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Thursday, September 6, 2012
"Mound Bayou"(1887)
Was an all black town in the Yazoo Delta in Northwest Mississippi.It was founded during the
spring of 1887 by twelve pioneers from Davis Bend,a fledgling black colony impacted by falling agricultural prices,natural prices,natural disasters,and hostile race relations.This migration movement was led by Isaiah Montgomery,a former patriarch of Davis Bend.Purchased from the Louisville,New Orleans,and Texas Railroad (L,NO &T),Mound Bayou bordered a new rail line between Memphis and Vicksburg.From 1890 to 1915,Mound Bayou was a land of promise for African Americans.Encapsulated in this "promise"were self-help,race pride,economic opportunity,and social justice,in a self-segregated community designed for blacks to have minimum contact with whites until integration was a viable option to black freedom.Mound Bayou had a U.S. Post Office,six churches,stores,and several public and private schools.Its economy depended on the production of cotton,timber,and corn,and being and agent for the L,NO,& T Railroad.Politically,Mound Bayou's mayor Isaiah Montgomery protected it from white violence through political accommodation.Isaiah also ensured Mound Bayou's growth by working closely with Booker T. Washington after 1900,through his "lieutenant"Charles Banks."Socially Mound Bayou had an exceptionally low crime rate,high morals (no gambling or sale of alcohol),and everyone had to be a useful member of the community.Through outlets like the town's newspaper,The Demonstrator (1900),Mound Bayou promoted education as an essential path to community survival,in particular vocational education in scientific agriculture through the Mound Bayou Normal and Industrial Institute.From 1907 to 1915,this infrastructure,along with with Mound Bayou's function as a railroad center,allowed it to flourish and grow to 8,000 people by 1911.Its noticeable decline occurred during the Great Migration period (1915-1930),in which cotton prices fell,Booker T. Washington passed away,and the black path towards freedom redirected from independent towns towards the major cities of the United States.
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Janice Hartmann, wrote, Pursuit of a Dream. It describes the conditions of Davis Bend, and how this town came into being. Jefferson Davis, oldest brother, Joseph, were the owner of these former slaves. Very interesting reading.
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