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History of Jackson, Mississippi:

The City, Originally Known As LeFleur's Bluff, Was Founded Based On The Need For A Centrally Located Capital For The State Of Mississippi And Named For The Iconic Figure Of General Andrew Jackson. In 1821, The Mississippi General Assembly, Meeting In The Then-capital, Natchez, Had Sent Thomas Hinds (for Whom Hinds County Is Named), James Patton, And William Lattimore To Look For A Site. After Surveying Areas North And East Of Jackson, They Proceeded Southwest Along The Pearl River Until They Reached LeFleur's Bluff In Hinds County. Their Report To The General Assembly Was This Location Had Beautiful And Healthful Surroundings, Good Water, Abundant Timber, Navigable Waters, And Proximity To The Natchez Trace. And So, A Legislative Act Passed By The Assembly On 28 November 1821 Authorized The Location To Become The Permanent Seat Of The Government Of The State Of Mississippi. Jackson Was Originally Planned Out In April 1822 By Peter Van Dorn In A "checkerboard" Pattern Advocated By Thomas Jefferson, In Which City Blocks Alternated With Parks And Other Open Spaces, Giving The Appearance Of A Checkerboard. This Plan Has Not Lasted To The Present Day. The State Legislature First Met In Jackson On December 23, 1822.

In 1839, Jackson Was The Site Of The Passage Of The First State Law That Permitted Married Women To Own And Administer Their Own Property.

Jackson Was First Linked With Other Cities By Rail In 1840. Unlike Vicksburg, Greenville, And Natchez, Jackson Is Not Located On The Mississippi River, And Did Not Develop Like Those Cities From River Commerce. Instead, Railroads Would Later Spark Growth Of The City In The Decades After The American Civil War.

In 1863, During The Campaign Which Ended In The Capture Of Vicksburg, Union Forces Won The Battle Of Jackson, Forcing Confederate Forces To Flee Westward Towards Clinton. Subsequently, On 15 May 1863 Union Troops Under The Command Of William Tecumseh Sherman Burned And Looted Nearly The Entire City Of Jackson, A Strategic Manufacturing And Railroad Center For The Confederacy, Which Was Afterwards Nicknamed "Chimneyville" Because Supposedly Only The Chimneys Of Houses Were Left Standing. The Line Of Confederate Defenses In May 1863 Was Located Along A Road In Downtown Jackson Now Known As Fortification Street.

Today There Are Few Antebellum Structures Left Standing In Jackson. One Surviving Structure Is The Governor's Mansion, Built In 1842, Which Served As Sherman's Headquarters. Another Is The Old Capitol Building, Which Served As The Home Of The Mississippi State Legislature From 1839 To 1903. There The Mississippi Legislature Passed The Ordinance Of Secession From The Union On January 9, 1861, Becoming The Second State To Secede From The United States. The Constitutional Convention Of 1890, Which Produced Mississippi's Constitution Of 1890, Was Also Held There. The So-called New Capitol Replaced The Older Structure Upon Its Completion In 1903, And Today The Old Capitol Is A Historical Museum. A Third Important Surviving Antebellum Structure Is The Jackson City Hall, Built In 1846 For Less Than $8,000. It Is Said That Sherman, A Mason, Spared It Because It Housed A Masonic Lodge, Though A More Likely Reason Is That It Housed An Army Hospital.

Pulitzer Prize-winning Author Eudora Welty Was Born In Jackson In 1909, Died There In 2001, And Lived Most Of Her Life In The Belhaven Section Of The City. She Wrote A Memoir Of Her Development As A Writer, One Writer's Beginnings (1984). The Book Gives A Charming Picture Of The City In The Early 20th Century. Today, The Main Jackson Public Library Is Named In Her Honor.

Highly Acclaimed African-American Author Richard Wright, A Native Of Roxie, Mississippi, Lived In Jackson As An Adolescent And Young Man In The 1910s And 1920s, And Relates His Experience In His Memoir Black Boy (1945). He Describes The Harsh And Largely Terror-filled Life Most African-Americans Experienced In The South (and, It Should Be Added, In Much Of The United States) Under Segregation In The Early Twentieth Century.

Jackson's Economic Growth Was Stimuated In The 1930s By The Discovery Of Natural Gas Fields Nearby.

On May 24, 1961 During The American Civil Rights Movement, A Large Group Of Freedom Riders Was Arrested In Jackson For Disturbing The Peace After They Disembarked From Their Bus.

In Jackson, Shortly After Midnight On June 12, 1963, Civil Rights Activist And Leader Of The Mississippi Chapter Of The NAACP Medgar Evers Was Murdered By Byron De La Beckwith, A White Supremacist. In 1994, Prosecutors Finally Convicted De La Beckwith Of Murder. A Local Highway Now Bears Medgar Evers' Name.

The First Successful Cadaveric Lung Transplant Was Performed At The University Of Mississippi Medical Center In Jackson In June 1963 By Dr. James Hardy. Hardy Transplanted The Cadaveric Lung Into A Patient Suffering From Lung Cancer. The Patient Survived For Eighteen Days Before Dying Of Kidney Failure.

Since 1968, Jackson Has Been The Home Of Malaco Records, One Of The Leading Record Companies For Gospel And Soul Music In The United States. In January 1973, Paul Simon Recorded The Song "Learn How To Fall," Found On The Album There Goes Rhymin' Simon, In Jackson At The Malaco Recording Studios.

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