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Mighty Massachusetts
Capital:
Boston State abbreviation/Postal code: Mass./MA Governor: Deval Patrick, D (to Jan. 2011) Lieut. Governor: Timothy
Murray, D (to Jan. 2011) Senators: Edward M. Kennedy, D (to Jan. 2013); John F. Kerry, D (to Jan. 2009) U.S. Representatives:
10 Historical biographies of Congressional members Secy. of the Commonwealth: William F. Galvin, D (to Jan. 2011) Treasurer:
Timothy P. Cahill, D (to Jan. 2011) Atty. General: Martha Coakley, D (to Jan. 2011) Present constitution drafted: 1780
(oldest U.S. state constitution in effect today) Entered Union (rank): Feb. 6, 1788 (6) Motto: Ense petit placidam
sub libertate quietem (By the sword we seek peace, but peace only under liberty) State symbols: flower mayflower
(1918) tree American elm (1941) bird chickadee (1941) song “All Hail to Massachusetts” (1966) beverage
cranberry juice (1970) insect ladybug (1974) cookie chocolate chip (1997) muffin corn muffin (1986) dessert
Boston cream pie (1996) Nicknames: Bay State; Old Colony State Origin of name: From Massachusett tribe of Native Americans,
meaning “at or about the great hill” 10 largest cities (2005 est.): Boston, 559,034; Worcester, 175,898;
Springfield, 151,732; Lowell, 103,111; Cambridge, 100,135; Brockton, 94,632; New Bedford, 93,102; Fall River, 91,802;
Quincy, 90,250; Lynn, 88,792 Land area: 7,840 sq mi. (20,306 sq km) Geographic center: In the town of Rutland in Worcester
Co. Number of counties: 14 Largest county by population and area: Middlesex, 1,459,011 (2005); Worcester, 1,513
sq mi. State forests and parks: 450,000 ac. Residents: Bay Stater 2005 resident population est.: 6,398,743 2000
resident census population (rank): 6,349,097 (13). Male: 3,058,816 (48.2%); Female: 3,290,281 (51.8%). White: 5,367,286
(84.5%); Black: 343,454 (5.4%); American Indian: 15,015 (0.2%); Asian: 238,124 (3.8%); Other race: 236,724 (3.7%);
Two or more races: 146,005 (2.3%); Hispanic/Latino: 428,729 (6.8%). 2000 percent population 18 and over: 76.4; 65 and
over: 13.5; median age: 36.5.
Massachusetts has played a significant role in American
history since the Pilgrims, seeking religious freedom, founded Plymouth Colony in 1620. As one of the most important of the
13 colonies, Massachusetts became a leader in resisting British oppression. In 1773, the Boston Tea Party protested unjust
taxation. The Minute Men started the American Revolution by battling British troops at Lexington and Concord on April
19, 1775. During the 19th century, Massachusetts was famous for the intellectual activity of its
writers and educators and for its expanding commercial fishing, shipping, and manufacturing interests. Massachusetts
pioneered the manufacture of textiles and shoes. Today, these industries have been replaced
in importance by the electronics and communications equipment fields. The state's cranberry crop is
the nation's second-largest (after Wisconsin). Also important are dairy and poultry products,
nursery and greenhouse produce, vegetables, and fruit. Tourism has become an important factor in the
economy of the state because of its numerous recreational areas and historical landmarks. Cape Cod has beaches,
summer theaters, and an artists' colony at Provincetown. The Berkshires, in the western
part of the state, is the site of Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony; art museums, including
Mass MoCA and the Clark Institute; and Jacob's Pillow, a world renowned dance center.
Among the many other points of interest are Old Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge, Minute Man National Historical
Park between Lexington and Concord, and Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth. In Boston there are many places of
historical interest, including Old North Church, Old State House, Faneuil Hall, the USS
Constitution, and the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum.
History Early European Exploration and Colonization. The
coast of what is now Massachusetts was probably skirted by Norsemen in the 11th cent., and Europeans of various nationalities
(but mostly English) sailed offshore in the late 16th and early 17th cent. Settlement began when the Pilgrims arrived on the
Mayflower and landed (1620) at a point they named Plymouth (for their port of embarkation in England). Their first governor,
John Carver, died the next year, but under his successor, William Bradford, the Plymouth Colony took firm hold. Weathering
early difficulties, the colony eventually prospered. Other Englishmen soon established fishing and trading posts nearby—Andrew
Weston (1622) at Wessagusset (now Weymouth) and Thomas Wollaston (1625) at Mt. Wollaston, which was renamed Merry Mount
(now Quincy) when Thomas Morton took charge. The fishing post established (1623) on Cape Ann by Roger Conant failed, but in
1626 he founded Naumkeag (Salem), which in 1628 became the nucleus of a Puritan colony led by John Endecott of the New England
Company and chartered by the private Council for New England.
The Puritan Colonies In 1629 the New England Company
was reorganized as the Massachusetts Bay Company after receiving a more secure patent from the crown. In 1630 John Winthrop
led the first large Puritan migration from England (900 settlers on 11 ships). Boston supplanted Salem as capital of the colony,
and Winthrop replaced Endecott as governor. After some initial adjustments to allow greater popular participation and
the representation of outlying settlements in the General Court (consisting of a governor, deputy governor, assistants, and
deputies), the “Bay Colony” continued to be governed as a private company for the next 50 years. It was also a
thorough going Puritan theocracy (see Puritanism), in which clergymen such as John Cotton enjoyed great political influence.
The status of freeman was restricted until 1664) to church members, and the state was regarded as an agency of God's will
on earth. Due to a steady stream of newcomers from England, the South Shore (i.e., S of Boston), the North Shore, and the
interior were soon dotted with firmly rooted communities. The early Puritans were primarily agricultural people,
although a merchant class soon formed. Most of the inhabitants lived in villages, beyond which lay their
privately owned fields. The typical village was composed of houses (also individually owned)
grouped around the common—a plot of land held in common by the community. The dominant structure on
the common was the meetinghouse, where the pastor, the most important figure in the community,
held long Sabbath services. The meetinghouse of he chief village of a town (in New England a town corresponds
to what is usually called a township elsewhere in the United
States) was also the site of the town meeting, traditionally regarded as a foundation of American democracy. In practice the
town meeting served less to advance democracy than to enforce unanimity and conformity, and participation was as a rule
restricted to male property holders who were also church members.Because they were eager for everyone to have the ability
to study scripture and always insisted on a learned ministry, the Puritans zealously promoted the development of educational
facilities. The Boston Latin School was founded in 1635, one year before Harvard was established, and in 1647 a law was passed
requiring elementary schools in towns of 50 or more families. These were not free schools, but they were open to all and
are considered the beginning of popular education in the United States. Native American resentment of the Puritan presence resulted in the Pequot War (see Pequot) of 1637, after which the
four Puritan colonies (Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, Connecticut, and New Haven) formed the New England Confederation,
the first voluntary union of American colonies. In 1675–76, the confederation broke the power of the Native Americans
of southern New England in King Philip's War. In the course of the French and Indian Wars, however, frontier settlements such
as Deerfield were devastated. The population of the Massachusetts Bay Colony naturally rejoiced
at the triumph of the Puritan Revolution in England, but with the restoration of Charles II in 1660
the colony's happy prospects faded. Its recently extended jurisdiction over Maine was for a time discounted
by royal authority, and, worse still, its charter was revoked in 1684. The withdrawal of
the charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony had long been expected because the colony had consistently violated
the terms of the charter and repeatedly evaded or ignored royal orders by operating an illegal
mint, establishing religious rather than property qualifications for suffrage, and discriminating against Anglicans. A New Royal Colony In 1691 a new charter
united Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, and Maine into the single royal colony of Massachusetts. This charter abolished church
membership as a test for voting, although Congregationalism remained the established religion. Widespread anxiety over
loss of the original charter contributed to the witchcraft panic that reached its climax in Salem in the summer of 1692. Nineteen
persons were hanged and one crushed to death for refusing to confess to the practice of witchcraft. The Salem trials ended
abruptly when colonial authorities, led by Cotton Mather, became alarmed at their excesses. By the mid-18th cent.
the Massachusetts colony had come a long way from its humble agricultural beginnings. Fish, lumber, and farm
products were exported in a lively trade carried by ships built in Massachusetts and manned
by local seamen. That the menace of French Canada was removed by 1763 was due in no small measure to
the unstinting efforts of England, but the increasing British tendency to regulate colonial affairs, especially
trade (see Navigation Acts), without colonial advice, was most unwelcome. Because of the
colony's extensive shipping interests, e.g., the traffic in molasses, rum, and slaves (the “triangular
trade”), it sorely felt these restrictions.
Discontent and Revolution In 1761 James Otis opposed a Massachusetts superior court's issuance of writs of assistance (general
search warrants to aid customs officers in enforcing collection of duties on imported sugar), arguing that this action violated
the natural rights of Englishmen and was therefore void. He thus helped set the stage for the political controversy which,
coupled with economic grievances, culminated in the American Revolution. In Massachusetts a bitter struggle developed between the governor, Thomas Hutchinson, and the anti-British
party in the legislature led by Samuel Adams, John Adams, James Otis, and John Hancock. The Stamp Act (1765) and the Townshend
Acts (1767) preceded the Boston Massacre (1770), and the Tea Act (1773) brought on the Boston Tea Party. The rebellious colonials
were punished for this with the Intolerable Acts (1774), which troops under Gen. Thomas Gage were sent to enforce. Through
committees of correspondence Massachusetts and the other colonies had been sharing their
grievances, and in 1774 they called the First Continental Congress a Philadelphia for united action.
The mounting tension in Massachusetts exploded in Apr., 1775, when General Gage decided to make a show of
force. Warned by Paul Revere and William Dawes, the Massachusetts militia engaged the British
force at Lexington and Concord (see Lexington and Concord, battles of). Patriot militia from other colonies
hurried to Massachusetts, where, after the battle of Bunker Hill (June 17, 1775), George Washington took
command of the patriot forces. The British remained in Boston until Mar. 17, 1776,
when Gen. William Howe evacuated the town, taking with him a considerable number of Tories. British troops
never returned,but Massachusetts soldiers were kept busy elsewhere fighting for the independence of the colonies. In 1780 a new constitution,
drafted by a constitutional convention under the leadership of John Adams, was ratified by direct vote of the citizenry. The
New Nation Victorious in the Revolution, the colonies faced depressing economic conditions. Nowhere were those conditions
worse than in Massachusetts, where discontented Berkshire farmers erupted in Shays's Rebellion in 1786. The
uprising was promptly quelled, but it frightened conservatives into support of a new national constitution
that would displace the weak government created under the Articles of Confederation; this constitution was
ratified by Massachusetts in 1788.Independence had closed the old trade routes within the
British Empire, but new ones were soon created, and trade with China became especially lucrative. Boston
and lesser ports boomed, and the prosperous times were reflected politically in the commonwealth's
unwavering adherence to the Federalist party, the party of the dominant commercial class. European
wars at the beginning of the 19th cent. at first further stimulated maritime trade but then led to interference
with American shipping. To avoid war Congress resorted to Jefferson's Embargo Act of 1807,
but its provisions dealt a severe blow to the economy of Massachusetts and the rest of the nation.
War with Great Britain came anyway in 1812, and it was extremely unpopular in New England.
There was talk of secession at the abortive Hartford Convention of New England Federalists, over which George Cabot presided. As it happened, however, the embargo
and the War of 1812 had an unexpectedly favorable effect on the economy of Massachusetts. With English manufactured goods shut out, the United States had to begin manufacturing
on its own, and the infant industries that sprang up after 1807 tended to concentrate in New England, and especially in Massachusetts.
These industries, financed by money made in shipping and shielded from foreign competition by protective tariffs after 1816,
grew rapidly, transforming the character of the commonwealth and its people. Labor was plentiful and
often ruthlessly exploited. The power loom, perfected by Francis Cabot Lowell, as well as English techniques
for textile manufacturing (based on plans smuggled out of England) made Massachusetts an
early center of the American textile industry. The water power of the Merrimack River became the basis for
Lowell's cotton textile industry in the 1820s. The manufacture of shoes and leather goods
also became important in the state. Agriculture, on the other hand, went into a sharp decline because Massachusetts
could not compete with the new agricultural states of the West, a region more readily accessible after the
opening of the Erie Canal (1825). Farms were abandoned by the score; some farmers turned
to work in the new factories, others moved to the West. In 1820 Maine was separated from Massachusetts
and admitted to the Union as a separate state under the terms of the Missouri Compromise.
In the same year the Massachusetts constitution was considerably liberalized by the adoption of amendments
that abolished all property qualifications for voting, provided for the incorporation of cities, and removed
religious tests for officeholders.
(Massachusetts is the only one of the original 13 states that is still governed under its original constitution, the one of
1780, although this was extensively amended by the constitutional convention of 1917–19.) Reform Movements and
Civil War In the 1830s and 40s the state became the center of religious and social reform movements, such as Unitarianism
and transcendentalism. Of the transcendentalists, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Thoreau were quick to perceive and
decry the evils of industrialization, while Bronson Alcott, Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Emerson had some association
with Brook Farm, an outgrowth of Utopian ideals. Horace Mann set about establishing an enduring system of public education
in the 1830s. During this period Massachusetts gave to the nation the architect Charles Bulfinch; such writers and poets as
Richard Henry Dana, Emily Dickinson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, and John
Greenleaf Whittier; the historians George Bancroft, John Lothrop Motley, Francis Parkman, and William Hickling Prescott;
and the scientist Louis Agassiz. In the 1830s reformers began to devote energy to the antislavery crusade
(see abolitionists). This was regarded with great
displeasure by the mill tycoons, who feared that an offended South would cut off their cotton supply. The Whig party split
on the slavery issue, and Massachusetts turned to the new Republican party, voting for John C. Frémont in 1856 and Abraham
Lincoln in 1860. Massachusetts was the first state to answer Lincoln's call for troops after the firing on Fort Sumter.
Massachusetts soldiers were the first to die for the Union cause when the 6th Massachusetts Regiment was fired on by a secessionist
mob in Baltimore. In the course of the war over 130,000 men from the state served in the Union forces. Industrialization
and Immigration. After the Civil War Massachusetts, with other northern states, experienced rapid industrial
expansion. Massachusetts capital financed many of the nation's new railroads, especially in the West. Although
people continued to leave the state for the West, labor remained cheap and plentiful as
European immigrants streamed into the state. The Irish, oppressed by both nature and the British, began arriving
in droves even before the Civil War (beginning in the 1840s), and they continued to land
in Boston for years to come. After them came French Canadians, arriving later in the 19th cent., and, in
the early 20th cent., Portuguese, Italians, Poles, Slavs, Russian Jews, and Scandinavians.
Also from the British Isles came the English, the Scots, and the Welsh. Of all the immigrant groups, English-speaking
and non-English-speaking, the Irish came to be the most influential, especially in politics. Their religion
(Roman Catholic) and their political faith (Democratic) definitely set them apart from the
old native Yankee stock.Practically all the immigrants went to work in the factories. The halcyon days of
shipping were over. The maritime trade had bounded back triumphantly after the War of 1812,
but the supplanting of sail by steam, the growth of railroads, and the destruction caused by Confederate
cruisers in the Civil War helped reduce shipping to its present negligible state—a far cry from the
colorful era of the clipper ships, which were perfected by Donald McKay of Boston. Whaling,
once the glory of New Bedford and Nantucket, faded quickly with the introduction of petroleum.
Growth of Cities, The Labor Movement The rise of
industrialism was accompanied by a growth of cities, although the small mill town, where the factory hands lived in company
houses and traded in the company store, remained important. Labor unions struggled for recognition in a long, weary battle
marked by strikes, sometimes violent, as was the case in the Lawrence textile strike of 1912. World War I, which caused
a vast increase in industrial production, improved the lot of workers, but not of Boston policemen, who staged
and lost their famous strike in 1919. For his part in breaking the strike, Gov. Calvin Coolidge
won national fame and went on to become vice president and then president, the third Massachusetts citizen
(after John Adams and John Quincy Adams) to hold the highest office in the land. The Sacco-Vanzetti
Case, following the police strike, attracted international attention, as liberals raged over the seeming
lack of regard for the spirit of the law in a state that had given the nation such an eminent jurist as Oliver Wendell Holmes (1841–1935). Labor unions finally came
into their own in the 1930s under the New Deal. World War II to the Present Industry spurted forward again during
World War II, and in the postwar era the state continued to develop. Politically, the state again assumed national importance
with the 1960 election of Senator John F. Kennedy as the nation's 35th President. In 1974, Michael S. Dukakis, a Democrat,
was elected governor. He lost to Edward King in 1978, but won again in 1982 and was reelected in 1986. In 1988 he ran for
president, losing to George H. W. Bush. Dukakis decided not to run again for governor. During the postwar
period the decline of textile manufacturing was offset as the electronics industry, attracted by the skilled
technicians available in the Boston area, boomed along Route 128. Growth in the computer
and electronics sectors, much of it spurred by defense spending, helped Massachusetts prosper during much
of the 1980s. At the end of the decade effects of a nationwide recession and the burden
of a huge state budget hit Massachusetts hard, but in the 1990s there was a substantial economic recovery,
spearheaded by growth in small high-tech companies. For more info on Massachusettes
plesase visit www.massvacation.com .
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Michigan Memories
Capital: Lansing State abbreviation/Postal code: Mich./MI Governor:
Jennifer Granholm, D (to Jan. 2011) Lieut. Governor: John D. Cherry, D (to Jan. 2011) Senators: Carl Levin, D (to Jan.
2009); Debbie A. Stabenow, D (to
Jan. 2007) U.S. Representatives: 15 Secy.
of State: Terri Lynn Land, R (to Jan. 2011) Atty. General: Mike Cox, R (to Jan. 2011) Treasurer: Robert J. Kleine (apptd.
by governor) Organized as territory: Jan. 11, 1805 Entered Union (rank): Jan. 26, 1837 (26) Present constitution
adopted: April 1, 1963 (effective Jan. 1,
1964) Motto: Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam
circumspice (If you seek
a pleasant peninsula, look around you)
State symbols: flower apple blossom (1897)
bird robin (1931) mammal white-tailed deer (1997) fishes trout (1965), brook trout (1988) gem isle royal greenstone
(chlorastrolite) (1972) stone petoskey stone (1965) tree white pine (1955) soil kalkaska soil series (1990) reptile
painted turtle (1995) flag “Blue charged with the arms of the state” (1911) wildflower Dwarf Lake iris
(1998) Nickname: Wolverine State Origin of name: From Indian word “Michigana” meaning “great or
large lake” 10 largest cities (2005
est.): Detroit, 886,671; Grand Rapids,
193,780; Warren, 135,311; Sterling Heights, 128,034;
Flint,
118,551; Lansing, 115,518; Ann Arbor, 113,271;
Livonia, 97,977;
Dearborn, 94,090; Westland, 85,623 Land area:
56,804 sq mi. (147,122 sq km) Geographic center: In Wexford Co., 5 mi. NNW of Cadillac Number of counties: 83 Largest
county by population and area: Wayne, 1,998,217
(2005); Marquette, 1,821 sq mi. State parks
and recreation areas: 97 Residents: Michigander, Michiganian, Michiganite 2005 resident population est.: 10,120,860 2000
resident census population (rank): 9,938,444 (8). Male:
4,873,095 (49.0%); Female: 5,065,349 (51.0%).
White:
7,966,053 (80.2%); Black: 1,412,742 (14.2%);
American Indian:
58,479 (0.6%); Asian: 176,510 (1.8%); Other race:
129,552
(1.3%); Two or more races: 192,416 (1.9%); Hispanic/Latino:
323,877 (3.3%). 2000 percent population 18 and
over: 73.9; 65
and over: 12.3; median age: 35.5.
Indian tribes were living in the Michigan region
when the first
European, Étienne Brulé of France, arrived in
1618. Other French
explorers, including Jacques Marquette, Louis
Joliet, and Sieur de
la Salle, followed, and the first permanent settlement
was
established in 1668 at Sault Ste. Marie.
France was ousted from the territory by Great Britain in 1763, following the French and Indian
Wars.
After the Revolutionary War, the U.S. acquired
most of the region, which remained the scene of constant conflict between the British and
U.S. forces and their respective Indian allies through the War of 1812.
Bordering on four of the five Great Lakes,
Michigan is divided into Upper and Lower peninsulas by the Straits of Mackinac, which link
lakes Michigan and Huron. The two parts of the state are connected by the Mackinac Bridge, one of the world's
longest
suspension bridges. To the north, connecting
lakes Superior and
Huron, are the busy Sault Ste. Marie Canals.
While Michigan ranks first among the states
in production of motor vehicles and parts, it is also a leader in many other manufacturing
and processing lines, including prepared cereals,
machine tools, airplane parts, refrigerators,
hardware, and furniture.
The state produces important amounts of
iron, copper, iodine, gypsum, bromine, salt, lime, gravel, and cement. Michigan's farms
grow apples, cherries, beans, pears, grapes, potatoes, and
sugar beets. Michigan's forests contribute
significantly to the state's economy, supporting thousands of jobs in the wood-product,
tourism, and recreation industries. With 10,083
inland lakes and 3,288 mi of Great Lakes
shoreline, Michigan is a prime area for both commercial and sport fishing.
Points of interest are the automobile plants
in Dearborn, Detroit, Flint, Lansing, and Pontiac; Mackinac Island; Pictured Rocks and Sleeping
Bear Dunes National Lakeshores; Greenfield Village in Dearborn; and the many summer resorts along both the
inland
lakes and Great Lakes.
History
Native Americans and French Explorers The
Ojibwa, the Ottawa, the Potawatomi, and other Algonquian-speaking Native American groups were living in Michigan
when the French explorer Étienne Brulé landed at the
narrows of Sault Ste. Marie in 1618, probably
the first European to have reached present Michigan. Later French explorers, traders, and
missionaries came, including Jean Nicolet, who was
searching for the Northwest Passage; Jacques
Marquette, who founded a mission in the Mackinac region; and the empire builder, Robert
Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, who came on the Griffon, the first ship to sail the Great Lakes. French posts
were scattered along the lakes and the rivers, and Mackinac Island (in the Straits of Mackinac)
became a center of the fur trade. Fort
Pontchartrain, later Detroit, was founded
in 1701 by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac. The vast region was weakly held by France until
lost to Great Britain in the last conflict (1754–63) of the French and Indian Wars.
Resistance to British Occupation The
Native Americans of Michigan, who had lived in peace with the French, resented the coming of the British,
who were the allies of the much-hated Iroquois tribes. Under Pontiac they
revolted (see Pontiac's Rebellion) against
the British occupation. The rebellion, which began in 1763, was short-lived, ending in 1766,
and the Native Americans subsequently supported the British during the American Revolution. Native American
resistance to U.S. control was effectively ended
at the Battle of
Fallen Timbers in 1794 with the victory
of Gen. Anthony Wayne. Despite provisions of the Treaty of Paris, which ended the American
Revolution (1783; see Paris, Treaty of), the British held
stubbornly to Detroit and Mackinac until
1796. After passage of the Northwest Ordinance in 1787, Michigan
became part of the Northwest Territory. However,
even after the
Northwest Territory was broken up and Detroit
was made (1805) capital of Michigan Territory, British agents still maintained great influence
over the Native Americans, who fought on the British side in the War of 1812. In that war Mackinac and Detroit
fell almost immediately to the British as a result of the ineffective control of U.S. Gen.
William Hull and his troops. Michigan
remained in British hands through most
of the war until Gen. William Henry Harrison in the battle of Thames and Oliver Hazard Perry
in the battle of Lake Erie restored U.S. control.
Settlement and Statehood After peace
came, pioneers moved into Michigan. The policy of pushing Native Americans westward and opening the lands
for settlement was largely due to the efforts of Gen. Lewis Cass, who
was governor of Michigan Territory (1813–31)
and later a U.S. Senator. Steamboat navigation on the Great Lakes and sale of public lands
in Detroit both began in 1818, and the Erie Canal
was opened in 1825. Farmers came to the
Michigan fields, and the first sawmills were built along the rivers.
The move toward statehood was slowed by the desire
of Ohio and
Indiana to absorb parts of present S Michigan,
and by the opposition of southern states to the admission of another free state. The Michigan
electorate organized a government without U.S. sanction and in 1836 operated as a state, although outside
the Union. To resolve the boundary dispute
Congress proposed that the Toledo strip be ceded to Ohio and Indiana with compensation to
Michigan of land in the Upper Peninsula. Though
the Michigan electorate rejected the offer,
a group of Democratic leaders accepted it, and by their acceptance Michigan became a state
in 1837. (The admission of Arkansas as a slave holding state offset that of Michigan as a free state.) Detroit
served as the
capital until 1847, when it was replaced
by Lansing. After statehood, Michigan promptly adopted a program of internal improvement
through the building of railroads, roads, and canals,
including the Soo Locks Ship Canal at Sault
Ste. Marie. At the same time lumbering was expanding, and the population grew as German,
Irish, and Dutch immigrants arrived. In 1854 the
Republican party was organized at Jackson,
Mich. During the Civil War, Michigan fought on the side of the Union, contributing 90,000
troops to the cause.
Reform Movements After the war the state
remained firmly Republican until 1882. Then Michigan farmers, moved by the same financial difficulties and
outrage at high transportation and storage rates that
aroused other Western farmers, supported movements
advocating
agrarian interests, such as the Granger
movement and the Greenback party. The farmers joined with the growing numbers of workers
in the mines and lumber camps to elect a Greenback-Democratic governor in 1882 and succeeded in getting legislation
passed for agrarian improvement and public welfare. Reforms influenced by the labor movement were the
creation of a
state board of labor (1883), a law enforcing
a 10-hr day (1885), and a moderate child-labor law (1887). The lumbering business, with
its yield of wealth to the timber barons, declined to virtual inactivity. Some of the loggers joined the
ranks of industrial
workers, which were further swelled by
many Polish and Norwegian immigrants.
Assembly Lines and Labor Strife With
the invention of the automobile and the construction of automotive plants, industry in Michigan was altered
radically. Henry Ford established the Ford Motor Company in 1903 and introduced conveyor-belt
assembly lines in 1918. General Motors
and the Chrysler Corporation were established
shortly after Ford. Along with the development of mass-production methods came the growth
of the labor movement. In the 1930s, when the automobile industry was well established in the state, labor
unions struggled for recognition. The conflict between labor and the automotive industry,
which continued into the 1940s, included sit-down strikes and was sometimes violent. Walter Reuther
a pioneer of the labor movement, was elected president of the United Automobile Workers (UAW) in 1946.
In World War II Michigan produced large
numbers of tanks, airplanes, and other war matériel. Industrial production again expanded
after the Korean War broke out in 1950, and the
opening of the Saint Lawrence Seaway in
1959 increased export trade by bringing many oceangoing vessels to the port of Detroit. In
the early 1960s, however, economic growth lagged and
unemployment became a problem in the state.
Racial Tensions and Recession Detroit
was shaken by severe race riots in 1967 that left 43 persons dead and many injured, in addition to causing
$200 million in damage. In the wake of the rioting, programs were undertaken to improve
housing facilities and job opportunities in the city, but these failed as the city suffered massive
outmigration. While Detroit deteriorated
the suburbs experienced dramatic growth, spreading throughout SE Michigan. Resistance to
busing was a major political issue in the state in
the early 1970s. The
state's dependence on the auto industry was exhibited during the recession of the early 1980s, when car sales
slumped,
many factories were closed and Michigan's unemployment
rate at
over 15% was the nation's highest. The
federal government helped bail out the Chrysler Corporation in 1979, authorizing $1.5 billion
in loan guarantees. After a brief period of recovery through limited diversification of the state economy,
Michigan was again especially hard hit by national recession and continuing foreign competition
in the early 1990s, and it
continued to suffer large, mainly auto-related
manufacturing job losses a decade later.
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Minnesota Magic
Capital: St. Paul State abbreviation/Postal code:
Minn./MN Governor: Tim Pawlenty, R (to Jan. 2011) Lieut. Governor: Carol Molnau, R (to Jan. 2011) Senators: Norm
Coleman, R (to Jan. 2009)Amy Klobuchar, D (to
Jan. 2013) U.S. Representatives: 8 Historical biographies
of Congressional members Secy. of State: Mark Ritchie, D (to Jan. 2011) Atty. General: Lori Swanson, D (to Jan. 2011) State
Auditor: Rebecca Otto, D (to Jan. 2011) Organized as territory: March 3, 1849 Entered Union (rank): May 11, 1858 (32) Present
constitution adopted: 1858 Motto: L'Étoile du Nord (The North Star)
State symbols:
flower lady slipper (1902) tree red (or Norway) pine
(1953) bird common loon (also called great northern diver) (1961) song “Hail Minnesota” (1945) fish
walleye (1965) mushroom morel (1984) Nicknames: North Star State; Gopher State; Land of 10,000 Lakes Origin of
name: From a Dakota Indian word meaning “sky-tinted
water”
10 largest cities (2005 est.): Minneapolis, 372,811; St.
Paul,
275,150; Rochester, 94,950; Duluth, 84,896; Bloomington,
81,164; Plymouth, 69,701; Brooklyn Park, 68,550; St. Cloud,
65,792; Eagan, 63,665; Coon Rapids, 62,417 Land area:
79,610 sq mi. (206,190 sq km) Geographic center: In Crow Wing Co., 10 mi. SW of Brainerd Number of counties: 87 Largest
county by population and area: Hennepin, 1,119,364
(2005); St. Louis, 6,226 sq mi. State forests: 58 (nearly
4 million ac.) State parks: 72 Residents: Minnesotan 2005 resident population est.: 5,132,799
Following the visits of several French explorers, fur traders,
and
missionaries, including Jacques Marquette, Louis Joliet,
and
Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, the region was claimed
for
Louis XIV by Daniel Greysolon, Sieur Duluth, in 1679.
The U.S. acquired eastern Minnesota from Great Britain after
the
Revolutionary War and 20 years later bought the western
part
from France in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. Much of the
region was explored by U.S. Army lieutenant Zebulon M. Pike
before the northern strip of Minnesota bordering Canada
was
ceded by Britain in 1818.
The state is rich in natural resources. A few square miles
of land
in the north in the Mesabi, Cuyuna, and Vermilion ranges
produce
more than 75% of the nation's iron ore. The state's farms
rank
high in yields of corn, wheat, rye, alfalfa, and sugar beets.
Other
leading farm products include butter, eggs, milk, potatoes,
green
peas, barley, soybeans, oats, and livestock.
Minnesota's factories produce nonelectrical machinery, fabricated
metals, flour-mill products, plastics, electronic computers,
scientific instruments, and processed foods. The state is
also a
leader in the printing and paper-products industries.
Minneapolis is the trade center of the Midwest, and the
headquarters of the world's largest super-computer and grain
distributor. St. Paul is the nation's biggest publisher
of calendars
and law books. These “twin cities” are the nation's
third-largest
trucking center. Duluth has the nation's largest inland
harbor and
now handles a significant amount of foreign trade. Rochester
is
home to the Mayo Clinic, a world-famous medical center.
Tourism is a major revenue producer in Minnesota, with arts,
fishing, hunting, water sports, and winter sports bringing
in
millions of visitors each year.
Among the most popular attractions are the St. Paul Winter
Carnival; the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre, the Institute of Arts,
Walker Art Center, and Minnehaha Park, in Minneapolis;
Boundary Waters Canoe Area; Voyageurs National Park; North
Shore Drive; the Minnesota Zoological Gardens; and the state's
more than 10,000 lakes.
History
Ancient Inhabitants and European Exploration Archaeological
evidence indicates that Minnesota was inhabited
long before the time of the Mound Builders. A skeleton
(“Minnesota Man”), found in 1931 near Pelican
Falls, is believed
to date from the late Pleistocene epoch, c.20,000 years
ago.
Many important archaeological finds relating to the early
inhabitants of North America have been made in Minnesota.
There are some experts who argue on the basis of the Kensington
Rune Stone and other evidence that the first Europeans to
reach
Minnesota were the Vikings, but French fur traders came
in the
mid-17th cent. is undeniably so. Other traders, explorers,
and
missionaries of New France also penetrated the country.
Among
these were Radisson and Groseilliers, Verendrye, the sieur
Duluth, and Father Hennepin and Michel Aco, who discovered
the
Falls of St. Anthony (the site of Minneapolis).
At the time the French arrived, the dominant groups of Native
Americans were the Ojibwa in the east and the Sioux in the
west. Both were friendly to the French and contributed to
the
fur-trading empire of New France. Minnesota remained excellent
country for fur trade throughout the British regime that
followed
the French and Indian Wars and continued so after the War
of
1812, when the American Fur Company became dominant and
the company's men helped to develop the area.
U.S. Absorption and Settlement The eastern part of Minnesota
had been included in the
Northwest Territory and was governed under the Ordinance
of
1787; the western part was joined to the United States by
the
Louisiana Purchase. Further exploration was pursued by
Jonathan Carver (1766–67), Zebulon M. Pike (1805–6),
Henry
Schoolcraft (1820, 1829), and Stephen H. Long (1823).
Only after the War of 1812, however, did settlement begin
in
earnest. In 1820 Fort St. Anthony (later Fort Snelling)
was
founded as a guardian of the frontier. A gristmill established
there in 1823 initiated the industrial development of
Minneapolis. Treaties (1837, 1845, 1851, and 1855) with
the
Ojibwa and the Sioux, by which the U.S. government took
over
Native American lands, and the opening of a land office
at St.
Croix Falls in 1848 initiated a period of substantial expansion.
Territorial Status and Statehood In 1849 Minnesota became
a territory. The Missouri and White
Earth rivers were the western boundary. A land boom grew
as
towns were platted, railroads chartered, and roads built.
Attention turned to education, and the Univ. of Minnesota
was
established in 1851. The school, with its many associated
campuses, has subsequently exerted and continues to exert
a
great influence on the cultural life of the state. The building
(1851–53) of the Soo Ship Canal at Sault Ste. Marie
opened a
water route for lake shipping eastward.
The Panic of 1857 hit Minnesota particularly hard because
of land
speculation, but difficult times did not prevent the achievement
of statehood in 1858, with St. Paul as the capital and Henry
Hastings Sibley as the state's first governor. The population
had
swelled from 6,000 in 1850 to more than 150,000 in 1857;
by
1870 there were nearly 440,000 people. Chiefly a land of
small
farmers (mainly of British, German, and Irish extraction),
Minnesota supported the Union in the Civil War and supplied
large quantities of wheat to the Northern armies.
Native American Resistance and New Settlement During
the Civil War and afterward the Sioux reacted to broken
promises, fraudulent dealings, and the encroachment of settlers
on their lands with violent resistance. A Sioux force under
Little
Crow was defeated by H. H. Sibley, virtually ending Native
American resistance. Meanwhile, settlement boomed, aided
by
the Homestead Act of 1862. Later in the century came
immigrants from Scandinavia—Swedes, Norwegians, and
Finns.
Lumbering, which had begun in 1839 at a sawmill on the St.
Croix, became paramount, and logging camps were established.
Fortunes were made quickly in the 1870s and 80s, as the
railroads pushed west. A boom in wheat made the Minnesota
flour mills famous across the world and brought wealth to
flour
producers such as John S. Pillsbury.
Discontent and Reform Politics In the late 19th cent.
farmers suffered from such natural
disasters as the blizzard of 1873 and insect plagues from
1874 to
1876. To these were added the miseries that accompanied
the
downward trend of the national economy, and Minnesota became
a center of farmers' discontent, expressed in the Granger
movement. The opening of the iron mines gave new impetus
to
Minnesota's economy but conditions in these mines also created
discontent among the laborers. They joined forces with the
farmers in the 1890s in the Populist party, one of several
third-party movements that challenged the Republican party's
traditional leadership in Minnesota. Ignatius Donnelly was
one of
the Populists' most powerful figures.
Renewed agrarian discontent led to the founding of the
Nonpartisan League in 1915. Farmers and laborers joined
forces
again in 1920 in the Farmer-Labor party, which was dominant
in
the 1930s. The Republicans returned to power in 1939 with
the
election of Harold Stassen as governor. In 1944 the Farmer-Labor
party and the Democrats merged. Probably the most successful
leader of the new party, the Democratic Farmer Labor party
(DFL), was Hubert H. Humphrey, who was elected to the U.S.
Senate four times and was vice president from 1965 to 1969.
Orville Freeman, DFL governor from 1955 to 1961, was secretary
of agriculture from 1961 to 1969.
Walter F. Mondale, a Humphrey protégé, was a U.S. senator
from
1964 to 1977. He was elected vice president as Jimmy Carter's
running mate in 1976 and ran for president in 1984, losing
to
incumbent Ronald Reagan. Since the 1950s the DFL and the
Republicans have vied sharply in contests for state offices.
In the
1970s the Republican party changed its name to the Independent
Republican party. With the exception of 1952, 1956, and
1972,
Minnesota has voted Democratic in every presidential election
since 1932.
Cooperatives and Population Shifts The state has been
notable for experimentation in novel features
of local government and has also been a leader in the use
of
cooperatives. This phenomenon is perhaps explained by the
cooperative heritage present among its many people of
Scandinavian descent. In 1919 credit unions, cooperative
creameries, grain elevators, and purchasing associations
were
supported by legislation that protected the institutions
and
instructed the state department of agriculture to encourage
them. Today there are several thousand cooperative associations
in Minnesota serving diversified needs.
Since the mid-19th cent. the state has become progressively
more urban. In 1970 the urban population was two thirds
of the
total. Since 1970 dramatic suburban growth has taken place,
especially in the Minneapolis–St. Paul metropolitan
area.
Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport has become
an
important hub for the region. Nearby is the massive Mall
of
America (1992), the nation's largest shopping center.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Mississippi Marvels
Capital: Jackson State abbreviation/Postal code:
Miss./MS Governor: Haley Barbour, R (to Jan. 2012) Lieut. Governor: Phil Bryant, R (to Jan. 2012) Senators: Thad
Cochran, R (to Jan. 2009); Trent Lott, R (to Jan.
2013) U.S. Representatives: 4 Historical biographies
of Congressional members Secy. of State: Eric Clark, D (to Jan. 2008) Treasurer: Tate Reeves R (to Jan. 2008) Atty.
General: Jim Hood, D (to Jan. 2008) Organized as territory: April 7, 1798 Entered Union (rank): Dec. 10, 1817 (20) Present
constitution adopted: 1890 Motto: Virtute et armis (By valor and arms)
State symbols:
flower or bloom of the magnolia or evergreen magnolia (1952)
wildflower coreopsis (1991) tree magnolia (1938) bird mockingbird (1944) song “Go, Mississippi”
(1962) stone petrified wood (1976) fish largemouth or black bass (1974) insect honeybee (1980) shell oyster
shell (1974) water mammal bottlenosed dolphin or porpoise (1974) fossil prehistoric whale (1981) land mammal white-tailed
deer (1974), red fox (1997) waterfowl wood duck (1974) beverage milk (1984) butterfly spicebush swallowtail (1991)
dance square dance (1995) Nickname: Magnolia State Origin of name: From an Indian word meaning “Father of
Waters” 10 largest cities (2005 est.): Jackson, 177,977; Gulfport, 72,464;
Biloxi, 50,209; Hattiesburg, 47,176; Southhaven, 38,840;
Greenville, 38,724; Meridian, 38,605; Tupelo, 35,673; Olive
Branch, 27,964; Clinton, 26,017 Land area: 46,907 sq
mi. (121,489 sq km) Geographic center: In Leake Co., 9 mi. WNW of Carthage Number of counties: 82 Largest county
by population and area: Hinds, 249,345 (2005);
Yazoo, 920 sq mi. State parks: 24 Residents: Mississippian 2005
resident population est.: 2,921,088
First explored for Spain by Hernando de Soto, who discovered
the
Mississippi River in 1540, the region was later claimed
by France.
In 1699, a French group under Sieur d'Iberville established
the
first permanent settlement near present-day Ocean Springs.
Great Britain took over the area in 1763 after the French
and
Indian Wars, ceding it to the U.S. in 1783 after the Revolution.
Spain did not relinquish its claims until 1798, and in 1810
the
U.S. annexed West Florida from Spain, including what is
now
southern Mississippi.
For a little more than one hundred years, from shortly after
the
state's founding through the Great Depression, cotton was
the
undisputed king of Mississippi's largely agrarian economy.
Over
the last half-century, however, Mississippi has diversified
its
economy by balancing agricultural output with increased
industrial activity.
Today, agriculture continues as a major segment of the state's
economy. For almost four decades soybeans occupied the most
acreage, while cotton remained the largest cash crop. In
2001,
however, more acres of cotton were planted than soybeans,
and
Mississippi jumped to second in the nation in cotton production
(exceeded only by Texas). The state's farmlands also yield
important harvests of corn, peanuts, pecans, rice, sugar
cane, and
sweet potatoes as well as poultry, eggs, meat animals, dairy
products, feed crops, and horticultural crops. Mississippi
remains
the world's leading producer of pond-raised catfish.
The state abounds in historical landmarks and is the home
of the
Vicksburg National Military Park. Other National Park Service
areas are Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site,
Tupelo
National Battlefield, and part of Natchez Trace National
Parkway.
Pre–Civil War mansions are the special pride of Natchez,
Oxford,
Columbus, Vicksburg, and Jackson.
On Aug. 29, 2005, Mississippi was hit by Hurricane Katrina,
killing hundreds, mostly in Harrison County.
History
Native Inhabitants and European Settlement Hernando De
Soto's expedition undoubtedly passed (1540–42)
through the region, then inhabited by the Choctaw, Chickasaw,
and Natchez, but the first permanent European settlement
was
not made until 1699, when Pierre le Moyne, sieur d'Iberville,
established a French colony on Biloxi Bay. Settlement accelerated
in 1718, when the colony came under the French Mississippi
Company, headed by the speculator John Law. The region was
part of Louisiana until 1763, when, by the Treaty of Paris
(see
Paris, Treaty of) England received practically all the French
territory E of the Mississippi River and also East Florida
and West
Florida, which had belonged to Spain.
English colonists, many of them retired soldiers, had made
the
Natchez district a thriving agricultural community, producing
tobacco and indigo, by the time Bernardo de Gálvez captured
it
for Spain in 1779. By the Treaty of Paris of 1783, at the
end of
the American Revolution, the United States (with English
approval) claimed as its southern boundary in the West lat.
31°N.
Most of the present-day state of Mississippi was included
in the
area. Spain denied this claim, and the long, involved West
Florida
Controversy ensued.
Territorial Status and Statehood In the Pinckney Treaty
(1795), Spain accepted lat. 31°N as the
northern boundary of its territory but did not evacuate
Natchez
until the arrival of American troops in 1798. Congress
immediately created the Mississippi Territory, with Natchez
as
the capital and William C. C. Claiborne as the governor.
After
Georgia's cession (1802) of its Western lands to the United
States (see Yazoo land fraud) and the Louisiana Purchase
(1803), a land boom swept Mississippi. The high price of
cotton
and the cheap, fertile land brought settlers thronging in,
most of
them via the Natchez Trace, from the Southern Piedmont region
and even from New England. A few attained great wealth,
but
most simply managed a living.
In 1817 Mississippi became a state, with substantially its
present-day boundaries; the eastern section of the Mississippi
Territory was organized as Alabama Territory. The aristocratic
planter element of the Natchez region initially dominated
Mississippi's government, as the state's first constitution
(1817)
showed. With the spread of Jacksonian democracy, however,
the
small farmer came into his own, and the new constitution
adopted in 1832 was quite liberal for its time.
Expansionism and Secession Land hunger increased as more
new settlers arrived, lured by the
continuing cotton boom. By a series of treaties (1820, 1830,
and
1832), the Native Americans in the state were pushed west
across the Mississippi. Mississippians were among the leading
Southern expansionists seeking new land for cotton cultivation
and the extension of slavery. After 1840 slaves in the state
outnumbered nonslaves.
On Jan. 9, 1861, Mississippi became the second state to
secede
from the Union. State pride was highly gratified by the
choice of
Jefferson Davis as president of the Confederacy. Civil War
fighting did not reach Mississippi until Apr., 1862, when
Union
forces were victorious at Corinth and Iuka. Grant's brilliant
Vicksburg campaign ended large-scale fighting in the state,
but
further destruction was caused by the army of Gen. W. T.
Sherman in the course of its march from Vicksburg to Meridian.
Moreover, cavalry of both the North and South, particularly
the
Confederate forces of Gen. N. B. Forrest, remained active.
Reconstruction After the war Mississippi abolished slavery
but refused to ratify
the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments, and in Mar., 1867,
under the Congressional plan of Reconstruction, it was organized
with Arkansas into a military district commanded by Gen.
E. O. C.
Ord. After much agitation, a Republican-sponsored constitution
guaranteeing basic rights to blacks was adopted in 1869.
Mississippi was readmitted to the Union early in 1870 after
ratifying the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and meeting
other Congressional requirements.
While Republicans were in power, the state government was
composed of new immigrants from the North, blacks, and
cooperative white Southerners. A. K. Davis became the state's
first African-American lieutenant governor in 1874. The
establishment of free public schools was a noteworthy aspect
of
Republican rule. As former Confederates were permitted to
return
to politics and former slaves were increasingly intimidated
(see
Ku Klux Klan), the Democrats regained strength. The Republicans
were defeated in the bitter election of 1875. Lucius Q.
C. Lamar
figured largely in the Democratic triumph and was the state's
most prominent national figure for many years.
Disenfranchisement and Sharecropping In Reconstruction
days the Republicans could win only with solid
African-American support. After Reconstruction blacks were
virtually disenfranchised. White supremacy was bolstered
by the
Constitution of 1890, later used as a model by other Southern
states; under its terms a prospective voter could be required
to
read and interpret any of the Constitution's provisions.
Because
at the turn of the century most black Mississippians could
not
read (neither could many whites, but the test was rarely
applied
to them) and because the county registrar could disqualify
prospective voters who disagreed with his interpretation
of the
Constitution, African Americans were essentially disenfranchised.
From the ruins of the shattered plantation economy rose
the
sharecropping system, and the merchant and the banker replaced
the planter in having the largest financial interest in
farming.
Too often the system made the sharecroppers, white as well
as
black, little more than economic slaves. The landowners,
however, maintained their hold on politics until 1904, when
the
small farmers, still the dominant voting group, elected
James K.
Vardaman governor. Nevertheless this agrarian revolt did
not
alter a deep-seated obscurantism that was reflected in the
Jim
Crow laws (1904) and in the ban on teaching evolution in
the
public schools (1926). Mississippi has made attempts to
wipe out
illiteracy, but it still has the highest illiteracy rate
in the country.
Another reflection of the social structure of the state
was
Prohibition, put into effect in 1908 and not repealed at
the local
level until 1959.
Public Works Following the disastrous flood of 1927 the
federal government
took over flood-control work—constructing levees,
floodwalls,
floodways, and reservoirs; stabilizing river banks; and
improving
channels. Navigation, too, has not been neglected; the
Intracoastal Waterway provides a protected channel along
the
entire Mississippi coastline and links the state's ports
with all
others along the Gulf Coast and with all inland waterway
systems
emptying into the Gulf of Mexico. The Tennessee-Tombigbee
Waterway, opened in 1985, connects the Tennessee River in
NE
Mississippi with the Tombigbee River in W Alabama.
The Persistence of Racial Conflict Mississippi is still
plagued by racial problems, which have
changed the state's alignment in national politics. In 1948
Mississippi abandoned the Democratic party because of the
national Democratic party's stand on civil rights, and the
state
supported J. Strom Thurmond, the States' Rights party candidate,
for president. The 1954 Supreme Court ruling against racial
segregation in public schools (see integration) occasioned
massive resistance. Citizens Councils, composed solely of
white
men and dedicated to maintaining segregation, began to spring
up throughout the state. In the 1960 presidential election
Mississippians again rebelled against the Democratic national
platform by giving victory at the polls to unpledged electors,
who
cast their electoral college votes not for John F. Kennedy
but for
Harry F. Byrd, the conservative senator from Virginia. In
1964 the
conservative Republican Barry Goldwater carried the state;
in
1968 presidential candidate Gov. George Wallace of Alabama,
who had become famous for opposing integration, won the
state.
In 1961 mass arrests and violence were touched off when
Freedom Riders, actively seeking to spur integration, made
Mississippi a major target. However, there was not even
token
integration of public schools in Mississippi until 1962,
when the
state government under the leadership of Gov. Ross R. Barnett
tried unsuccessfully to block the admission of James H.
Meredith,
an African American, to the Univ. of Mississippi law school.
In the
conflict the federal and state governments clashed, and
the U.S.
Dept. of Justice took legal action against state officials,
including
Barnett. Two persons were killed in riots, and federal troops
had
to be called upon to restore order. Racial antagonisms resulted
in
many more acts of violence: churches and homes were bombed;
Medgar Evers, an official of the National Association for
the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), was killed in 1963;
three civil-rights workers (two white, one black) were murdered
the next year; and there were many less publicized outrages.
After the passage of the Federal Voting Rights Act of 1965,
many
black Mississippians succeeded in registering and voting.
In
1967, for the first time since 1890, a black was elected
to the
legislature, and African Americans, almost 36% of the state's
citizens, are now as well represented in Mississippi politics
as in
any state, with a large degree of cross-racial voting. In
spite of
these advances, in 1992 it was necessary for the U.S. Supreme
Court to order the state college system to end its tradition
of
segregation.
Natural Disasters and Economic Difficulties In Aug.,
1969, Mississippi and Louisiana were devastated by
Camille, one of the century's worst hurricanes. In Apr.,
1973, the
Mississippi River rose to record levels in the state; floodwaters
covered about 9% of Mississippi, including parts of Vicksburg
and
Natchez, causing massive property damage. Economic problems
continued in the 1980s and 1990s, as the state struggled
to shift
emphasis from manufacturing to the service sector and to
avoid
the national trend of industrial decline. Mississippi and
Louisiana
again suffered widespread devastation, even greater than
that
from Camille, when Hurricane Katrina struck both states
in Aug.,
2005. For travel planning and other attractions please
visit
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Missouri, Show Me!
Capital: Jefferson City State abbreviation/Postal
code: Mo./MO Governor: Matt Blunt, R (to Jan. 2009) Lieut. Governor: Peter Kinder, R (to Jan. 2009) Senators: Christopher
S. Bond, R (to Jan. 2011); Claire McCaskill,
D (to Jan. 2013) U.S. Representatives: 9 Historical
biographies of Congressional members Secy. of State: Robin Carnahan, D (to Jan. 2009) Treasurer: Sarah Steelman, R
(to Jan. 2009) Atty. General: Jeremiah “Jay” W. Nixon, D (to Jan. 2009) Organized as territory: June 4,
1812 Entered Union (rank): Aug. 10, 1821 (24) Present constitution adopted: 1945 Motto: Salus populi suprema lex
esto (The welfare of the people
shall be the supreme law)
State symbols:
flower hawthorn (1923) bird bluebird (1927)
aquatic animal paddlefish (1997) fish channel catfish (1997) song “Missouri Waltz”
(1949) fossil crinoid (1989) musical instrument fiddle (1987) rock mozarkite (1967) mineral
galena (1967) insect honeybee (1985) tree flowering dogwood (1955) tree nut eastern black walnut
(1990) animal mule (1995) dance square dance (1995) Missouri Day third Wednesday in October
(1969) Nickname: Show-me State Origin of name: Named after the Missouri Indian tribe. “Missouri”
means “town of the large canoes.” 10 largest
cities (2005 est.): Kansas City, 444,965; St. Louis,
344,362; Springfield, 150,298; Independence, 110,208;
Columbia, 91,814; Lee's Summit, 80,338; St. Joseph, 72,661;
O'Fallon, 69,694; St. Charles, 62,304; St. Peter's, 54,209 Land
area: 68,886 sq mi. (178,415 sq km) Geographic center: In Miller Co., 20 mi. SW of Jefferson City Number of counties:
114, plus 1 independent city Largest county by population and area: St. Louis, 1,004,666
(2005); Texas, 1,179 sq mi. Conservation areas1: leased,
315 (197, 661 ac.); owned, 775
(770,574 ac.) State parks and historic sites: 81 Residents:
Missourian 2005 resident population est.: 5,800,310
Hernando de Soto visited the Missouri area in 1541. France's
claim to the entire region was based on Sieur de la Salle's
travels
in 1682. French fur traders established Ste. Genevieve in
1735,
and St. Louis was first settled in 1764.
The U.S. gained Missouri from France as part of the Louisiana
Purchase in 1803, and the territory was admitted as a state
following the Missouri Compromise of 1820. Throughout the
pre–Civil War period and during the war, Missourians
were
sharply divided in their opinions about slavery and in their
allegiances, supplying both Union and Confederate forces
with
troops. However, the state itself remained in the Union.
Historically, Missouri played a leading role as a gateway
to the
West, St. Joseph being the eastern starting point of the
Pony
Express, while the much-traveled Santa Fe and Oregon trails
began in Independence.
Missouri's economy is highly diversified. Service industries
provide more income and jobs than any other segment, and
include a growing tourism and travel sector. Wholesale and
retail
trade, manufacturing, and agriculture also play significant
roles
in the state's economy.
Missouri is a leading producer of transportation equipment
(including automobile manufacturing and auto parts), beer
and
beverages, and defense and aerospace technology. Food
processing is the state's fastest-growing industry.
Missouri mines produce 90% of the nation's principal
(non-recycled) lead supply. Other natural resources include
iron
ore, zinc, barite, limestone, and timber.
The state's top agricultural products include grain, sorghum,
hay,
corn, soybeans, and rice. Missouri also ranks high among
the
states in cattle and calves, hogs, and turkeys and broilers.
A
vibrant wine industry also contributes to the economy.
Tourism draws hundreds of thousands of visitors to a number
of
Missouri points of interest: the country-music shows of
Branson;
Bass Pro Shops national headquarters (Springfield); the
Gateway
Arch at the Jefferson National Expansion (St. Louis); Mark
Twain's boyhood home (Hannibal); the Harry S. Truman home
and library (Independence); the scenic beauty of the Ozark
National Scenic Riverways; and the Pony Express and Jesse
James museums (St. Joseph). The state's different lake regions
also attract fishermen and sun-seekers from throughout the
Midwest.
History
French Exploration and Settlement Missouri's recorded
history begins in the latter half of the 17th
cent. when the French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis
Jolliet descended the Mississippi River, followed by Robert
Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, who claimed the whole area
drained
by the Mississippi River for France, calling the territory
Louisiana.
When the French explorers arrived the area was inhabited
by
Native Americans of the Osage and the Missouri groups, and
by
the end of the 17th cent. French trade with the Native Americans
flourished.
In the early 18th cent. the French worked the area's lead
mines
and made numerous trips through Missouri in search of furs.
Trade down the Mississippi prompted the settlement of Ste.
Geneviève about 1735 and the founding of St. Louis in 1764
by
Pierre Laclede and René Auguste Chouteau, who were both
in the
fur-trading business. Although not involved in the last
conflict
(1754–63) of the French and Indian Wars, Missouri
was affected
by the French defeat when, in 1762, France secretly ceded
the
territory west of the Mississippi to Spain. In 1800 the
Louisiana
Territory (including the Missouri area) was retroceded to
France,
but in 1803 it passed to the United States as part of the
Louisiana Purchase.
French influence remained dominant, even though by this
time
Americans had filtered into the territory, particularly
to the lead
mines at Ste Geneviève and Potosi. By the time of the Lewis
and
Clark expedition (1803–6), St. Louis was already known
as the
gateway to the Far West.
Territorial Status and Statehood The U.S. Territory of
Missouri was set up in 1812, but settlement
was slow even after the War of 1812. The coming of the
steamboat increased traffic and trade on the Mississippi,
and
settlement progressed. Planters from the South had introduced
slavery into the territory, but their plantations were restricted
to
a small area. However, the question of admitting the Missouri
Territory as a state became a burning national issue because
it
involved the question of extending slavery into the territories.
The dispute was resolved by the Missouri Compromise, which
admitted (1821) Missouri to the Union as a slave state but
excluded slavery from lands of the Louisiana Purchase north
of
lat. 36°30'N. (All of Missouri lies north of 36°30' except
for the
southeastern “bootheel.”)
Slaveholding interests became politically powerful, but
the state
remained principally a fur-trading center. In 1822, W. H.
Ashley
(who later made a fortune in fur trading) led an expedition
of the
adventurous trappers who became known as mountain men up
the Missouri River to explore the West for furs. From Missouri
traders established a thriving commerce over the Santa Fe
Trail
with the inhabitants of New Mexico, and pioneers followed
the
Oregon Trail to settle the Northwest. Franklin, Westport,
Independence, and St. Joseph became famous as the points
of
origin of these expeditions.
Settlement of Missouri itself quickened, spreading in the
1820s
over the river valleys into central Missouri and by the
1830s into
W Missouri. The boundaries of the state were formed after
Native
Americans gave up their claim to Platte co. in 1836; this
strip of
land in the northwest corner of Missouri was added to the
state.
Mormon immigrants came to settle Missouri in the 1830s,
but
their opposition to slavery and their growing numbers made
them
unwelcome and they were driven from the state in 1839. German
immigrants, however, were cordially received during the
1840s
and 50s, settling principally in the St. Louis area.
Slavery, Civil War, and a New Missouri In 1854 the problem
of slavery was made acute with the passage
of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, leaving the question of slavery
in
the Kansas and Nebraska territories to the settlers themselves.
The proslavery forces in Missouri became very active in
trying to
win Kansas for the slave cause and contributed to the violence
and disorder that tore the territory apart in the years
just prior to
the Civil War. Nevertheless Missouri also had leaders opposed
to
slavery, including one of its Senators, Thomas Hart Benton.
During the Civil War most Missourians remained loyal to
the
federal government. A state convention that met in Mar.,
1861,
voted against secession, and in 1862 the convention set
up a
provisional government. Guerrilla activities persisted during
this
period, and the lawlessness bred by civil warfare persisted
in
Missouri after the war in the activities of outlaws such
as Jesse
James.
A new Missouri rose out of the war—the semi-Southern
atmosphere, along with the river life and steamboating,
began to
decline, but the flavor of the period was preserved in the
works
of one of Missouri's most celebrated sons, Mark Twain. The
coming of the railroads brought the eventual decay of many
of
Missouri's river towns and tied the state more closely to
the East
and North. Urbanization and industrialization progressed,
and the
Louisiana Purchase Exposition, held at St. Louis in 1904,
dramatically revealed Missouri's economic growth.
Political History Since the brief period of radical Republican
rule from 1864 to
1870, Missouri has been permanently wedded to neither major
party. While tending toward the Republicans in the days
of
Theodore Roosevelt, it turned solidly Democratic for Franklin
D.
Roosevelt and helped to elect Missourian Harry S. Truman
to the
presidency in 1948. Political machines in the large cities
have
attracted national attention, notably the machine of Thomas
J.
Pendergast (1872–1945) in Kansas City. Missouri has
contributed
to the United States such outstanding statesmen as Champ
Clark,
James Reed, and W. Stuart Symington. Thomas Hart Benton,
a
descendant of the Missouri Senator of the same name, was
one of
the country's important artists.
World War I to the Present Although during World War
I general prosperity prevailed in the
state, the depression years of the 1930s sent farm values
crashing, and many banks, especially in rural areas, failed.
Prosperity returned during World War II, when both St. Louis
and
Kansas City served as vital transportation centers, and
industrialization increased enormously. In the postwar period,
Missouri became the second largest producer (behind Michigan)
of automobiles in the nation. Although most industry remains
based in the two metropolitan centers, smaller Missouri
communities, especially suburbs, have since attracted much
light
and heavy industry, as well as former city dwellers. St.
Louis lost
half its population between 1950 to 1990, and out-migration
has
continued; what was once the fourth largest U.S. city is
now
barely in the top 50 in size. For additional information
on the
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