City Maps - Mississippi Heritage Trust

Transcription

City Maps - Mississippi Heritage Trust
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City Maps
Curriculum Developed By
Mississippi Heritage Trust
PHYSICAL: 600 East Amite Street, Suite 201
Jackson, MS 39201
MAILING: P.O. Box 577, Jackson, MS 39205
PHONE: 601-354-0200
FAX: 601-354-0220
EMAIL: [email protected]
ONLINE: www.mississippiheritage.com
This project has been made possible with funding from
the American Architectural Foundation,
the Mississippi Arts Commission and
the Mississippi Humanities Council.
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Original Plan of Jackson
Photo courtesy of “From Frontier Capital to Modern City: A History of Jackson, Mississippi’s Built Environment, 1865-1950”, The Jaeger
Company
Jackson, MS  Hinds County
Named after the seventh president of the United States, Andrew Jackson, the city was founded
in 1821 to serve as the capitol of Mississippi. Jackson is now the largest city in the state, with a
population of over 175,000.
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1875 Map of Jackson
Photo courtesy of “From Frontier Capital to Modern City: A History of Jackson, Mississippi’s Built Environment, 1865-1950”, The Jaeger
Company
Jackson, MS  Hinds County
The 1875 map of Jackson shows the U.S. Garrison sprawled on the very western edge of the city,
known then as “West Jackson.”
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1900 Map of Biloxi
Photo courtesy of Maritime and Seafood Industry Museum
Biloxi, MS  Harrison County
The European explorer Pierre LeMoyne D’Iberville first landed in Biloxi in 1699. Named for the
Native Americans living there, Biloxi means “First People.” Biloxi grew as a summer resort, then
seafood processing center and was at one time known as the “seafood capitol of the world.”
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Circa 1884 Map of Natchez
Photo courtesy of Biloxi Public Library
Natchez, MS  Adams County
The site of Natchez was once the grand ceremonial village of the Natchez tribe. Natchez became
the first capital of the Mississippi Territory in 1798. After 19 years as territorial capital, Natchez
became the first capital of the state of Mississippi. Though the capital was shifted to the morecentrally-located city of Jackson in 1822, Natchez’s strategic location on the Mississippi River led
to its growth as a bustling port for transporting cotton from local plantations downriver to New
Orleans.
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1871 Map of Vicksburg
Photo courtesy of “Cities of the Mississippi: Nineteenth Century Images of Urban Development”, John W. Reps, 1994
Vicksburg, MS  Warren County
Incorporated in 1825, Vicksburg was named for Newitt Vick, a Methodist minister and conscientious objector to the American Revolution. During the Civil War, Vicksburg was under siege for
47 days and starved into submission, as its location atop a high bluff overlooking the Mississippi
River proved impregnable to assault by federal troops.
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November 1885 Sanborn Map of Oxford
Photo courtesy of Sanborn Insurance Map Company
Oxford, MS  Lafayette County
Oxford was first incorporated as a town in 1837, and was given its name after the center of learning of England in the hopes of securing Mississippi’s first university. The University of Mississippi
was chartered in 1841 and opened its doors to students in 1848. Oxford is laid out with a central
town square.
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November 1894 Sanborn Map of Corinth
Photo courtesy of Sanborn Insurance Map Company
Corinth, MS  Alcorn County
Beginning as a small town called Cross City, Corinth grew up at the railroad crossing of the Mobile, Ohio, Memphis and Charleston railroads in the mid 1850s. Renamed for the Greek city-state
of Corinth, the city was of great strategic importance during the Civil War.
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Sprawl Diagram
Photo courtesy of “A Better Place to Live”, Philip Langdon, 1994
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