A
FORTY-FIVE MINUTE RUN
THROUGH YAZOO - MORE OR LESS
Louise to Broad Lake Bridge -- 10 1/2 minutes
Welcome
to Yazoo County. For the next 35 miles or
so, you will be traveling in Mississippi's
largest county. It includes a land area of
610,000 acres and stretches 55 miles from
east to west. Our county population is approximately
27,000 and our county seat, Yazoo City, has
roughly 11,000 outstanding citizens.
The
name "Yazoo" is, of course, Indian.
Archeological finds show that successive Indian
cultures have flourished in this region since
6,000 b.c., but we know little about the oldest
ones except that they were mound builders.
This part of our county is dotted with them
still. We shall pass a small one in the front
yard of a home on your right in just a moment.
Some of those mounds were originally over
50 feet high.
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The
name "Yazoo" is, of course, Indian. Archeological
finds show that successive Indian cultures have flourished
in this region since 6,000 b.c., but we know little
about the oldest ones except that they were mound
builders. This part of our county is dotted with them
still. We shall pass a small one in the front yard
of a home on your right in just a moment. Some of
those mounds were originally over 50 feet high.
When
the first Europeans arrived in our county (they were
French explorers following the course of the Mississippi
River down from Canada in 1682), the principal tribe
in Central Mississippi was the Choctaw. This region
where we are right now was swampy country then, subject
almost every year to spring floods, so there were
no Choctaw villages in our part of the future state.
At the mouth of the Yazoo near Vicksburg, however,
they found a small village of a smaller tribe--the
Yazoos, spelled by the French Y-A-S-O-U-X, so named
our river for them.
We
have never known what "Yazoo" meant--if
anything. Sadly, the tribe died out soon after the
French came, probably from European diseases like
so many others in the Americas. Or they could have
finally run afoul of the Choctaws. We really don't
know.
The
county's terrain is made up partly of flat, delta
land, and partly hills. Obviously, we are now in the
delta. As you will see in about fifteen minutes, on
the eastern side of Yazoo City you will experience
the hill area all the way to Jackson.
As
you ride through Yazoo County you may notice differences
in plant and animal life. The drainage in this flat
delta land is poor, hence much swamp country filled
with cypress trees which grow well in water, small
palmetto palms, and large canebrakes.
There
are plenty of alligators, too, as well as deer, wild
turkey, bobcats, and--in winter--ducks and geese from
Canada. All our lakes are former creeks and river
beds that have been naturally cut off in the distant
past.
We
are fortunate to have at our borders three wildlife
refuges covering several thousand acres, and one,
Panther Swamp National Wildlife Refuge, within the
county. In the northeast we have Hillside Wildlife
Refuge which we share with Holmes County, and in the
southwest we have the massive Delta National Forest
which we share with Sharkey County. There are very
few animals living in Mississippi which cannot be
found in one or both of these forests. Hunting is
allowed in season and many trophy animals have been
taken from the refuges.
Agriculturally,
we are one of the state's most important counties.
Of the 82 counties, we are No. 1 in cotton production,
No. 1 in grain sorghum, and No. 1 in swine production.
We're No. 5 in catfish and 11th in both soybeans and
corn.
Our
agriculture is among the most diversified. Approximately
1/3 of the county is comprised of the relatively flat
delta land that you see here, and 2/3's is made up
of the hill area you'll see in a few minutes.
You
have heard the phrase "cotton is king" in
the south. That certainly seems to be true in Yazoo
County. In 1991, of the $125 million which agriculture
directly generated, cotton was responsible for about
$75 million. Catfish brought in some $20 million.
We also grow wheat, rice, and some Christmas trees
and other horticultural crops. In addition, our hardwood
forests have resulted in several timber companies
locating here recently. As a matter of fact, 1991
forestry contributed almost as much to our economy
as soybeans.
Up
until the 1950's corn was an important crop, mainly
because of the many mules used on farms. Furthermore,
hogs were fattened by turning them out into the corn
fields. Currently hogs are produced in confinement
on slab floors.
Even
though many of the farms in Yazoo are incorporated
and many contain several thousand acres, for the most
part they are family farms. Some have been in the
same family for five or more generations.
An
important resource in this county is the people themselves.
Yazoo County farmers have won many state, regional,
and even national awards. We have a former president
of the National Angus Association, former president
of the National Catfish Association, and many farmers
who assume prominent roles in other agricultural organizations.
For information:
E-mail: yazoo@yazoo.org
Mail: P.O. Box 186
Yazoo City, MS 39194
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