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A Brief History of Mississippi Leading to the Creation of Lauderdale County

A Lauderdale County Web Exclusive
by Bill White


The recorded history of Mississippi began with the coming of the Europeans. More specifically, it began with the expedition of Hernando De Soto, who is credited with the discovery of the Mississippi River. However, long before De Soto arrived in the area now known as Mississippi, perhaps as much as 10,000 years earlier, Native Americans inhabited, planted and hunted the land. They navigated the "Father of Waters", fished and built their villages along its shores, followed its tributaries inland and raised countless new generations teaching them each in succession to respect the land and to live in harmony with it.

By the 16th century, there were three predominant Native American tribes living in the area. The Chickasaw occupied the lands in the northern and eastern portions of the state. The powerful Choctaw tribe lived in the central portion of the state ranging northward to the Chickasaw lands in the northwest and southward in the east. The Natchez occupied the lands in Southwestern Mississippi.

With the arrival of the Europeans, the record of Mississippi history began to change and grow rapidly as the new settlers interacted with the natives. The settlers traded with the Native Americans, learned from them about the wildlife and vegetation of this new country, and domesticated the land from which they pushed them. It was the continuation of an old story that would last for another 350 years.

The entire Mississippi valley was claimed by France in the latter part of the 17th century and the first permanent European settlement was constructed near what is now Ocean Springs in 1699.

The Natchez tiring of the increasing European encroachment on their lands attacked the French settlers hoping to reclaim their lost territory. The French, nonetheless, rose to the occasion, eventually defeating the Natchez. This, the first of many area conflicts later to be known as the "Indian Wars", resulted in the general dispersion of the Natchez people which subsequently ceased to exist as a factor in Mississippi history thereafter. The French now faced the Chickasaws at various battle sites of Southwestern and West central Mississippi.

Following the French and Indian wars, in 1763 France, weary of the fight, ceded its possessions to Great Britain retaining only New Orleans. In 1779 the Spanish rose to capture Natchez and, under the Treaty of Paris, (ending the American Revolutionary War) also gained control of West Florida which included the southern half of Mississippi. The new America, however, now clearly possessed, without challenge, that part of Mississippi north of 32 degrees 28 minutes North latitude.

In 1798 the path to statehood was started as the original Mississippi Territory was created by the U.S. Congress. This "first cut" at defining and expanding the boundaries of the fledgling United States, created the territory as a strip of land about 100 miles wide from the Mississippi River to the Chattahoochee River on the Georgia border.

The land area of the territory was increased by the West Florida rebellion of 1810 and the end of the War of 1812.

The War of 1812 is often referred to as the "Second American Revolution". It was fought on several fronts in the North, East and deep South and won a reluctantly granted respect from the British with regard to the newly created America's power and politics.

The well-known Battle of New Orleans has the somewhat dubious distinction having been fought well after the signing of an armistice between the two primary combatants. However, history would have been markedly changed without this great mistake. It was during the Battle of New Orleans that General Andrew Jackson earned his nickname "Old Hickory" as he demonstrated the strength and courage of the American soldier. It was also during the period leading to this battle that a colonel from Tennessee, already a prominent American would fall before the enemy and, by his deeds and sacrifice, distinguish himself. Lieutenant Colonel James Lauderdale would later be honored for his bravery first in Mississippi and, later in other localities around the South.

Finally the area of Mississippi Territory reached from the Mississippi River in the West to the Chattahoochee in the East and from Tennessee in the North southward to the Gulf of Mexico including all of the lands of both present day Mississippi and Alabama.

In 1817 the U.S. Congress divided the Mississippi Territory into the Mississippi and Alabama territories. Later that same year, Mississippi became the twentieth state.

Over the next two decades, various treaties with the Choctaw made greater and greater land areas of the territory accessible to Americans until with the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, the first treaty of the era under which Native Americans were literally removed from their homelands, Mississippi was ready for settlement.

The Mississippi capital was first located at Natchez but was removed in 1802 to nearby Washington, a small town near the Natchez Trace. Washington was, in turn, replaced by the current location at Jackson in 1822.

On 23 December 1833 Mississippi established Lauderdale County. The county was one of 16 counties created by the act which was made possible by the Choctaw Cession of 1830.

These then, are the statewide events, leading to the formation of Lauderdale County, Mississippi.

Maps Courtesy Mississippi Digital Map Library.

Additional Resources and References:

Mindconnection: Mississippi History and Facts
SGH Resources: Mississippi State History

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Page Last Updated:   Thursday, 03 November 2016

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