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Memphis
Memphis: History
Memphis: History
Jackson Helps Found City
Lush wilderness covered the Mississippi River bluffs (now known as the Memphis metropolitan area) when Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto encountered the area's Chickasaw inhabitants in 1541. In 1673, French explorers Louis Joliet and Jacques Marquette explored the region, called the Fourth Chickasaw Bluffs, which in 1682 was claimed for France by Robert Cavelier de La Salle as part of the vast Louisiana Territory. The French established Fort Assumption at the Fourth Chickasaw Bluffs in 1739. As ownership of the region was disputed by various nations, Fort Assumption was followed by the Spanish Fort San Fernando, built on the site in 1795, and the American Fort Adams, erected in 1797. The Chickasaw ceded West Tennessee to the United States in 1818, and the following year John Overton, James Winchester, and Andrew Jackson founded a settlement on the Mississippi River bluffs that they named Memphis, after an ancient Egyptian city on the Nile River.
"King Cotton" Spurs City's Growth
Irish, Scots-Irish, Scottish Highlanders, and German immigrants joined westward-advancing pioneers from the eastern United States in settling the new town, which was incorporated in 1826. They served as gunsmiths and blacksmiths and operated saw mills, cotton mills, and cotton warehouses. The economy of the region was based primarily on the cotton industry, which utilized slave labor, and Memphis became the largest slave market in the mid-South. The necessity of transporting cotton to the marketplace made Memphis the focus of transportation improvements. The Memphis-to-New Orleans steamship line was established on the Mississippi River in 1834; six miles of railroad had been constructed around Memphis by 1842; and four major roads were carved out in the 1850s. In 1857 the Memphis-to-Charleston railroad line linked the Mississippi River to the Atlantic Coast. From 1850 to 1860 Memphis's population more than quintupled, swelling to 33,000 people.
When the economic and social differences between northern and southern states that led Tennessee to secede from the United States and join the Confederacy erupted in war, Memphis served temporarily as Tennessee's state capital. But in 1862 a Confederate fleet near Memphis was defeated by Union forces, which then captured Memphis. At the conflict's conclusion, Tennessee was the first state to rejoin the Union and the following year, in 1867, Memphis was made Shelby County seat. A series of yellow fever epidemics in the 1870s ravaged the city, leaving it deserted and bankrupt; in 1879 its charter was revoked.
Subsequent improvements to the city's sewage and drinking water systems helped reduce the threat of epidemic, trade resumed in Memphis, and its population mounted to almost 65,000 by 1890. The first railroad bridge across the Mississippi south of St. Louis opened in Memphis in 1892, increasing the city's trade opportunities. The following year Memphis regained its city charter, and by the turn of the century the city was once again established as a booming trading center for cotton and lumber.
King Assassinated in City
In the first half of the twentieth century adversities in Memphis—such as the 1937 Mississippi River flood that brought 60,000 refugees into the city—were offset by advances—such as the formation of the Memphis Park Commission, the establishment of colleges, airports, military installations, and municipal utilities, and construction of port improvements. In the 1960s Memphis annexed neighboring areas and was the subject of federal court decisions ordering desegregation of the city's schools, parks, and recreational facilities. The city's sanitation workers, protesting discriminatory labor practices in a 1968 strike, attracted civil-rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., to their cause. On April 4, 1968, King, an advocate of nonviolent protest, was slain by a sniper at a Memphis motel. A steel structure entitled "The Mountaintop" honors King in Memphis's Civic Center Plaza. By 1973 court-ordered busing for school desegregation in Memphis was adopted without major incident, and the 1980 Memphis Jobs Conference, a broad-based economic planning initiative, was praised for its thorough integration of various Memphis sectors.
Economic Growth
Present-day Memphis boasts renovated historic districts and city landmarks, striking new developments, and a diversified community of residents and workers. Traditional economic mainstays (such as cotton, lumber, and distribution) mix with services (including overnight package express, insurance, and hoteliery) and with newer enterprises (especially agricultural technology and biomedical technology) to make Memphis a strong economic community. Its strength supports academic institutions, health care facilities, and recreational assets and draws on a rich cultural and historical heritage, attracting both tourists and new residents to the river city on the bluffs.
Historical Information: Western Tennessee Historical Society Library, University of Memphis, McWherter Library Special Collections, Memphis, TN 38152; telephone (901)678-2210. Center for Southern Folklore Archives, 119 South Main Street, Memphis, TN 38103; telephone (901)525-3655. Memphis Pink Palace Museum Library, 3050 Central Avenue, Memphis, TN 38111; telephone (901)320-6368
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Memphis Fears Being Left Behind as Rival Southern Cities Blossom. (Originated from The Atlanta Journal and Constitution)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 4/17/1994; ; 700+ words
; MEMPHIS, TENN.--Apr. 18--Memphis is a city famous for the blues, and many residents say they have a reason to be blue. Older urban areas such as North and South Memphis appear to be dying of economic benign neglect as business development...
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Memphis, Tenn., to Host National Creativity Summit.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 1/23/2003; 700+ words
; ...Mark Watson, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Jan. 23--Memphis will be the setting for the birth of a...Community and Everyday Life, said the Memphis Manifesto Summit will bring together the...
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MEMPHIS NFL STRUGGLE GOES BACK MANY YEARS.(Sports)
Newspaper article from: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 10/12/1997; 700+ words
; Byline: Woody Baird Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- After more than two decades of pro football blues, it's no wonder Memphis sports fans feel little enthusiasm about...should be surprising. ``The people of Memphis have been disappointed so many times for...
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Memphis deserves major respect right about now.
Newspaper article from: Dallas Morning News (Dallas, TX); 3/22/2007; 700+ words
; ...Jean-Jacques Taylor SAN ANTONIO _ Memphis wants you to know it has one of the...and me _ wrong until we finally admit Memphis is an elite program. Frankly, that shouldn't be too hard after Memphis beat Texas A&M on Thursday night...
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Memphis, Tenn., convention bureau snags six new conventions.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 10/13/2004; 700+ words
; ...David Flaum, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business...next year and 2018, officials of the Memphis Convention and Visitors Bureau and some...Tuesday. The $90 million makeover of the Memphis Cook Convention Center and influence wielded...
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Memphis, Tenn., silent as nearby Marion, Ark., vies for Toyota plant.
Newspaper article from: Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN); 2/1/2007; 700+ words
; ...dollars in investments and tax revenue for Memphis -- one thing is conspicuously absent: Help from Memphis. And with more than 3,500 jobs expected...nearly $6 million in new tax revenue for Memphis and Shelby County, the Bluff City has...
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Memphis lures NBA with plans for new arena
Magazine article from: The Mississippi Business Journal; 7/9/2001; ; 700+ words
; SOUTHAVEN - In the early 1990s, Memphis was the powerhouse. With a minor...up with a grander plan. When the Memphis RiverKings were released from their contract with the MidSouth Coliseum in Memphis after a yearlong court battle, the...
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Memphis, Tenn. Places near Bottom in National Competitiveness Study.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 12/17/2002; 700+ words
; ...Mark Watson, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business...Y., and New Orleans rank lower than Memphis in a new study of competitiveness among...categories: Government and fiscal policy--Memphis's good local bond rating and low taxes...
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Memphis continues streak: RiverKings cruise to seventh straight win over Tulsa this season.
Newspaper article from: Tulsa World (Tulsa, OK); 2/14/2007; 700+ words
; ...certain teams you just can't beat. Memphis is one of those for Tulsa. It all went...Tulsa failed to keep pace and fell to Memphis for the seventh straight time this season...Ryan Campbell each got two assists as Memphis did all the necessary damage in the game...
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Hands on Memphis.(interview with Hands on Memphis executive director Ken Hall)(Interview)
Magazine article from: Business Perspectives; 3/22/1999; 700+ words
; ...makes the biggest impact on the quality of life in Memphis, most Memphians might be at a loss for an answer...that works with over 90 other agencies in the Memphis area alone. Hands on Memphis recruits and trains volunteers to serve a vast...
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Memphis: Education and Research
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Memphis: Education and Research Elementary and Secondary Schools The Memphis City Schools is the largest school system in the...largest metropolitan school system in the nation. All Memphis City Schools are accredited; in comparison, 60...
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Memphis: History
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Memphis: History Jackson Helps Found City Lush...Mississippi River bluffs (now known as the Memphis metropolitan area) when Spanish explorer...Mississippi River bluffs that they named Memphis, after an ancient Egyptian city on the...
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Memphis: Communications
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Memphis: Communications Newspapers and Magazines Memphis is served by The Commercial Appeal, a morning-circulated...reported weekday mornings in The Daily News, while the Memphis Business Journal and Tri-State Defender are published...
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Memphis: Economy
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Memphis: Economy Major Industries and Commercial...center of a major distribution network, Memphis works from a broad economic base as it...trading center for cotton and hardwood, Memphis is the headquarters for major manufacturing...
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Memphis
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
MEMPHIS MEMPHIS, the largest city in Tennessee and the chief city on the Mississippi River between St. Louis and New Orleans. In 1819, Memphis was laid out by a trio of town site developers, one of whom was the future...
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