approaches to restore some natural habitats in order to best interact with the original riverine ecology Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18007 600 181031 306311 9 182075 448141 0 1830136 62181 1 1840375 651175 0 1850606 52661 5 1860791 30530 5 1870827 9224 6 18801 131 59736 7 18901 289 60014 0 19001 551 27020 3 19101 797 11415 8 19201 790 618 0 4 19302 009 82112 2 19402 183 7968 7 19502 178 914 0 2 19602 178 1410 0 19702 216 9121 8 19802 520 63813 7 19902 573 2162 1 20002 844 65810 5 20102 967 2974 3 20202 961 279 0 2 Source 1910 2020 73 Mississippi population density mapMississippi s population has remained from 2 million people at the 1930 U S census to 2 9 million at the 2020 census 74 In contrast with Alabama to its east and Louisiana to its west Mississippi has been the slowest growing of the three Gulf coast states by population 75 According to the U S Census Bureau Mississippi s center of population is located in Leake County in the town of Lena 76 From 2000 to 2010 the United States Census Bureau reported that Mississippi had the highest rate of increase in people identifying as mixed race up 70 percent in the decade it amounts to a total of 1 1 percent of the population 52 In addition Mississippi led the nation for most of the last decade in the growth of mixed marriages among its population The total population has not increased significantly but is young Some of the above change in identification as mixed race is due to new births But it appears mostly to reflect those residents who have chosen to identify as more than one race who in earlier years may have identified by just one race and or ethnicity A binary racial system had been in place since slavery times and the days of official government racial segregation In the civil rights era people of African descent banded together in an inclusive community to achieve political power and gain restoration of their civil rights As the demographer William H Frey noted In Mississippi I think it s identifying as mixed race changed from within 52 Historically in Mississippi after Indian removal in the 1830s the major groups were designated as black African American who were then mostly enslaved and white primarily European American Matthew Snipp also a demographer commented on the increase in the 21st century in the number of people identifying as being of more than one race In a sense they re rendering a more accurate portrait of their racial heritage that in the past would have been suppressed 52 After having accounted for a majority of the state s population since well before the American Civil War and through the 1930s today African Americans constitute approximately 37 8 percent of the state s population Most have ancestors who were enslaved with many forcibly transported from the Upper South in the 19th century to work on the area s new plantations Many of these slaves were mixed race with European ancestors as there were many children born into slavery with white fathers Some also have Native American ancestry 77 During the first half of the 20th century a total of nearly 400 000 African Americans left the state during the Great Migration for opportunities in the North Midwest and West They became a minority in the state for the first time since early in its development 78 Race and ethnicity Edit Map of counties in Mississippi by racial plurality per the 2020 U S censusLegend Non Hispanic White 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 Black or African American 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 Racial and ethnic composition as of the 2020 census Race and ethnicity 74 Alone TotalWhite non Hispanic 55 4 55 4 57 9 57 9 African American non Hispanic 36 4 36 4 37 6 37 6 Hispanic or Latino b 3 6 3 6 Asian 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 5 Native American 0 5 0 5 1 6 1 6 Pacific Islander 0 04 0 04 0 1 0 1 Other 0 2 0 2 0 7 0 7 Historical racial and ethnic composition from 1990 2010 Racial composition 1990 79 2000 80 2010 81 White 63 5 61 4 59 1 Black 35 6 36 3 37 0 Asian 0 5 0 7 0 9 Native 0 3 0 4 0 5 Other race 0 1 0 5 1 3 Two or more races 0 7 1 2 Americans of Scots Irish English and Scottish ancestry are present throughout the state It is believed that there are more people with such ancestry than identify as such on the census in part because their immigrant ancestors are more distant in their family histories English Scottish and Scots Irish are generally the most under reported ancestry groups in both the South Atlantic states and the East South Central states The historian David Hackett Fischer estimated that a minimum 20 of Mississippi s population is of English ancestry though the figure is probably much higher and another large percentage is of Scottish ancestry Many Mississippians of such ancestry identify simply as American on questionnaires because their families have been in North America for centuries 82 83 In the 1980 U S census 656 371 Mississippians of a total of 1 946 775 identified as being of English ancestry making them 38 of the state at the time 84 The state in 2010 had the highest proportion of African Americans in the nation The African American percentage of population has begun to increase due mainly to a younger population than the whites the total fertility rates of the two races are approximately equal Due to patterns of settlement and whites putting their children in private schools in almost all of Mississippi s public school districts a majority of students are African American African Americans are the majority ethnic group in the northwestern Yazoo Delta and the southwestern and the central parts of the state These are areas where historically African Americans owned land as farmers in the 19th century following the Civil War or worked on cotton plantations and farms 85 People of French Creole ancestry form the largest demographic group in Hancock County on the Gulf Coast The African American Choctaw mostly in Neshoba County and Chinese American portions of the population are also almost entirely native born The Chinese first came to Mississippi as contract workers from Cuba and California in the 1870s and they originally worked as laborers on the cotton plantations However most Chinese families came later between 1910 and 1930 from other states and most operated small family owned groceries stores in the many small towns of the Delta 86 In these roles the ethnic Chinese carved out a niche in the state between black and white where they were concentrated in the Delta These small towns have declined since the late 20th century and many ethnic Chinese have joined the exodus to larger cities including Jackson Their population in the state overall has increased in the 21st century 87 88 89 90 In the early 1980s many Vietnamese immigrated to Mississippi and other states along the Gulf of Mexico where they became employed in fishing related work 91 As of 2011 53 8 of Mississippi s population younger than age 1 were minorities meaning that they had at least one parent who was not non Hispanic white 92 Birth data Edit Note Births in table don t add up because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race giving a higher overall number Live Births by Single Race Ethnicity of Mother Race 2013 93 2014 94 2015 95 2016 96 2017 97 2018 98 2019 99 2020 100 White 20 818 53 9 20 894 53 9 20 730 54 0 gt non Hispanic White 19 730 51 0 19 839 51 3 19 635 51 1 19 411 51 2 18 620 49 8 18 597 50 2 18 229 49 8 17 648 49 8 Black 17 020 44 0 17 036 44 0 16 846 43 9 15 879 41 9 16 087 43 1 15 797 42 7 15 706 42 9 15 155 42 7 Asian 504 1 3 583 1 5 559 1 5 475 1 3 502 1 3 411 1 1 455 1 2 451 1 3 American Indian 292 0 7 223 0 6 259 0 7 215 0 6 225 0 6 238 0 6 242 0 7 252 0 7 Hispanic of any race 1 496 3 9 1 547 4 0 1 613 4 2 1 664 4 4 1 650 4 4 1 666 4 5 1 709 4 7 1 679 4 7 Total Mississippi 38 634 100 38 736 100 38 394 100 37 928 100 37 357 100 37 000 100 36 636 100 35 473 100 Since 2016 data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected but included in one Hispanic group persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race LGBT community Edit The 2010 United States census counted 6 286 same sex unmarried partner households in Mississippi an increase of 1 512 since the 2000 United States census 101 Of those same sex couples roughly 33 contained at least one child giving Mississippi the distinction of leading the nation in the percentage of same sex couples raising children 102 Mississippi has the largest percentage of African American same sex couples among total households The state capital Jackson ranks tenth in the nation in concentration of African American same sex couples The state ranks fifth in the nation in the percentage of Hispanic same sex couples among all Hispanic households and ninth in the highest concentration of same sex couples who are seniors 103 Language Edit Top 10 non English languages spoken in Mississippi Language Percentage of population as of 2010 104 Spanish 1 9 French 0 4 German Vietnamese and Choctaw tied 0 2 Korean Chinese Tagalog Italian tied 0 1 In 2000 96 4 of Mississippi residents five years old and older spoke only English in the home a decrease from 97 2 in 1990 105 English is largely Southern American English with some South Midland speech in northern and eastern Mississippi There is a common absence of final r particularly in the elderly natives and African Americans and the lengthening and weakening of the diphthongs aɪ and ɔɪ as in ride and oil South Midland terms in northern Mississippi include tow sack burlap bag dog irons andirons plum peach clingstone peach snake doctor dragonfly and stone wall rock fence 105 Religion Edit Religion in Mississippi 2020 106 Religion PercentProtestant 67 Catholic 12 Other Christian 1 Unaffiliated 15 Other faith 1 Under French and Spanish rule beginning in the 17th century European colonists were mostly Roman Catholics The growth of the cotton culture after 1815 brought in tens of thousands of Anglo American settlers each year most of whom were Protestants from Southeastern states Due to such migration there was rapid growth in the number of Protestant denominations and churches especially among the Methodists Presbyterians and Baptists 107 Liberty Baptist Church Amite County The revivals of the Great Awakening in the late 18th and early 19th centuries initially attracted the plain folk by reaching out to all members of society including women and blacks Both slaves and free blacks were welcomed into Methodist and Baptist churches Independent black Baptist churches were established before 1800 in Virginia Kentucky South Carolina and Georgia and later developed in Mississippi as well In the post Civil War years religion became more influential as the South became known as the Bible Belt By 2014 the Pew Research Center determined 83 of its population was Christian 108 In a separate study by the Public Religion Research Institute in 2020 80 of the population was Christian 109 Since the 1970s fundamentalist conservative churches have grown rapidly fueling Mississippi s conservative political trends among whites 107 In 1973 the Presbyterian Church in America attracted numerous conservative congregations As of 2010 Mississippi remained a stronghold of the denomination which originally was brought by Scots immigrants The state has the highest adherence rate of the PCA in 2010 with 121 congregations and 18 500 members It is among the few states where the PCA has higher membership than the PC USA 110 According to the Association of Religion Data Archives ARDA in 2010 the Southern Baptist Convention had 907 384 adherents and was the largest religious denomination in the state followed by the United Methodist Church with 204 165 and the Roman Catholic Church with 112 488 111 Other religions have a small presence in Mississippi as of 2010 there were 5 012 Muslims 4 389 Hindus and 816 of the Bahaʼi Faith 111 According to the Pew Research Center in 2014 with evangelical Protestantism as the predominant Christian affiliation the Southern Baptist Convention remained the largest denomination in the state 108 Non denominational Evangelicals were the second largest followed by historically African American denominations such as the National Baptist Convention USA and Progressive National Baptist Convention Public opinion polls have consistently ranked Mississippi as the most religious state in the United States with 59 of Mississippians considering themselves very religious The same survey also found that 11 of the population were non Religious 112 In a 2009 Gallup poll 63 of Mississippians said that they attended church weekly or almost weekly the highest percentage of all states U S average was 42 and the lowest percentage was in Vermont at 23 113 Another 2008 Gallup poll found that 85 of Mississippians considered religion an important part of their daily lives the highest figure among all states U S average 65 114 Health EditThe state is ranked 50th or last place among all the states for health care according to the Commonwealth Fund a nonprofit foundation working to advance performance of the health care system 115 Mississippi has the highest rate of infant and neonatal deaths of any U S state Age adjusted data also shows Mississippi has the highest overall death rate and the highest death rate from heart disease hypertension and hypertensive renal disease influenza and pneumonia 116 In 2011 Mississippi and Arkansas had the fewest dentists per capita in the United States 117 For three years in a row more than 30 percent of Mississippi s residents have been classified as obese In a 2006 study 22 8 percent of the state s children were classified as such Mississippi had the highest rate of obesity of any U S state from 2005 to 2008 and also ranks first in the nation for high blood pressure diabetes and adult inactivity 118 119 In a 2008 study of African American women contributing risk factors were shown to be lack of knowledge about body mass index BMI dietary behavior physical inactivity and lack of social support defined as motivation and encouragement by friends 120 A 2002 report on African American adolescents noted a 1999 survey which suggests that a third of children were obese with higher ratios for those in the Delta 121 The study stressed that obesity starts in early childhood extending into the adolescent years and then possibly into adulthood It noted impediments to needed behavioral modification including the Delta likely being the most underserved region in the state with African Americans the major ethnic group lack of accessibility and availability of medical care and an estimated 60 of residents living below the poverty level Additional risk factors were that most schools had no physical education curriculum and nutrition education is not emphasized Previous intervention strategies may have been largely ineffective due to not being culturally sensitive or practical 121 A 2006 survey found nearly 95 percent of Mississippi adults considered childhood obesity to be a serious problem 122 A 2017 study found that Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi was the leading health insurer with 53 followed by UnitedHealth Group at 13 123 Economy EditSee also Mississippi locations by per capita income A Mississippi U S quarter The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that Mississippi s total state product in 2010 was 98 billion 124 GDP growth was 5 percent in 2015 and is estimated to be 2 4 in 2016 according to Dr Darrin Webb the state s chief economist who noted it would make two consecutive years of positive growth since the recession 125 Per capita personal income in 2006 was 26 908 the lowest per capita personal income of any state but the state also has the nation s lowest living costs 2015 data records the adjusted per capita personal income at 40 105 125 Mississippians consistently rank as one of the highest per capita in charitable contributions 126 At 56 percent the state has one of the lowest workforce participation rates in the country Approximately 70 000 adults are disabled which is 10 percent of the workforce 125 Mississippi s rank as one of the poorest states is related to its dependence on cotton agriculture before and after the Civil War late development of its frontier bottomlands in the Mississippi Delta repeated natural disasters of flooding in the late 19th and early 20th century that required massive capital investment in levees and ditching and draining the bottomlands and slow development of railroads to link bottomland towns and river cities 127 In addition when Democrats regained control of the state legislature they passed the 1890 constitution that discouraged corporate industrial development in favor of rural agriculture a legacy that would slow the state s progress for years 128 Before the Civil War Mississippi was the fifth wealthiest state in the nation its wealth generated by the labor of slaves in cotton plantations along the rivers 129 Slaves were counted as property and the rise in the cotton markets since the 1840s had increased their value By 1860 a majority 55 percent of the population of Mississippi was enslaved 130 Ninety percent of the Delta bottomlands were undeveloped and the state had low overall density of population Sharecropper s daughter Lauderdale County 1935 Largely due to the domination of the plantation economy focused on the production of agricultural cotton the state s elite was reluctant to invest in infrastructure such as roads and railroads They educated their children privately Industrialization did not reach many areas until the late 20th century The planter aristocracy the elite of antebellum Mississippi kept the tax structure low for their own benefit making only private improvements Before the war the most successful planters such as Confederate President Jefferson Davis owned riverside properties along the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers in the Mississippi Delta Away from the riverfronts most of the Delta was undeveloped frontier During the Civil War 30 000 Mississippi soldiers mostly white died from wounds and disease and many more were left crippled and wounded Changes to the labor structure and an agricultural depression throughout the South caused severe losses in wealth In 1860 assessed valuation of property in Mississippi had been more than 500 million of which 218 million 43 percent was estimated as the value of slaves By 1870 total assets had decreased in value to roughly 177 million 131 Poor whites and landless former slaves suffered the most from the postwar economic depression The constitutional convention of early 1868 appointed a committee to recommend what was needed for relief of the state and its citizens The committee found severe destitution among the laboring classes 132 It took years for the state to rebuild levees damaged in battles The upset of the commodity system impoverished the state after the war By 1868 an increased cotton crop began to show possibilities for free labor in the state but the crop of 565 000 bales produced in 1870 was still less than half of prewar figures 133 Blacks cleared land selling timber and developing bottomland to achieve ownership In 1900 two thirds of farm owners in Mississippi were blacks a major achievement for them and their families Due to the poor economy low cotton prices and difficulty of getting credit many of these farmers could not make it through the extended financial difficulties Two decades later the majority of African Americans were sharecroppers The low prices of cotton into the 1890s meant that more than a generation of African Americans lost the result of their labor when they had to sell their farms to pay off accumulated debts 29 After the Civil War the state refused for years to build human capital by fully educating all its citizens In addition the reliance on agriculture grew increasingly costly as the state suffered loss of cotton crops due to the devastation of the boll weevil in the early 20th century devastating floods in 1912 1913 and 1927 collapse of cotton prices after 1920 and drought in 1930 127 It was not until 1884 after the flood of 1882 that the state created the Mississippi Yazoo Delta District Levee Board and started successfully achieving longer term plans for levees in the upper Delta 70 Despite the state s building and reinforcing levees for years the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 broke through and caused massive flooding of 27 000 square miles 70 000 km2 throughout the Delta homelessness for hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars in property damages With the Depression coming so soon after the flood the state suffered badly during those years In the Great Migration hundreds of thousands of African Americans migrated North and West for jobs and chances to live as full citizens Entertainment and tourism Edit The legislature s 1990 decision to legalize casino gambling along the Mississippi River and the Gulf Coast has led to increased revenues and economic gains for the state Gambling towns in Mississippi have attracted increased tourism they include the Gulf Coast resort towns of Bay St Louis Gulfport and Biloxi and the Mississippi River towns of Tunica the third largest gaming area in the United States Greenville Vicksburg and Natchez Before Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast Mississippi was the second largest gambling state in the Union after Nevada and ahead of New Jersey citation needed An estimated 500 000 per day in tax revenue was lost following Hurricane Katrina s severe damage to several coastal casinos in Biloxi in August 2005 134 Because of the destruction from this hurricane on October 17 2005 Governor Haley Barbour signed a bill into law that allows casinos in Hancock and Harrison counties to rebuild on land but within 800 feet 240 m of the water The only exception is in Harrison County where the new law states that casinos can be built to the southern boundary of U S Route 90 citation needed In 2012 Mississippi had the sixth largest gambling revenue of any state with 2 25 billion 135 The federally recognized Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians has established a gaming casino on its reservation which yields revenue to support education and economic development citation needed Momentum Mississippi a statewide public private partnership dedicated to the development of economic and employment opportunities in Mississippi was adopted in 2005 136 Manufacturing Edit 2014 Corolla built by Toyota Motor Manufacturing Mississippi on display at the Tupelo Automobile Museum Mississippi like the rest of its southern neighbors is a right to work state It has some major automotive factories such as the Toyota Mississippi Plant in Blue Springs and a Nissan Automotive plant in Canton The latter produces the Nissan Titan Taxation Edit Mississippi collects personal income tax in three tax brackets ranging from 3 to 5 The retail sales tax rate in Mississippi is 7 Tupelo levies a local sales tax of 2 5 137 State sales tax growth was 1 4 percent in 2016 and estimated to be slightly less in 2017 125 For purposes of assessment for ad valorem taxes taxable property is divided into five classes 138 On August 30 2007 a report by the United States Census Bureau indicated that Mississippi was the poorest state in the country Major cotton farmers in the Delta have large mechanized plantations and they receive the majority of extensive federal subsidies going to the state yet many other residents still live as poor rural landless laborers The state s sizable poultry industry has faced similar challenges in its transition from family run farms to large mechanized operations 139 Of 1 2 billion from 2002 to 2005 in federal subsidies to farmers in the Bolivar County area of the Delta only 5 went to small farmers There has been little money apportioned for rural development Small towns are struggling More than 100 000 people have left the region in search of work elsewhere 140 The state had a median household income of 34 473 141 Employment Edit As of December 2018 the state s unemployment rate was 4 7 the seventh highest in the country after Arizona 4 9 Louisiana 4 9 New Mexico 5 0 West Virginia 5 1 District of Columbia 5 4 and Alaska 6 5 142 Federal subsidies and spending Edit With Mississippi s fiscal conservatism in which Medicaid welfare food stamps and other social programs are often cut eligibility requirements are tightened and stricter employment criteria are imposed Mississippi ranks as having the second highest ratio of spending to tax receipts of any state In 2005 Mississippi citizens received approximately 2 02 per dollar of taxes in the way of federal spending This ranks the state second highest nationally and represents an increase from 1995 when Mississippi received 1 54 per dollar of taxes in federal spending and was 3rd highest nationally 143 This figure is based on federal spending after large portions of the state were devastated by Hurricane Katrina requiring large amounts of federal aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA However from 1981 to 2005 it was at least number four in the nation for federal spending vs taxes received 144 A proportion of federal spending in Mississippi is directed toward large federal installations such as Camp Shelby John C Stennis Space Center Meridian Naval Air Station Columbus Air Force Base and Keesler Air Force Base Three of these installations are located in the area affected by Hurricane Katrina Politics and government EditMain articles Mississippi Legislature Government of Mississippi List of Governors of Mississippi and Political party strength in Mississippi Five Governors of Mississippi in 1976 from left Ross Barnett James P Coleman William L Waller John Bell Williams and Paul B Johnson Jr As with all other U S states and the federal government Mississippi s government is based on the separation of legislative executive and judicial power Executive authority in the state rests with the Governor currently Tate Reeves R The lieutenant governor currently Delbert Hosemann R is elected on a separate ballot Both the governor and lieutenant governor are elected to four year terms of office Unlike the federal government but like many other U S states most of the heads of major executive departments are elected by the citizens of Mississippi rather than appointed by the governor Mississippi is one of five states that elects its state officials in odd numbered years the others are Kentucky Louisiana New Jersey and Virginia Mississippi holds elections for these offices every four years always in the year preceding presidential elections In a 2020 study Mississippi was ranked as the 4th hardest state for citizens to vote in 145 Laws Edit Further information Constitution of the State of Mississippi Abortion law in Mississippi LGBT rights in Mississippi Gun laws in Mississippi and Capital punishment in Mississippi In 2004 Mississippi voters approved a state constitutional amendment banning same sex marriage and prohibiting Mississippi from recognizing same sex marriages performed elsewhere The amendment passed 86 to 14 the largest margin in any state 146 147 Same sex marriage became legal in Mississippi on June 26 2015 when the United States Supreme Court invalidated all state level bans on same sex marriage as unconstitutional in the landmark case Obergefell v Hodges 148 With the passing of HB 1523 in April 2016 from July it became legal in Mississippi to refuse service to same sex couples based on one s religious beliefs 149 150 The bill has become the subject of controversy 151 A federal judge blocked the law in July of that year 152 however it was challenged and a federal appeals court ruled in favor of the law in October 2017 153 154 Mississippi is one of the most anti abortion states in the United States A 2014 poll by Pew Research Center found that 59 of the state s population thinks abortion should be illegal in all most cases while only 36 of the state s population thinks abortion should be legal in all most cases 155 Mississippi has banned sanctuary cities 156 Mississippi is one of thirty one states which practice capital punishment see also capital punishment in Mississippi Section 265 of the Constitution of the State of Mississippi declares that No person who denies the existence of a Supreme Being shall hold any office in this state 157 However this religious test restriction was held to be unconstitutional by the U S Supreme Court in Torcaso v Watkins 1961 Gun laws in Mississippi are among the most permissive in the country with no license or background check required to openly carry handguns in most places in the state In 2021 the U S Supreme Court ruled in a 6 3 decision in Jones v Mississippi that a Mississippi law allowing mandatory sentencing of children to life imprisonment without parole is valid and that states and judges can impose such sentences without separately deciding if the child can be rehabilitated Political alignment Edit Treemap of the popular vote by county 2016 presidential election Mississippi led the South in developing a disenfranchising constitution passing it in 1890 By raising barriers to voter registration the state legislature disenfranchised most blacks and many poor whites excluding them from politics until the late 1960s It established a one party state dominated by white Democrats particularly those politicians who supported poor whites and farmers Although the state was dominated by one party there were a small number of Democrats who fought against most legislative measures that disenfranchised most blacks 158 They also side with the small group of Mississippi Republicans that still existed in the state and Republicans at the federal level on legislative measures that benefited them Most blacks were still disenfranchised under the state s 1890 constitution and discriminatory practices until passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and concerted grassroots efforts to achieve registration and encourage voting citation needed In the 1980s whites divided evenly between the parties In the 1990s those voters largely shifted their allegiance to the Republican Party first for national and then for state offices 159 In 2019 a lawsuit was filed against an 1890 election law known as The Mississippi Plan which requires that candidates must win the popular vote and a majority of districts 160 In the following year 79 of Mississippians voted to remove the requirement of doing so 161 Transportation EditAir Edit Mississippi has six airports with commercial passenger service the busiest in Jackson Jackson Evers International Airport Roads Edit Mississippi is the only American state where people in cars may legally consume beer Some localities have laws restricting the practice 162 In 2018 the state was ranked number eight in the Union in terms of impaired driving deaths 163 The Vicksburg Bridge carries I 20 and U S 80 across the Mississippi River at Vicksburg Mississippi is served by nine interstate highways I 10 I 110 I 20 I 220 I 22 I 55 I 59 I 69 I 269 and fourteen main U S Routes US 11 US 45 US 49 US 51 US 61 US 72 US 78 US 278 US 80 US 82 US 84 US 90 US 98 US 425 as well as a system of State Highways Rail Edit vteMississippi passenger railLegendCity of New Orleansto Chicago Crescentto New York City Marks MeridianGreenwood Laurel Yazoo City HattiesburgJackson Picayune Hazlehurst Crescentto New OrleansBrookhaven McComb Suspended 2005City of New Orleansto New Orleans Sunset Limitedto Orlando Pascagoula Biloxi Gulfport Bay St Louis Sunset Limitedto Los AngelesPassenger Edit Amtrak provides scheduled passenger service along two routes the Crescent and City of New Orleans Prior to severe damage from Hurricane Katrina the Sunset Limited traversed the far south of the state the route originated in Los Angeles California and it terminated in Florida Freight Edit All but two of the United States Class I railroads serve Mississippi the exceptions are the Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific Canadian National Railway s Illinois Central Railroad subsidiary provides north south service BNSF Railway has a northwest southeast line across northern Mississippi Kansas City Southern Railway provides east west service in the middle of the state and north south service along the Alabama state line Norfolk Southern Railway provides service in the extreme north and southeast CSX has a line along the Gulf Coast Water Edit Major rivers Edit Mississippi River Big Black River Pascagoula River Pearl River Tennessee Tombigbee Waterway Yazoo RiverMajor bodies of water Edit The Ross Barnett Reservoir at sunset Arkabutla Lake 19 550 acres 79 1 km2 of water constructed and managed by the U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District 164 Bay Springs Lake 6 700 acres 27 km2 of water and 133 miles 214 km of shoreline constructed and managed by the U S Army Corps of Engineers Grenada Lake 35 000 acres 140 km2 of water became operational in 1954 constructed and managed by the U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District 165 Ross Barnett Reservoir 33 000 acres 130 km2 of water named for Ross Barnett the 52nd Governor of Mississippi became operational in 1966 constructed and managed by The Pearl River Valley Water Supply District a state agency provides water supply for the City of Jackson Sardis Lake 98 520 acres 398 7 km2 of water became operational in October 1940 constructed and managed by the U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District 166 Enid Lake 44 000 acres 180 km2 of water constructed and managed by the U S ArmyEducation EditSee also List of colleges and universities in Mississippi and Education in Mississippi Until the Civil War era Mississippi had a small number of schools and no educational institutions for African Americans The first school for black students was not established until 1862 During Reconstruction in 1871 black and white Republicans drafted a constitution that was the first to provide for a system of free public education in the state The state s dependence on agriculture and resistance to taxation limited the funds it had available to spend on any schools In the early 20th century there were still few schools in rural areas particularly for black children With seed money from the Julius Rosenwald Fund many rural black communities across Mississippi raised matching funds and contributed public funds to build new schools for their children Essentially many black adults taxed themselves twice and made significant sacrifices to raise money for the education of children in their communities in many cases donating land and or labor to build such schools 167 Blacks and whites attended separate segregated public schools in Mississippi until the late 1960s although such segregation had been declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court in its 1954 ruling in Brown v Board of Education In the majority black Mississippi Delta counties white parents worked through White Citizens Councils to set up private segregation academies where they enrolled their children Often funding declined for the public schools 168 But in the state as a whole only a small minority of white children were withdrawn from public schools State officials believed they needed to maintain public education to attract new businesses Many black parents complained that they had little representation in school administration and that many of their former administrators and teachers had been pushed out They have had to work to have their interests and children represented 168 In the late 1980s Mississippi s 954 public schools enrolled about 369 500 elementary and 132 500 secondary students Some 45 700 students attended private schools In the 21st century 91 of white children and most of the black children in the state attend public schools 169 In 2008 Mississippi was ranked last among the fifty states in academic achievement by the American Legislative Exchange Council s Report Card on Education 170 with the lowest average ACT scores and sixth lowest spending per pupil in the nation In contrast Mississippi had the 17th highest average SAT scores in the nation As an explanation the Report noted that 92 of Mississippi high school graduates took the ACT but only 3 of graduates took the SAT apparently a self selection of higher achievers This breakdown compares to the national average of high school graduates taking the ACT and SAT of 43 and 45 respectively 170 Generally prohibited in the West at large school corporal punishment is not unusual in Mississippi with 31 236 public school students c paddled at least one time circa 2016 171 A greater percentage of students were paddled in Mississippi than in any other state according to government data for the 2011 2012 school year 171 In 2007 Mississippi students scored the lowest of any state on the National Assessments of Educational Progress in both math and science 172 Jackson the state s capital city is the site of the state residential school for deaf and hard of hearing students The Mississippi School for the Deaf was established by the state legislature in 1854 before the civil war Culture Edit Culture of Mississippi redirects here Not to be confused with Mississippian culture The Mississippi State Capitol was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2016 While Mississippi has been especially known for its music and literature it has embraced other forms of art Its strong religious traditions have inspired striking works by outsider artists who have been shown nationally citation needed Jackson established the USA International Ballet Competition which is held every four years This ballet competition attracts the most talented young dancers from around the world 173 The Magnolia Independent Film Festival still held annually in Starkville is the first and oldest in the state George Ohr known as the Mad Potter of Biloxi and the father of abstract expressionism in pottery lived and worked in Biloxi MS Music Edit Main article Music of Mississippi Musicians of the state s Delta region were historically significant to the development of the blues Although by the end of the 19th century two thirds of the farm owners were black continued low prices for cotton and national financial pressures resulted in most of them losing their land More problems built up with the boll weevil infestation when thousands of agricultural jobs were lost Jimmie Rodgers a native of Meridian and guitarist singer songwriter known as the Father of Country Music played a significant role in the development of the blues He and Chester Arthur Burnett were friends and admirers of each other s music Their friendship and respect is an important example of Mississippi s musical legacy While the state has had a reputation for being racist Mississippi musicians created new forms by combining and creating variations on musical traditions from African American traditions and the musical traditions of white Southerners strongly shaped by Scots Irish and other styles The state is creating a Mississippi Blues Trail with dedicated markers explaining historic sites significant to the history of blues music such as Clarksdale s Riverside Hotel where Bessie Smith died after her auto accident on Highway 61 The Riverside Hotel is just one of many historical blues sites in Clarksdale The Delta Blues Museum there is visited by tourists from all over the world Close by is Ground Zero a contemporary blues club and restaurant co owned by actor Morgan Freeman Elvis Presley who created a sensation in the 1950s as a crossover artist and contributed to rock n roll was a native of Tupelo From opera star Leontyne Price to the alternative rock band 3 Doors Down to gulf and western singer Jimmy Buffett modern rock jazz world music guitarist producer Clifton Hyde to rappers David Banner Big K R I T and Afroman Mississippi musicians have been significant in all genres Sports Edit See also List of college athletic programs in Mississippi Biloxi is home to the Biloxi Shuckers baseball team a AA minor league affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers and member of the Double A South playing at MGM Park Clinton is home to the Mississippi Brilla FC a USL League Two soccer team Pearl is home to the Mississippi Braves baseball team a AA minor league affiliate of the Atlanta Braves and member of the Double A South playing at Trustmark Park Southaven is home to the Memphis Hustle basketball team The Hustle are an affiliate of the Memphis Grizzlies They play in the NBA G League See also Edit Mississippi portal United States portalIndex of Mississippi related articles Outline of Mississippi List of people from Mississippi Mississippi literatureNotes Edit Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry Please note this figure refers to only the number of students paddled regardless of whether a student was spanked multiple times in a year and does not refer to the number of instances of corporal punishment which would be substantially higher References Edit Knob Reset NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce a b Elevations and Distances in the United States United States Geological Survey 2001 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved October 24 2011 Bureau US Census 2021 04 26 2020 Census Apportionment Results The United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2021 04 27 Median Annual Household Income census gov Retrieved January 27 2020 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain 3 3 43 State toy 2010 Mississippi Code Justia Retrieved 31 March 2011 2020 Population and Housing State Data Census gov Retrieved 2022 02 07 Cotton in a Global Economy Mississippi 1800 1860 Mississippi History Now mshistorynow mdah state ms us Retrieved May 24 2019 Richter William L William Lee 1942 2009 The A to Z of the Civil War and Reconstruction Richter William L William Lee 1942 Lanham Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810863361 OCLC 435767707 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mississippi Annual State Health Rankings 2013 americashealthrankings org Archived from the original on April 24 2016 Retrieved October 5 2014 Percent of People Who Have Completed High School Including Equivalency statistics states compared Statemaster Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 5 2014 State Median Household Income Patterns 1990 2010 U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 6 2012 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Sub national HDI Subnational HDI Global Data Lab globaldatalab org Retrieved May 24 2019 Mississippi Rankings and Facts U S News Retrieved July 23 2022 Prentice Guy 2003 Pushmataha Choctaw Indian Chief Southeast Chronicles Archived from the original on December 2 2007 Retrieved February 11 2008 Mikko Saikku January 28 2010 Bioregional Approach to Southern History The Yazoo Mississippi Delta Southern Spaces doi 10 18737 M7QK5T Retrieved September 9 2015 Wynne Ben 2007 Mississippi On The Road Histories p 12 ISBN 978 1566566667 Kappler Charles 1904 Indian Affairs Laws and Treaties Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved April 16 2008 Baird W David 1973 The Choctaws Meet the Americans 1783 to 1843 The Choctaw People United States Indian Tribal Series p 36 ASIN B001G42A16 Library of Congress 73 80708 Bond Bradley 2005 Mississippi A Documentary History Univ Press of Mississippi p 68 ISBN 978 1617034305 Morris Thomas D 1999 Southern Slavery and the Law 1619 1860 University of North Carolina Press p 172 ISBN 978 0807864302 Fede Andrew 2012 People Without Rights Routledge Revivals An Interpretation of the Fundamentals of the Law of Slavery in the U S South Routledge p 79 ISBN 978 1136716102 McCain William D 1967 The Administrations of David Holmes Governor of the Mississippi Territory 1809 1817 Journal of Mississippi History 29 3 328 347 Site Builder www thomaslegion net US Southern Colonies Spanish La Florida WEST JPEG 1826 Refusal of Chickasaws and Choctaws PDF choctawnation com Five Civilized Tribes Archived from the original on June 22 2018 Retrieved June 27 2018 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek PDF Retrieved April 2 2021 Historical Census Browser Fisher lib virginia edu Archived from the original on August 23 2007 Retrieved July 30 2010 a b c d e f g h John C Willis Forgotten Time The Yazoo Mississippi Delta after the Civil War Charlottesville University of Virginia Press 2000 ISBN 978 0813919829 Rothman Lily June 23 2016 Free State of Jones Why You Probably Hadn t Heard the Real Free State of Jones Story Before Time Retrieved April 10 2022 a b James T Campbell 1995 Songs of Zion The African Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States and South Africa New York Oxford University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 0 19 536005 9 The Church in the Southern Black Community Documenting the South University of North Carolina 2004 Retrieved January 15 2009 a b DuBois W E B 1998 Black Reconstruction in America 1860 1880 New York The Free Press p 437 Wharton V L 1941 The Race Issue in the Overthrow of Reconstruction in Mississippi A Paper Read before the American Historical Association 1940 Phylon 2 4 362 370 doi 10 2307 271241 JSTOR 271241 McMillen Neil R 1990 The Politics of the Disfranchised Dark Journey Black Mississippians in the Age of Jim Crow p 43 ISBN 978 0 252 06156 1 Stephen Edward Cresswell Rednecks Redeemers and Race Mississippi after Reconstruction Jackson University Press of Mississippi 2006 p 124 ISBN 978 1578068470 The Louisville Leader Louisville Kentucky Louisville Leader Collection library louisville edu May 19 1923 Retrieved May 28 2016 Randy J Sparks Religion in Mississippi online edition Rice University 2001 The Anti Prohibition Manual A Summary of Facts and Figures Dealing with Prohibition 1917 Cincinnati Ohio National Association of Distillers and Wholesale Dealers 1917 p 8 Retrieved July 16 2019 Tracy Janice Branch 2015 Mississippi Moonshine Politics How Bootleggers amp the Law Kept a Dry State Soaked Arcadia Publishing p 20 ISBN 978 1625852885 Retrieved July 16 2019 Historical Census Browser 1960 United States Census University of Virginia Archived August 23 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed March 13 2008 Joseph Crespino Mississippi as Metaphor State Region and Nation in Historical Imagination Southern Spaces October 23 1996 accessed October 1 2013 Michael Schenkler Memories of Queens College and an American Tragedy Queens Press October 18 2002 Archived January 17 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed March 15 2008 Robert G Clark 26 October 2000 video The Morris W H Bill Collins Speaker Series Mississippi State University accessed June 10 2015 Mississippi Bourbon Borealis Time February 11 1966 Spruill Marjorie Julian Spruill Wheeler Jesse Mississippi Women and the Woman Suffrage Amendment Mississippi Historical Society Retrieved August 25 2018 After oversight Mississippi ratifies 13th Amendment abolishing slavery almost 150 years after its adoption Daily News New York Retrieved February 19 2013 Mississippi Officially Abolishes Slavery Ratifies 13th Amendment ABC News February 7 2013 Retrieved February 19 2013 Mississippi fixes oversight formally ratifies 13th Amendment on slavery Fox News Retrieved February 19 2013 Segregationist Mississippi laws repealed The Clarion Ledger dead link John Blake July 30 2008 Segregated Sundays CNN Retrieved July 30 2010 a b c d Susan Saulny Black and White and Married in the Deep South A Shifting Image The New York Times March 20 2011 accessed October 25 2012 Pettus Emily Wagster Press Associated June 30 2020 Governor to retire Mississippi s Confederate themed flag Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved June 30 2020 Avery Dan November 4 2020 Mississippi voters decide to replace Confederate themed state flag NBC News Retrieved November 4 2020 Mississippi National Park Service Retrieved July 16 2008 a b c Archived copy Retrieved March 2 2019 Retrieved September 20 2013 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Mississippi Weather Mississippi Weather Forecast Mississippi Climate ustravelweather com Archived from the original on November 21 2015 Retrieved September 9 2015 Climatological Information for Mississippi USA com 2003 Meyer Robinson June 29 2017 The American South Will Bear the Worst of Climate Change s Costs The Atlantic What Climate Change Means for Mississippi PDF United States Environmental Protection Agency August 2016 Delcourt Hazel R Delcourt Paul A 1975 The Blufflands Pleistocene pathway into the Tunica Hills The American Midland Naturalist 94 2 385 400 doi 10 2307 2424434 JSTOR 2424434 McCook Lucile M Kartesz John A preliminary checklist of the plants of Mississippi University of Mississippi Pullen Herbarium Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Magnolia grandiFLORA The digital herbarium for Mississippi Magnolia grandiFLORA Mississippi Herbarium Consortium Retrieved March 22 2018 Ross Stephen T 2002 Inland Fishes of Mississippi Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1578062461 Jones Robert L Slack William T Hartfield Paul D 2005 The freshwater mussels Mollusca Bivalvia Unionidae of Mississippi Southeastern Naturalist 4 1 77 92 doi 10 1656 1528 7092 2005 004 0077 TFMMBU 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 3878159 S2CID 86592258 Mississippi Crayfishes Crayfishes of Mississippi U S Forest Service Southern Research Station Retrieved March 23 2018 Nations Tina M Stark Bill P Hicks Matthew B 2007 The winter stoneflies Plecoptera Capniidae of Mississippi PDF Illiesia 3 9 70 94 Retrieved March 23 2018 Roediger David R 1999 The Wages of Whiteness Race and the Making of the American Working Class New York Verso p 146 ISBN 978 1859842409 a b Solomon John Otto 1999 The Final Frontiers 1880 1930 Settling the Southern Bottomlands Westport Greenwood Press pp 10 11 a b About the levee Physical development of a levee system Leveeboard org Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved July 30 2010 Solomon John Otto 1999 The Final Frontiers 1880 1930 Settling the Southern Bottomlands Westport Greenwood Press p 50 ISBN 978 0313289637 Solomon 1999 The Final Frontiers p 70 Historical Population Change Data 1910 2020 Census gov United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved May 1 2021 a b Race and Ethnicity in the United States 2010 Census and 2020 Census census gov United States Census Bureau August 12 2021 Retrieved 2021 09 26 QuickFacts Alabama Louisiana Mississippi U S Census Bureau Population and Population Centers by State 2000 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on December 12 2001 Retrieved December 5 2008 Mississippi QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau Quickfacts census gov Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved March 14 2012 U S Census Quick Facts Mississippi July 1 2019 Historical Census Statistics on Population Totals By Race 1790 to 1990 and By Hispanic Origin 1970 to 1990 For The United States Regions Divisions and States Archived from the original on December 24 2014 Retrieved October 5 2014 Population of Mississippi Census 2010 and 2000 Interactive Map Demographics Statistics Quick Facts Retrieved April 2 2021 permanent dead link 2010 Census Data Retrieved October 5 2014 David Hackett Fischer Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America New York Oxford University Press 1989 pp 602 645 Dominic Pulera 2004 Sharing the Dream White Males in Multicultural America A amp C Black p 57 ISBN 978 0 8264 1643 8 Ancestry of the Population by State 1980 Table 3 PDF Retrieved February 18 2012 James C Cobb The Most Southern Place on Earth The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity 1994 p 244 Wong Vivian Wu Summer 1996 Somewhere between White and Black The Chinese in Mississippi OAH Magazine of History 10 4 33 36 doi 10 1093 maghis 10 4 33 JSTOR 25163098 Thornell John G 2008 A Culture in Decline The Mississippi Delta Chinese Southeast Review of Asian Studies 30 196 202 Loewen James W 1971 The Mississippi Chinese Between Black and White Cambridge Harvard University Press Quan Robert Seto 1982 Lotus Among the Magnolias The Mississippi Chinese Jackson University Press of Mississippi Jung John 2011 Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocers Yin amp Yang Press Judge Phoebe Vietnamese Shrimpers May Lose Way Of Life Again NPR May 16 2010 Retrieved on March 26 2013 Exner Rich June 3 2012 Americans under age 1 now mostly minorities but not in Ohio Statistical Snapshot The Plain Dealer National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 64 Number 1 January 15 2015 PDF Cdc gov Retrieved April 2 2021 National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 64 Number 12 December 23 2015 PDF Cdc gov Retrieved April 2 2021 National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 66 Number 1 January 5 2017 PDF Cdc gov Retrieved April 2 2021 National Vital Statistics Reports Volume 67 Number 1 January 31 2018 PDF Cdc gov Retrieved April 2 2021 Archived copy PDF www cdc gov Archived from the original PDF on 11 November 2018 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Data PDF Cdc gov Retrieved December 21 2019 Data PDF Cdc gov Retrieved March 30 2021 Data PDF www cdc gov Retrieved 2022 02 20 Census gov Married Couple and Unmarried Partner Households 2000 PDF Retrieved July 30 2010 Mississippi leads nation in same sex child rearing Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal August 26 2011 Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved March 12 2012 Ost Jason Facts and Findings from The Gay and Lesbian Atlas Urban org Archived from the original on August 5 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 Mississippi Languages city data com Retrieved September 9 2015 a b Mississippi Languages city data com Retrieved September 9 2015 Public Religion Research Institute Study Public Religion Research Institute 2020 Retrieved November 26 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link a b Mississippi History Now Religion in Mississippi Mshistory k12 ms us Archived from the original on October 8 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 a b Adults in Mississippi Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project May 11 2015 PRRI American Values Atlas ava prri org Retrieved 2022 11 26 Presbyterian Church in America Religious Groups The Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved October 5 2014 a b The Association of Religion Data Archives State Membership Report www thearda com Retrieved November 22 2013 Frank Newport March 27 2012 Mississippi is The Most Religious U S State Gallup Mississippians Go to Church the Most Vermonters Least Gallup com Retrieved on April 12 2014 State of the States Importance of Religion Gallup com Retrieved on April 12 2014 Commonwealth Fund Aiming Higher Results from a State Scorecard on Health System Performance 2009 Commonwealthfund org August 3 2009 Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved March 14 2012 Deaths Final Data for 2013 table 18 PDF CDC National Center for Health Statistics May 30 2014 Health United States 2014 PDF U S Department of Health and Human Services May 2015 Ronni Mott December 3 2008 We the Fat Jackson Free Press Retrieved December 20 2008 Thomas M Maugh August 28 2007 Mississippi heads list of fattest states Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on March 28 2019 Retrieved August 28 2007 Victor Sutton PhD and Sandra Hayes MPH Bureau of Health Data and Research Mississippi Department of Health October 29 2008 Impact of Social Behavioral and Environmental Factors on Overweight and Obesity among African American Women in Mississippi American Public Health Association APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing at 2008 136th Annual Meeting Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved December 20 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Gail D Hughes DrPH MPH and Gloria Areghan MSN both with Department of Preventive Medicine Epidemiology University of Mississippi Medical Centre Bern Nadette Knight MSPH with Department of General Internal Medicine University of Mississippi Medical Center and Abiodun A Oyebola MD with Department of Public Health Jackson State University November 11 2008 Obesity and the African American Adolescent The Mississippi Delta Report American Public Health Association 2002 130th Annual APHA Meeting Retrieved December 20 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lei Zhang PhD MBA Office of Health Data and Research Mississippi State Department of Health Jerome Kolbo PhD ACSW College of Health Bonnie Harbaugh PhD RN School of Nursing and Charkarra Anderson Lewis PhD MPH Department of Community Health Sciences University of Southern Mississippi October 29 2008 Public Perception of Childhood Obesity among Mississippi Adults American Public Health Association APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing at 2008 136th Annual Meeting Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved December 20 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Competition in health insurance research American Medical Association Retrieved June 15 2019 GDP by State Greyhill Advisors Retrieved September 13 2011 a b c d Pender 2017 Generosity Index Catalogueforphilanthropy org Archived from the original on December 4 2002 Retrieved July 30 2010 a b John Otto Solomon The Final Frontiers 1880 1930 Settling the Southern Bottomlands Westport Greenwood Press 1999 pp 10 11 42 43 50 51 and 70 Naipaul V S 1990 A Turn in the South Vintage p 216 ISBN 978 0679724889 The people who wrote the constitution wanted the state to remain a pastoral state an agricultural state They didn t want big business or the corporations coming in encouraging unfavorable competition for jobs with the agricultural community Mississippi Almanac Entry The New York Times July 15 2004 Archived from the original on May 26 2012 Retrieved May 12 2010 The New York Times Travel Almanac 2004 Historical Census Browser Fisher lib virginia edu Retrieved July 30 2010 permanent dead link W E B DuBois Black Reconstruction in America 1860 1880 New York Harcourt Brace 1935 reprint New York The Free Press 1998 p 432 Du Bois 1935 Black Reconstruction p 437 Du Bois 1935 Black Reconstruction pp 432 434 Katrina Stats City of Biloxi Retrieved October 1 2013 2013 edition of State of the States The AGA Survey of Casino Entertainment Archived October 19 2013 at the Wayback Machine American Gaming Association Retrieved October 1 2013 Mississippi Direct Financial Incentives 2011 Mississippi Momentum Mississippi Area Development Online March 2011 Retrieved June 16 2014 Local Sales Taxes Add Significant Burden on Consumers The Tax Foundation September 22 2011 Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved February 18 2012 Ad Valorem Tax Mississippi Department of Revenue Archived from the original on July 4 2014 Retrieved June 30 2014 Stuesse Angela and Laura Helton Low Wage Legacies Race and the Golden Chicken in Mississippi Where Contemporary Immigration Meets African American Labor History Southern Spaces December 31 2013 Low Wage Legacies Race and the Golden Chicken in Mississippi Where Contemporary Immigration Meets African American Labor History Southern Spaces Archived from the original on August 14 2014 Retrieved August 13 2014 Gilbert M Gaul and Dan Morgan June 19 2007 A Slow Demise in the Delta US Farm Subsidies Favor Big Over Small and White Over Blacks The Washington Post accessed March 29 2008 Les Christie August 30 2007 The Richest and Poorest Places in the U S CNNMoney com Archived from the original on September 14 2007 Retrieved September 22 2007 Unemployment Rates for States Seasonally Adjusted December 2018 Local Area Unemployment Statistics U S Bureau of Labor Statistics March 2 2019 Retrieved March 2 2019 Tax Foundation Tax Foundation Retrieved July 30 2010 Federal Taxes Paid Vs Federal Spending Received State 1981 2005 October 19 2007 J Pomante II Michael Li Quan 15 Dec 2020 Cost of Voting in the American States 2020 Election Law Journal Rules Politics and Policy 19 4 503 509 doi 10 1089 elj 2020 0666 S2CID 225139517 Retrieved 14 January 2022 Amendment banning gay marriage passes USA Today November 2 2004 Retrieved October 12 2007 Voters pass all 11 bans on gay marriage NBC News Associated Press November 3 2004 Retrieved December 7 2007 Mississippi s Ban on Gay Marriage Officially Lifted Retrieved October 16 2015 LGBT couples can be refused service under new Mississippi law The Guardian April 5 2016 Retrieved April 7 2016 Mississippi law opens a new front in the battle over gay rights Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 11 2016 Mississippi passes controversial religious freedom bill BBC News April 5 2016 Park Madison July 1 2016 Judge blocks controversial Mississippi law CNN com Retrieved January 6 2018 Willie James Inman October 4 2017 Major religious freedom law set to take effect unless Supreme Court intervenes foxnews com Retrieved January 6 2018 Campbell Larrison October 1 2017 Religious freedom law House Bill 1523 will take effect Oct 6 appeal planned mississippitoday org Retrieved January 6 2018 Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Retrieved 2021 04 16 Shoichet Catherine E May 9 2019 Florida is about to ban sanctuary cities At least 11 other states have too CNN Mississippi State Constitution Retrieved February 15 2011 Sansing David G 2013 A place called Mississippi Paul E Binford Atlanta Georgia ISBN 978 1 56733 244 5 OCLC 861987177 Alexander P Lamis 1999 Southern Politics in the 1990s LSU Press p 425 ISBN 9780807166772 Black Voters Sue Over Mississippi s Jim Crow Era Election Law NPR org Retrieved January 4 2020 Rozier Alex 31 December 2020 Interactive How Mississippians voted for 2020 candidates and ballot measures Mississippi Today Retrieved April 2 2021 Phillips Owen April 28 2016 Riding in Cars with Beers Retrieved April 26 2019 Woodell Brody 20 December 2018 Which states have the MOST and the LEAST drunk driving deaths WQAD Retrieved April 26 2019 U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District Arkabutla Lake Archived from the original on July 15 2007 U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District Grenada Lake Archived from the original on March 10 2007 U S Army Corps of Engineers Vicksburg District Sardis Lake Archived from the original on March 10 2007 James D Anderson The Education of Blacks in the South 1860 1935 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina 1988 pp 160 161 a b Bolton Charles C The Hardest Deal of All The Battle Over School Integration in Mississippi 1870 1980 University Press of Mississippi 2005 pp 136 178 179 ISBN 1604730609 9781604730609 Bolton 2005 The Hardest Deal of All pp 178 179 a b Report Card on Education PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2011 a b Farrell Colin February 2016 Corporal punishment in US schools World Corporal Punishment Research Retrieved April 4 2016 Dillon Sam November 14 2007 Study Compares States Math and Science Scores With Other Countries The New York Times Retrieved May 12 2010 The New York Times 2007 USA International Ballet Competition Usaibc com Archived from the original on September 25 2007 Retrieved July 30 2010 Further reading EditBusbee Westley F Mississippi A History 2005 Gonzales Edmond ed A Mississippi Reader Selected Articles from the Journal of Mississippi History 1980 Krane Dale and Stephen D Shaffer Mississippi Government amp Politics Modernizers versus Traditionalists 1992 government textbook Loewen James W and Charles Sallis eds Mississippi Conflict and Change 2nd ed 1980 high school textbook McLemore Richard ed A History of Mississippi 2 vols 1973 thorough coverage by scholars Mitchell Dennis J A New History of Mississippi 2014 Ownby ted et al eds The Mississippi Encyclopedia 2017 Skates John Ray Mississippi A Bicentennial History 1979 popular Sparks Randy J Religion in Mississippi 2001 374 pp online edition Swain Martha H ed Mississippi Women Their Histories Their Lives 2003 17 short biographiesExternal links EditMississippi at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Official website Mississippi Travel and Tourism Mississippi Development Authority The Mississippi Believe It Campaign USDA Mississippi State Facts University Press of Mississippi Ecoregions of Mississippi Mississippi at Curlie Mississippi as Metaphor State Region and Nation in Historical Imagination Southern Spaces October 23 2006 Geographic data related to Mississippi at OpenStreetMap Mississippi State Databases an annotated list of searchable databases compiled by the Government Documents Roundtable of the American Library Association Preceded byIndiana List of U S states by date of admission to the UnionAdmitted on December 10 1817 20th Succeeded byIllinois Coordinates 33 N 90 W 33 N 90 W 33 90 State of Mississippi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mississippi amp oldid 1132585853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.