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A portion of the Mississippi
River, showing its many present and past meanderings, oxbows and
channels, from the work of Harold Fisk, Geographical Investigations
of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi, 1944. |
Welcome to the Mississippi Delta National Heritage
Area This site is under construction and is currently used to provide information to potential contractors |
| The River bore the alluvial plain that is the Mississippi Delta, and the Delta bore fruit....... |
| The Blues, Faulkner, Welty, Wright, the Civil War, Civil Rights, The Great Flood, Bogues and Bayous, Plantations, The Great Migration, Soul Food, King Cotton, The Levee, Agribusiness, Catfish, Gospel, Immigrants' Stories, Highway 61, Quilts, Segregation, Integration, Freedom Songs, Freedom Summer, Folk Tales, Juke Joints, Swamp Forests, Hunt Clubs, Oral Histories, and surprisingly, hot tamales......... |
| The
Mississippi Delta has a mystique of mythological proportions.
It was virgin
wilderness and swamp at the turn of the twentieth century, cleared for
cotton and plantation life by the 1930's, dominated by politically
powerful gentleman planters, peopled by Black sharecroppers, Italian
immigrants, Chinese, Lebanese and Jewish merchants. It is the source of
"The Great Migration" north, and thus the home of the African American
populations of many Northern cities like Chicago and Detroit. It is the
home of the Blues, Gospel, and the birthplace of Rock'n'Roll. It was once a
segregated society, overturned by the Civil Rights revolution, and now has many
African American public officials. It is the home of soul food. It
was an inspiration to Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty, Richard Wright,
Clifton Taulbert, Shelby Foote, and Hodding Carter. It is where Teddy
Roosevelt saved the original "Teddy Bear." It is the land where Muddy
Waters and Robert Johnson wrote the lyrics that eventually made the
Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton famous.
The Delta is the American story, shrunk in time and space. Faulkner said it was "deswamped and denuded and derivered in two generations." Shelby Foote claimed that one could see "a hundred years of history in twenty years in the Delta," and James Cobb wrote "When it comes to history, the Delta was clearly a region in a hurry."Analysts from Howard Zinn to James Cobb have claimed that the Delta is the South's South, the Most Southern Place on Earth, a place where American traits and experience are revealed with blinding clarity. Students of contemporary American culture will not find a better place to explore American history and culture first hand.
"Much of what is profoundly American- what people love about America- has come from the delta, which is often called 'the cradle of American culture.'" from Stories of the Delta, The National Park Service Lower Mississippi Delta Symposium, 1996
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| Our Mission | Enabling Legislation | NEPA Guidance | Where We Are | Who We Are | Contact Us |
| Contract | Exhibit B | |||
| Inventory of Heritage Resources | More NEPA Guidance Director Order 12 updated | RFP for Management Planning | What happened on this date in Delta Heritage? | NPS Planning Notebook |
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