In
the winter of 1540 Hernando de Soto led a large expedition into
Mississippi and wintered along the Pontotoc River. In the following
spring he reached the Mississippi River, but, because he found
no gold or silver in the region, Spanish explorers directed
their efforts elsewhere.
Nearly
130 years later a small group of French Canadians sailed down
the Mississippi River and immediately realized its commercial
and strategic importance. In 1699 a French expedition led by Pierre
le Moyne d'Iberville established France's claim to the lower Mississippi
valley. French settlements were soon established at Fort Maurepas,
Mobile, Biloxi, Fort Rosalie, and New Orleans.
Following
the French and Indian War, which ended in 1763, France ceded its
possessions in the lower Mississippi valley, except New Orleans,
to Great Britain, which also gained possession of Spanish Florida
and divided that territory into two colonies. One of those was
West Florida, which included the area between the Apalachicola
and Mississippi rivers. The original northern boundary of West
Florida was the 31 parallel, but it was extended in 1764 to the
3228' parallel. Fort Rosalie was renamed Fort Panmure, and the
Natchez District was established as a subdivision of West Florida.
Natchez flourished during the early 1770s. After the outbreak
of the U.S. War of Independence, Spain regained possession of
Florida and occupied Natchez. The Treaty of Paris of 1783 fixed
the 31 parallel as the boundary between Spanish Florida and the
United States, but Spain continued to occupy Natchez until the
dispute was settled in 1798.
The
original Mississippi Territory created by the U.S. Congress in1798
was a strip of land extending about 100 miles north to south and
from the Mississippi River to the Chattahoochee on the Georgia
border. The territory was increased in 1804 and 1812 to reach
from Tennessee to the Gulf. In 1817 the western part achieved
statehood as Mississippi (the eastern part became the state of
Alabama in 1819). Natchez, the first territorial capital, was
replaced in 1802 by nearby Washington, which in turn was replaced
by Jackson in 1822.
The
1820s and '30s were marked by the decline of the Jeffersonian
Republicans, the ascendancy of the Jacksonian Democrats, and the
removal of the Indians to Oklahoma. They were the days of steamboats,
land speculation, and the growth of a plantation-based cotton
economy, with its concomitant slave population. Slave owning,
however, was not common among the small landowners, who became
more numerous than the large planters but who had little influence
on public affairs for many years.
Sectionalism in both North and South had been growing for
some time. Its ill feelings gradually became dominated in both
North and South by slavery. In January 1861, a convention adopted
an ordinance of secession, and within a year the state was in
the midst of war. The people suffered much privation, and the
land underwent great devastation; by 1865 the state was in economic
ruin.
For
25 years following the Civil War, Mississippi's former slaves
and their former owners grappled with the political, social, and
economic consequences of emancipation. The white minority could
not or would not accept a biracial society based on equality of
opportunity. In 1890 the ruling elite adopted a constitution that
established a caste system of racial segregation and an economic
order that kept blacks in a position of dependency.
Mississippians hoped to find economic salvation in the coming
of industry and the railroads, but the hope was only partially
realized. Emancipation had made the former slaves free to go where
they wished, but most remained and eventually were absorbed into
the tenant-farming system. The continued economic interdependence
of the two races kept intact many of the customs and social systems
that had developed before the war. The constitution of 1890 effectively
disfranchised most of the black population. |