This will my paper about the state of Mississippi’s history, and what happen in Mississippi history the made the state what it is today. I will be using information from the internet and from a person that at one time lived in Mississippi. In this essay I will try to be as honest as I possibly can.
Mississippi was not always in habited by 2,993,432, Americans, 59.1% Whites’ and 37% American African or Black people, says worldpopulation.com. At one time it was inhabited by the Native Americans, these native American almost never got a long deferent groups wouldn’t get along with others these groups where known as the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Natchez, Yazoo, Pascagoula and the Biloxi says wiki.com there is not much to say about these people other the fact that they did not have
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The European gave the Native American small pocks, chicken pocks, and many other disease; with the power to kill off an entire family tree with just one sneeze it was just a matter of time before the Native Americans became almost nothing but a memory. The Native Americans didn’t right anything down; their stories were passed down from generation to generation; so since there aren’t many Native Americans left I don’t have much to say about them. Hernando De Soto was a major settler back in the mid-1500s. Even doe the European took the state of Mississippi from the natives the Spanish steel controlled what happen in it came to things like trading goods so you could say that they owned the state until the late-1700s when the Spanish lose control over the State. Then Came the Cotton Gin was invented this machine gave the State the upper hand that it needed over Spain with the free labor of slaves; cotton was produced by the boot lodes daily and since it was grown locally the Spanish could not tax it. The Native American Slave didn’t work out; because of this skin pigment and the fact that they knew the land like the back of their hands all they had to
Mississippi History has become the state its now because of many events, government actions, cultural changes, and writers. Indian Act Removal Act, 13th Amendment, and Reverend George Lee played a big impact Mississippi current status. The Removals of Indians increased the Europeans power and lessened the Indian population. The 13th Amendment abolished slavery. Reverend George Lee was shot down for urging blacks to vote. All these contributed to Mississippi History.
From slavery period of no political status to President Abraham Lincoln abolition of slavery, from the “Voting Rights Act” to today’s Obama, slaves to the president, African Americans traveled is a difficult and tortuous politics of the road.
The mississippians were a group of people from North America. They lived here about 2700 years ago. They were very different than what we are used to now.
THE BATTLE OF OLE MISS AS IT RELATES TO THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE AND AMERICAN HISTORY
“Freedom Summer”, a book by Bruce Watson, talks about that historic time of 1964 in Mississippi. He explains in detail about the events that went on. Even the most painful details from that summer he has you relive as he tells about them. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee went to Mississippi to educate African Americans and help them vote. Watson talks about the murder of three innocent people while down there in Mississippi. Three people that were young and just helping African Americans be educated were murdered for helping. He uses many different quotes from those that were there or experienced what went on. All these to tell the story so important because it shaped American democracy. It made sure that African Americans had
Prompt: Although the development of the Trans-Mississippi West is popularly associated with hardy individualism, it was in fact largely dependent on the federal government. Assess the validity of this statement with specific reference to western economic activities in the 19th century.
However, since the Europeans moving in, According to Takaki,“Ever since the arrival of the English strangers in Jamestown in 1607 and at Plymouth Rock in 1620, the Indians story had been one of stolen lands, sickness, suffering, starvation and sadness”(Takaki P.45). White people want to get more lands, therefore they used the dirty tricks lied to Indians in order to get the lands. According to Takaki, Indians have been removed to west of Mississippi, Indians were lived outside of border and living poorly. On the other hand, “he new comers such as British people they had took all of lands which were easily to grow crops, and the lands left were really hard to plant”(The Last Indians War). That also the why Indians are poor because they do not
When Thomas Jefferson became president in 1800, few could have imagined the lasting impact his decisions would have on the future of America. In 1803, he made one of the most important purchases that would alter the course of the United States, this event became known as the Louisiana Purchase. The Louisiana Purchase contributed significantly to the growth and expansion of a United States, that at the time, was experiencing rapid growth in population. The acquisition of this land from France, gave the United States access to a land that had not been fully explored and riches that had yet to be discovered. It gave the United States full access to the Mississippi River which was great for trade, and the Lewis and Clark Corps of Discovery expedition mapped out the terrain and cultivated relationships with the natives.
The purpose of me writing this essay is to discuss the history and achievements of Mississippi. Mississippi joined the Union as the 20th state in 1817 and gets its name from the Mississippi River, which forms its western border. Spanish explorers arrived in the state in 1540 but it was the French who made the first permanent settlement in Mississippi in 1699. In the 19th century, Mississippi produced the most cotton in the United States. The capital of Mississippi is Jackson. Its population for 2010 is at around 2,967,297. Its size is approximately 48,432 square miles. Mississippi state nickname is famously known as “The Magnolia State”. Its state motto is “By valor and arms”. Its state is known as the Magnolia. Its state bird is the Mockingbird.
Mississippi’s Civil War: A Narrative History begins by providing the account of the Nullification Crisis that took place in 1832. The crisis began as a dispute between the state of South Carolina and the federal government over a series of national tariffs that many of the southerners viewed as excessive. (6) The leader of the nullification movement in Mississippi was John Anthony Quitman. Quitman died in 1859 and the Mississippi finally left the Union in 1861. (8) As a result of the Nullification crisis, the Mexican War took place. Many Mississippians volunteered to fight with much enthusiasm. After nearly two years of war, America won. (11) From 1840-1860 Mississippi’s population doubled to almost 800,000 residents and by 1860 Mississippi’s institutions were hopelessly entangled in the web of slavery. The cotton based agriculture increased the need for slaves and by the eve of the Civil War slaves represented 55 percent of the state’s total population. (12) Mississippi’s ordinance of secession officially took them out of the union in 1861 leading up to the Civil War. (32)
Culture wasn’t the only thing that the Europeans brought over to the Americas. Along with their customs and rules, came the diseases that the Native American’s have never been exposed to. The Europeans brought many communicable diseases such as small pox and measles which were transmitted to the Native Americans through trade goods or someone infected with them. This quickly annihilated most of the Native American population.
Mississippi history is a sad history of slavery and oppression. It is a history of racism and refusal to let go of segregationist ideals. Mississippi history is enough to give many the blues. In fact, the Blues style music originated in Mississippi and gravitated outward from there. .Mississippi history and Blues history are intertwined. Delta Blues is a blues style that originated in the Mississippi Delta and influenced many musicians. Another musical art form, Jazz may be considered an offspring from the Blues and also started in the South. There are many Blues musicians and singers that come from Mississippi or have become linked to Mississippi for various reasons. Bessie Smith, Charley Patton, Muddy Waters, and Cassandra Wilson have
Although I wasn’t in Mississippi during the ‘Freedom Summer’, I had a solid understanding of how life was during the ‘Freedom Summer’. This was years of racism and segregation towards the blacks in the US during the Civil Rights Movement. My aspect type was racism, and I learned of its impact on life through our analysis in the class of The Color Purple (1982) by Alice Walker, an epistolary novel about the lives of black people in rural dominated white racist Georgia during the 1920’s-50’s. Furthermore, we discussed Nelson Mandela’s Inaugural Speech in class, and how Mandela fought for Independence from the white racist government. With extra research of the Freedom Summer project launched by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Mississippi was one of the most racist states in the nation. They followed about 100 slaves laws that made these people want to hit the grave faster. Along with this came the problem of owning land as well as voting. Since the Spanish and Europeans started dehumanizing blacks and took their identity making them less of a person (Dawn Dennis Lecture). White people believed if you have no identity then you were non-existent (Dawin Dennis Lecture Notes).
After the Thirteenth Amendment,The people created black codes in order to degrade blacks, and they made these codes in replace of slavery since it was abolished, they felt good in themselves because it was basically like bringing back slavery in another form. First, “Adding to the controversy the new southern legislators began passing repressive “Black codes”. Mississippi pass the first of these laws designed to restrict