Showing posts with label Chicago Bears Party Invitations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Bears Party Invitations. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Review of chicago bears party supplies::how do i video chat on gmail







Review of chicago bears party supplies::how do i video chat on gmail








Statehood:               Mississippi               joined               the               Union               on               December               10,               1817               as               the               20th               State               and               is               composed               of               lowlands,               large               bays,               the               Potomac               Ridge,               the               Fall               Line               Hills,               the               Mississippi               Sound,               a               coastline               full               of               islands,               Woodall               Mountain,               the               highest               elevation               point               in               the               State               at               806               feet               tall,               the               Mississippi               River               Delta,               the               Mississippi               Alluvial               Plain,               many               catfish               aquaculture               farms               where               most               of               the               farm-raised               catfish               consumed               in               the               United               States               are               produced,               and               the               Mississippi               Delta,               between               the               Yazoo               and               Mississippi               Rivers,               that               contains               some               of               the               world's               most               fertile               soil.
               Name:
               Heavily               forested,               especially               with               pine,               elm,               cottonwood,               oak,               pecan,               hickory,               tupelo,               and               sweetgum               trees,               outside               of               the               Mississippi               Delta's               northwestern               section               of               the               State,               and               containing               the               Ojibwe               Indian               name               "misi-ziibi,"               meaning               the               "Great               River,"               Mississippi               is               bordered               by               Tennessee,               Louisiana,               Alabama,               Arkansas,               and               the               Gulf               of               Mexico.
               Native               Americans:
               Along               with               the               Prehistoric               Mississippian               Mound               Builder               Culture               other               Native               American               Indian               tribes               that               resided               in               Mississippi               included               the               Biloxi,               the               Chickasaw,               the               Choctaw,               the               Houma,               the               Natchez,               the               Ofo,               the               Quapaw,               the               Tunica,               the               Acolapissa,               the               Chakchiuma,               the               Koroa,               the               Mosopelea,               the               Opelousa,               the               Pascagoula,               the               Yowani,               the               Alabama,               the               Coushatta,               the               Caddo,               the               Apalachee,               the               Cherokee,               the               Creek,               the               Guale,               the               Hopewell,               the               Muskhogean,               the               Hitchiti,               the               Kansa,               the               Mobile,               the               Osage,               the               Pawnee,               the               Seminole,               the               Yamasee,               and               the               Ojibwa.
               History:
               Originally               inhabited               by               Prehistoric               Mississippian               Culture               Mound               Builders,               whose               earthen               works               remain               throughout               the               Mississippi               Valley,               the               Magnolia               State               was               first               encountered               by               the               Hernando               de               Soto               Expedition               of               1540,               followed               by               the               French               in               April               of               1699,               who               created               the               first               European               settlements               at               Fort               Maurepas,               Ocean               Springs,               and               Fort               Rosalie,               or               Natchez,               which               became               the               major               town               of               their               New               Louisiana               Territory.
               Under               French               and               Spanish               Colonial               governments               the               Territory               that               became               Mississippi               developed               a               Class               of               Free               People               of               Color               that               included               European               men,               enslaved               women,               and               their               multiracial               children,               who               formed               a               third               Class               between               European               and               enslaved               Africans,               and               ceded               the               Territory               to               England               under               the               1763               Treaty               of               Paris               following               the               French               and               Indian               War.
               Becoming               part               of               the               United               States               after               the               Revolutionary               War,               and               organized               on               April               7,               1798,               the               Mississippi               Territory,               taken               from               parts               of               Georgia               and               South               Carolina,               became               the               20th               State               of               the               Union               on               December               10,               1817.
               Beginning               in               the               1850s               cotton               became               the               king               crop               grown               in               the               State's               Delta               and               Black               Belt               areas,               and               plantation               owners               became               extremely               wealthy               owning               many               slaves,               numbering               about               436,631,               or               fifty-five               percent               of               Mississippi's               total               population               in               1860,               with               most               of               them               living               along               rivers               that               supported               the               plantations,               leaving               approximately               ninety               percent               of               the               Delta               as               undeveloped               frontier.
               One               of               the               founding               members               of               the               Confederate               States               of               America,               and               the               second               to               secede               from               the               Union,               on               January               9,               1861,               Mississippi               typified               the               Jim               Crow               racial               segregation               laws               of               the               early               20th               Century,               although               at               that               time               approximately               two-thirds               of               all               Mississippi               farmers               were               ex-slaves               and               African-Americans,               who               eventually               lost               their               lands               and               became               Sharecroppers.

Mississippi               also               experienced               two               Great               Migrations               of               Blacks               to               Northern               cities               and               the               West               Coast               in               search               of               a               better               way               of               life               than               the               State               offered.
               Mississippi               was               an               activity               center               during               the               Civil               Rights               Movement               with               Freedom               Schools,               the               Mississippi               State               Sovereignty               Commission,               White               Citizen               Councils,               and               KKK               attacks               that               earned               Mississippi               the               dubious               distinction               of               being               a               Reactionary               State               in               the               1960s,               and               in               1995               symbolically               ratified               the               13th               Amendment               to               the               United               States               Constitution,               that               had               been               Nationally               adopted               on               December               6,               1865               abolishing               slavery,               and               prohibiting               involuntary               servitude               except               as               punishment               for               a               crime,               and               was               the               first               Reconstruction               Amendment               following               the               Civil               War.
               Mississippi               suffered               extensive               destruction               by               Hurricane               Camille               on               August               17,               1969,               and               was               further               devastated               by               Hurricane               Katrina               on               August               29,               2005,               that               destroyed               ninety               miles               of               the               Mississippi               Gulf               Coast.
               Brices               Cross               Roads               National               Battlefield               Site:
               Located               in               Lee               County,               six               miles               west               of               Baldwyn,               Brice               Cross               Roads,               the               only               National               Battlefield               in               the               National               Park               System,               and               a               National               Register               of               Historic               Places               Site,               commemorates               the               June               10,               1864               Confederate               Army's               victory               over               Union               forces               attempting               to               capture               Tupelo               during               the               Civil               War,               that               secured               supply               lines               between               Chattanooga               and               Nashville,               Tennessee,               and               temporarily               kept               the               North               out               of               Alabama               and               Mississippi.
               Gulf               Islands               National               Seashore:
               Including               barrier               islands               such               as               Petit               Bois               Island,               Horn               Island,               East               Ship               Island,               West               Ship               Island,               coastal               mainlands,               bayous,               salt               marshes,               southern               magnolia               forests,               live               oak               forests,               popular               sandy               beaches,               Fort               Pickens,               Fort               Barranca,               Fort               McRee,               Advanced               Redoubt,               the               Santa               Rosa               Peninsula,               the               Navel               Live               Oaks               Native               American               archaeological               site,               nature               trails,               and               abundant               wildlife,               the               Gulf               Islands               National               Seashore               contains               a               one               hundred               and               fifty               mile               long               stretch               of               Mississippi               and               Florida.
               Vicksburg               National               Military               Park               and               Cemetary:
               Including               reconstructed               forts,               twenty               miles               of               historic               trenches,               1325               historical               markers,               two               antebellum               homes,               the               USS               Cairo               gunboat,               the               first               American               ship               sunk               by               a               torpedo,               the               Grant's               Canal               site,               and               the               Illinois               State               Memorial,               with               forty-seven               steps,               one               for               each               day               the               town               was               under               seige,               the               Vicksburg               National               Military               Park               and               Cemetary               preserves               the               May               18               to               July               4,               1863               seige,               battle,               and               surrender               of               the               city               that               gave               the               United               States               control               of               the               Mississippi               River,               and               was               considered               the               turning               point               of               the               Civil               War.

The               December               26               to               29,               1862               Battle               of               Chickasaw               Bayou               and               Walnut               Hills,               the               January               9               to               11,               1863               Battle               of               Arkansas               Post,               the               April               29,               1863               Battle               of               Grand               Gulf,               the               April               29               to               May               1,               1863               Battle               of               Synder's               Bluff,               the               May               1,               1863               Battle               of               Port               Gibson,               the               May               12,               1863               Battle               of               Raymond,               the               May               14,               1863               Battle               of               Jackson               Crossroads,               the               May               16,               1863               Battle               of               Champion               Hill,               and               the               May               17,               1863               Battle               of               Big               Black               River               Bridge               were               all               instrumental               in               Vicksburg's               eventual               fall               to               Union               forces.
               Tupelo               National               Battlefield:
               The               Tupelo               National               Battlefield               commemorates               the               July               14               and               15,               1864               Union               victory               in               the               Battle               of               Old               Town               Creek,               the               last               major               Civil               War               skirmish               faught               in               Mississippi,               that               opened               a               route               for               General               Sherman               to               march               to               Atlanta.
               Natchez               National               Historical               Park:
               The               Natchez               National               Historical               Park               contains               the               1716               French-built               Fort               Rosalie,               where               the               town               of               Natchez               began,               a               Prehistoric               Indian               settlement               known               as               the               Grand               Village               of               the               Natchez,               the               William               Johnson               House,               and               the               Melrose               Mansion,               a               National               Register               of               Historic               Places               site               equipped               with               pre-Civil               War               furnishings.
               Natchez               Trace               Parkway:
               The               Natchez               Trace               Parkway,               a               444-mile               long               two               lane               road               featuring               panaramic               scenery               of               the               original               route               of               migratory               American               Bison               along               the               low               hills               and               ridges               between               Mississippi               and               the               Cumberland               Plateau,               contains               the               Meriwether               Lewis               National               Monument,               the               1780-built               Mount               Locust               Inn,               one               of               the               oldest               structures               in               the               State,               the               Mississippi               Craft               Center,               the               Rocky               Springs               Ghost               Town,               Cypress               Swamp,               the               Ackia               Battleground               National               Monument,               Chickasaw               Village,               the               Tupelo               National               Battlefield,               and               the               Brices               Cross               Roads               National               Battlefield               Site.
               Natchez               Trace               National               Scenic               Trail:
               The               Natchez               Trace               National               Scenic               Trail               was               an               old               Choctaw               and               Chickasaw               indian               footpath,               used               by               various               American               explorers,               that               includes               the               Rocky               Springs               Trail               near               Port               Gibson,               the               Ridgeland               Trail               north               of               Jackson,               the               Leipers               Fork               Trail               south               of               Nashville,               and               the               Tupelo               Trail.
               National               Forests:
               National               Forests               in               Mississippi               include               the               Bienville               National               Forest,               in               the               central               part               of               the               State,               that               contains               approximately               178,542               acres,               and               the               Bienville               Wildlife               Management               Area,               the               Tombigbee               National               Forest,               in               north               central               Mississippi,               that               possesses               about               66,000               acres,               and               is               divided               into               the               Coffeeville,               Houston,               and               Ackerman               units,               the               Homochitto               National               Forest,               Mississippi's               first               National               Forest,               and               the               heaviest               producer               of               lumber               in               the               South,               that               contains               about               seventy-five               percent               of               all               the               oil               wells               found               on               National               Forest               property               in               the               State,               the               Delta               National               Forest               in               the               Lower               Mississippi               Valley,               that               contains               more               than               60,000               acres               and               the               Sunflower               Wildlife               Management               Area,               the               Holly               Springs               National               Forest,               with               its               156,661               acres               in               north               central               Mississippi,               and               the               home               of               the               Puskus,               Chewalla,               and               Choctaw               Lake               Recreational               Areas,               and               the               more               than               500,000-acre               De               Soto               National               Forest               in               Southeastern               Mississippi               overlooking               the               Gulf               of               Mexico.
               State               Parks:
               Mississippi's               twenty-six               State               Parks               are               known               as               the               Buccaneer               State               Park               in               Waveland               that               was               closed               by               Hurricane               Katrina,               the               Wall               Doxey               State               Park               at               Holly               Springs,               the               Clark               Creek               National               Area               west               of               Woodville,               the               Trace               State               Park               near               Hamlet,               where               famed               Frontiersman               Davy               Crockett               once               lived,               the               Clarkes               State               Park               north               of               Quitman,               the               Tishomingo               State               Park               in               the               Appalachian               foothills               north               of               Tupelo,               the               Shepard               State               Park               west               of               Pascagoula,               the               George               P.

Cossar               State               Park               east               of               Oakland               on               Enid               Lake,               the               Roosevelt               State               Park               near               Morton,               the               Percy               Quin               State               Park               south               of               McComb,               the               Golden               Memorial               State               Park               east               of               Walnut               Grove,               the               Grand               Gulf               Military               State               Park               northwest               of               Port               Gibson               and               the               Ghost               Town               of               Grand               Gulf,               a               Mississippi               Landmark               found               on               the               National               Register               of               Historic               Places,               the               Paul               B.

Johnson               State               Park               on               Geiger               Lake,               the               Natchez               State               Park               near               Stanton,               the               Great               River               Road               State               Park               in               Rosedale               with               unmatched               scenic               views               of               the               Mississippi               River,               the               Leroy               Percy               State               Park               at               Hollandale,               the               Legion               State               Park               and               Historic               District               in               Louisville,               the               Holmes               County               State               Park               at               Durant,               the               LeFleur's               Bluff               State               Park               near               Jackson,               where               the               State's               Capitol               city               began,               the               Lake               Lowndes               State               Park               at               Columbus,               the               Hugh               White               State               Park               in               Grenada,               the               Lake               Lincoln               State               Park               in               Wesson,               the               J.P.

Coleman               State               Park               near               Pickwick               Lake,               and               the               John               W.

Kyle               State               Park               in               Sardis.
               Lakes:
               Mississippi's               largest               lakes               include               Arkabutla               Lake               on               the               Coldwater               River               in               the               northern               part               of               the               State,               built               after               the               Great               Mississippi               Flood               of               1927               to               help               alleviate               damages               caused               by               the               continual               overflowing               headwaters               of               the               Yazoo               River,               and               featured               in               the               motion               picture               O               Brother               Where               Art               Thou,               Grenada               Lake,               on               the               Yalobusha               River,               Mississippi's               largest               lake,               and               home               of               the               Hugh               White               State               Park,               the               Ross               Barnett               Reservoir,               on               the               Pearl               River,               the               State's               largest               drinking               water               resource,               Sardis               Lake               on               the               Little               Tallahatchie               River               that               is               popular               with               University               of               Mississippi               students,               Marathon               Lake,               Shongelo               Lake,               Choctaw               Lake,               Lake               Ferguson,               Geiger               Lake,               Lake               Lowndes,               Lake               Lincoln,               Pickwick               Lake,               Gainesville               Lake,               Martin               Lake,               Lake               Tom               Bailey,               and               Enid               Lake.
               Rivers:
               Major               rivers               found               in               the               State               of               Mississippi               include               the               Yazoo               River               containing               at               least               twenty-nine               sunken               ships               from               the               Civil               War,               the               Tombigbee               River,               the               Mississippi               River,               the               Leaf               River,               the               Strong               River,               the               Homochitto               River,               the               Bouie               River,               the               Sucamoochee               River,               the               Pascagoula               River,               the               Eseatawpa               River,               the               Dog               River,               the               Noxubee               River,               the               Chickasawhay               River,               the               Chunky               River,               the               Buttahatchee               River,               the               Tchoutacabouffa               River,               the               Biloxi               River,               the               Jourdan               River,               the               Pearl               River,               the               Yockanookany               River,               the               Tangipahoa               River,               the               Tickfaw               River,               the               Amite               River,               the               Big               Black               River,               the               Big               Sunflower               River,               the               Tallahatchie               River,               the               Little               Tallahatchie               River,               the               Yalobusha               River,               the               Shuna               River,               the               Hatchie               River,               The               Tuscumbia               River,               the               Tennessee               River,               the               Coldwater               River,               the               Yazoo               River,               the               Okatoma               River,               Mississippi's               only               white               water               rapids               area,               and               the               Wolf               River.
               Delta               Blues:
               One               of               the               earliest               forms               of               Blues               music               originated               in               the               Mississippi               Delta,               an               area               famous               for               its               abstract               poverty,               and               features               the               harmonica,               cigar               box               guitar,               slide               guitar,               and               guitar               as               its               dominent               instruments,               with               vocal               styles               ranging               from               soulful               to               passionate               to               fiery               to               introspective.

The               Delta               Blues               style               of               music               was               first               recorded               in               the               late               1920s,               although               it               definately               existed               long               before               that,               when               record               companies               realized               the               potential               of               the               African-American               music               market               for               one               person               singing               and               playing               recordings.

Defined               by               its               instrumentation,               rhythm,               "bottleneck"               slide,               and               vastly               different               harmonic               structure,               some               of               the               most               famous               early               Delta               Blues               musicians               included               such               Performers               as               Ishman               Bracey,               Tommy               Johnson,               Garfield               Akers,               Big               Joe               Williams,               Son               House,               Charley               Patton,               Robert               Johnson,               Willie               Brown,               Bukka               White,               Lead               Belly,               Muddy               Waters,               Skip               James,               Elmore               James,               Memphis               Minnie,               Bertha               Lee,               Geeshie               Wiley,               and               perhaps               the               most               influencial               woman               to               ever               perform               the               Blues,               Janis               Joplin,               primarily               known               for               her               version               of               such               songs               as               "Piece               Of               My               Heart,"               and               her               biggest               Hit               the               Kris               Kristofferson               Smash               "Me               And               Bobby               McGee,"               and               who's               life               the               motion               picture               The               Rose,               featuring               Bette               Midler,               loosely               portrayed.
               Attractions:
               Popular               Mississippi               Attractions               include               the               Old               Capitol               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Museum               of               Natural               Science,               the               Mississippi               Agricultural               and               Forestry               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Museum               of               Art,               the               Mississippi               Sports               Hall               of               Fame,               the               State               Capitol               Complex,               the               City               of               Jackson               Public               Fire               Education               Center               and               Fire               Museum,               the               Jackson               Zoological               Park,               the               Margaret               Walker               Alexander               National               Research               Center,               the               Mississippi               War               Memorial               Building,               the               Russell               C.

Davis               Planetarium,               the               Presidential               Library               of               Confederate               President               Jefferson               Davis               and               his               post-Civil               War               Beauvoir               residence,               the               Tomb               of               the               Unknown               Confederate               Soldier,               the               Biloxi               Lighthouse,               the               world's               only               lighthouse               in               the               middle               of               a               four               lane               highway,               the               Maritime               and               Seafood               Industry               Museum,               the               Civil               War-era               Longwood               Plantation,               a               National               Historic               Landmark               site,               the               Rosalie               Mansion               and               Gardens               home               of               the               Daughters               of               the               American               Revolution,               the               Natchez               Museum               of               African-American               History               and               Culture,               the               Natchez               National               Historical               Park,               the               Natchez               National               Cemetary,               the               Grand               Village               of               the               Natchez               Indians,               the               Vicksburg               National               Military               Park,               the               Vicksburg               Battlefield               Museum,               the               Vicksburg               National               Cemetary,               the               Blues               and               Legends               Hall               of               Fame,               the               Gulf               Islands               National               Seashore,               the               Mississippi               Vietnam               Veterans               Memorial,               the               Elvis               Presley               Birthplace               and               Museum,               the               Tupelo               Automobile               Museum,               the               Natchez               Trace               Parkway,               the               Tupelo               National               Battlefield,               the               Corinth               Civil               War               Contraband               Camp,               the               Crossroads               Historical               Museum,               the               Delta               Blues               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Armed               Forces               Museum,               the               B.B.

King               Museum               and               Delta               Interpretive               Center,               the               Windsor               Ruins               Historic               Natchez               Cemetary,               the               Mississippi               Delta,               the               Birthplace               of               Kermit               the               Frog               Exhibit,               the               Brice's               Crossroads               National               Battlefield,               the               Oprah               Winfrey               Birthplace,               the               Museum               of               the               Southern               Jewish               Experience,               the               Jim               Henson               Museum,               the               Biedenharn               Candy               Company               Museum               where               coca-cola               was               first               bottled               in               1894,               the               Deep               Sea               Fishing               Rodeo,               and               the               Mississippi               Delta               riverboats.
               Jackson:
               Named               for               Andrew               Jackson,               and               possessing               the               wellknown               slogan               of               "Jackson,               Mississippi:               City               With               Soul,"               the               capital               of               the               State               of               Mississippi               was               ranked               Number               Three               on               Forbes               Magazine's               list               of               Best               Bang               For               Your               Buck               Cities               in               the               United               States.
               Originally               part               of               the               Choctaw               Nation               Jackson               was               acquired               by               the               US               under               the               September               27,               1830               Treaty               of               Dancing               Rabbit               Creek,               and               was               known               as               Parkville               on               the               Natchez               Trace,               then               as               LeFleur's               Bluff.
               The               October               18,               1820               Treaty               of               Doak's               Stand               opened               the               area               around               Jackson               to               non-American               settlers,               and               the               city               began               growing               before               the               Civil               War               due               to               railroads               linking               Jackson               to               major               towns               of               the               time               located               along               the               Mississippi               River.
               The               city               of               Jackson               fell               twice               to               Union               forces               during               the               Civil               War,               first               on               May               13,               1863               during               the               Battle               of               Jackson,               and               again               on               July               4,               1863               during               the               Siege               of               Jackson.

Abandoned               by               the               Confederate               Army,               and               burned               by               Union               forces,               Jackson               earned               the               name               "Chimneyville"               because               only               the               chimneys               of               houses               survived               the               fires               set               by               the               Union               forces.
               From               1961               to               1963               Jackson               was               a               hotbed               of               activities               surrounding               the               Civil               Rights               Movement               including               the               arrests               of               more               than               three               hundred               Freedom               Riders               on               May               24,               1961,               the               arrests               of               Black               Tougaloo               College               students               for               reading               books               in               the               "Whites               Only"               library,               making               the               town               a               site               on               the               Civil               Rights               Trail,               Sit-Ins               by               the               Freedom               Movement,               and               the               June               6,               1966               James               Meredith               March               for               Civil               Rights               legislation,               earning               the               city               one               year               of               martial               law,               the               only               US               city               to               endure               that               distinction               in               the               Twentieth               Century.
               The               International               Headquarters               of               the               Phi               Theta               Kappa               Two-Year               Colleges               Honor               Society               is               located               in               Jackson.
               Jackson               was               popularized               in               American               Country               Music               by               the               Johnny               Cash               song               "Jackson,"               and               is               famous               as               the               home               of               Gospel               Music,               Rhythm               and               Blues,               and               The               Blues.
               Major               industries               that               have               been               found               in               Jackson               include               railroads,               manufacturing,               natural               gas,               aviation,               medicine               including               the               first               successful               cadaveric               lung               transplant               operation,               music,               electrical               equipment,               processed               foods,               fabricated               metals,               casinos,               and               agriculture               products               such               as               soybeans,               poultry,               cotton,               and               livestock.
               Major               Corporations               that               have               been               located               in               Jackson               include               the               Trustmark               Banking               and               Financial               Services               Corporation,               EastGroup               Properties               Incorporated,               Cal-Maine               Foods               Incorporated,               Parkway               Properties               Incorporated,               the               Canadian               National               Railway,               the               Kansas               City               Southern               Railway,               and               Amtrak's               City               of               New               Orleans               passenger               trains.
               Popular               Jackson               area               Attractions               include               the               Smith-Robertson               Museum               and               Cultural               Center,               the               Celtic               Heritage               Society               of               Mississippi,               the               Jackson               Zoological               Park,               the               Municipal               Art               Gallery,               the               Mississippi               Agriculture               and               Forestry               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Department               of               Archives               and               History,               the               Mississippi               Museum               of               Art,               the               Malaco               Records               Recording               Studios,               the               Gold               Coast,               the               USA               International               Ballet               Competition,               CelticFest               Mississippi,               the               Capital               Complex,               the               Russell               C.

Davis               Planetarium,               the               Oaks               House               Museum,               the               Eudora               Welty               House               and               State               Historical               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Sports               Hall               of               Fame               and               Museum,               the               Medgar               Evers               Home               Museum,               The               City               of               Jackson               Fire               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Blues               Trail,               the               Mississippi               Museum               of               Natural               Science,               the               Mississippi               History               Museum,               and               the               National               Mississippi               River               Museum               and               Aquarium.
               Gulfport:
               Incorporated               July               28,               1898               the               co-County               Seat               of               Harrison               County               was               severely               damaged               on               August               29,               2005               by               Hurricane               Katrina.
               Part               of               the               Gulf               Islands               National               Seashore               Gulfport               is               the               home               of               the               "World's               Largest               Fishing               Rodeo,"               historic               antebellum               homes,               barrier               islands,               and               famous               beaches.
               Major               industries               that               have               been               located               in               Gulfport               include               shipping,               fishing,               lumber,               casino               gambling,               retail               merchandising,               hospitality,               and               healthcare.
               Popular               Gulfport               area               Attractions               include               the               Lynn               Meadows               Discovery               Center               and               Children's               Museum,               the               Fun               Time               USA               Amusement               Park,               Ship               Island,               the               St.

James               Fall               Festival,               the               Fire               in               the               Sky               Freedom               Fest,               the               Christmas               Festival               of               Lights,               the               Gulf               Islands               Waterpark,               the               Gulfport               Centennial               Museum,               the               CEC               Seabees               Memorial               Museum,               Beauvoir,               the               Jefferson               Davis               Home               and               Presidential               Library,               the               Oktoberfests,               the               Scottish               Games               &               Celtic               Festival,               the               Winter               Classics               Horseshows,               the               Gulfhaven               Gardens,               the               Biloxi               Lighthouse,               and               the               Historic               Waveland               City               Hall.
               Hattiesburg:
               Founded               in               1882               the               Forrest               County               Seat               began               as               a               lumber               and               railroad               center               and               became               known               as               "The               Hub               City"               as               a               result               of               a               1912               local               newspaper               contest               and               because               of               its               location.
               Hattiesburg               was               first               settled               by               pine               timberland               workers               from               Georgia               and               the               Carolinas               attracted               to               the               area               by               the               1897               lumber               boom.
               Hattiesburg               can               be               found               on               the               Bouie               and               Leaf               River               junction,               and               is               the               home               of               Camp               Shelby,               the               largest               National               Guard               Training               Base               east               of               the               Mississippi               River.
               Heavily               involved               in               the               Cold               War               Nuclear               Arms               Race,               Hattiesburg               was               the               site               of               Nuclear               Test               Salmon               and               Nuclear               Test               Sterling,               from               the               Project               Dribble               Program's               Vela               Uniform               and               Project               Vela,               when               two               nuclear               devices               were               exploded               in               the               nearby               salt               domes               of               Lumberton               in               the               1960s.
               The               Civil               Rights               Movement               of               Palmers               Crossing's               African-American               community,               after               Clyde               Kennard,               a               Korean               War               veteran               who               applied               to               attend               Mississippi               Southern               College,               an               all-White               school,               was               framed               for               a               crime               he               did               not               commit               and               served               seven               years               in               Parchman               Prison,               the               oldest               and               only               maximum               security               prison               for               men               in               the               State               of               Mississippi,               the               Freedom               Summer               of               1964,               the               Mississippi               Freedom               Democratic               Party,               and               heavy               KKK               attacks               on               Blacks,               all               made               Hattiesburg               an               activities               center               for               Civil               Rights               during               the               1960s.
               Parchman               Prison               was               where               Elvis               Presley's               Father,               Vernon               Presley,               served               a               three               year               sentence               for               Forgery,               and               a               famous               picture               of               Elvis               and               his               parents               at               the               prison               still               exists.
               Ranked               by               CNN               as               a               Top               25               Growing               Business               City               major               industries               that               have               been               found               in               Hattiesburg               include               railroads,               lumber,               food               processing,               filing               supplies,               plumbing               manufacturing,               electric               home               appliances,               coffee,               and               paper-based               consumer               products.
               Major               Corporations               that               have               been               located               in               Hattiesburg               include               the               Southern               Railway               System,               the               Gulf               and               Ship               Island               Railroad,               the               Illinois               Central               Railroad,               Amtrak,               the               Norfolk               Southern               Railway,               the               Canadian               National               Railway,               the               Kansas               City               Southern               Railway,               the               Kohler               Engine               Company,               the               Northeast               Coca-Cola               Bottling               Company,               the               International               Filing               Company,               Mr.

Coffee,               Sunbeam               Products               Incorporated,               and               the               Kimberly-Clark               Corporation.
               Popular               Hattiesburg               area               Attractions               include               the               Hattiesburg               Zoo,               the               African-American               Military               History               Museum,               the               Mississippi               Armed               Forces               Museum,               the               All-American               Rose               Garden,               the               Hattiesburg               Area               Historical               Society               Museum,               The               de               Grummond               Children's               Literature               Collection,               the               Pep's               Point               Water               Park,               the               Hattiesburg               Arts               Council               Gallery,               and               the               Historic               Hattiesburg               Driving               Tour.
               Biloxi:
               With               a               three               hundred               year               old               history               Biloxi               lays               on               the               Mississippi               Sound               with               its               barrier               islands               scattered               into               the               Gulf               of               Mexico.
               The               first               settlement               of               French               Louisiana,               Biloxi               was               founded               as               Fort               Maurepas               in               1699,               and               became               the               capital               city               of               the               Territory               from               1720               to               1723,               but               was               ceded               to               England               by               the               Treaty               of               Paris               after               the               Seven               Years               War               ended.
               England               and               Spain               ruled               Biloxi               from               1763               to               1798,               and               in               1811               the               United               States               gained               control               of               the               city               as               part               of               the               Territory               of               Mississippi.
               Biloxi               has               been               a               Summer               Resort               since               before               the               Civil               War               began               and               a               casino               town               since               the               1940s.
               On               August               29,               2005               Hurricane               Katrina               destroyed               about               ninety               percent               of               the               buildings               along               the               Biloxi               coast               including               the               floating               casinos,               libraries,               and               churches               in               the               area.
               Major               industries               that               have               been               found               in               Bilox               include               the               military,               tourism,               railroads,               food               preservation,               casinos,               cotton,               commercial               fishing,               and               seafood.
               Major               Casinos               that               have               been               located               in               Biloxi,               on               the               "Poor               Man's               Riviera,"               include               the               Hard               Rock               Hotel               and               Casino,               the               Grand               Biloxi               Hotel,               Casino               and               Spa,               the               Beau               Rivage               Resort               and               Casino,               the               Casino               Magic,               the               President               Casino               Broadwater               Resort,               the               Isle               of               Capri               Casino               Hotel,               the               Boomtown               Casino,               the               Treasure               Bay               Casino               and               Hotel,               the               IP               Casino               Resort               and               Spa,               the               Palace               Casino               Resort,               and               the               Bacaran               Bay               Resort.
               Popular               Biloxi               area               Attractions               include               Ship               Island,               the               Beauvoir,               the               post-Civil               War               home               and               library               of               Confederate               President               Jefferson               Davis,               the               Biloxi               Tour               Train,               the               Biloxi               Island               Lighthouse,               the               Mardi               Gras               Museum,               the               Maritime               and               Seafood               Industry               Museum,               the               1836-built               Grass               Lawn               Milner               Home               Showcase               on               the               Mississippi               Sound,               the               Crusin'               the               Coast               Car               Parade,               the               J.L.

Scott               Marine               Education               Center               and               Aquarium,               the               Biloxi               Historical               Walking               Tour,               the               Biloxi               Shrimp               Festival               and               Blessing               of               the               Fleet,               and               the               Ohr/O'Keefe               Museum               of               Art.
               Greenville:
               Known               as               the               heart               and               soul               of               the               Mississippi               Delta,               and               found               in               Washington               County,               on               the               eastern               bank               of               the               Ferguson               River,               Greenville               was               the               birthplace               of               Muppet               creator               Jim               Henson.
               Greenville               contains               a               famous               courthouse,               several               historical               plantations,               churches,               buildings,               and               cemetaries,               Cotton               Row,               and               Old               Highway               61,               the               route               the               Blues               traveled               from               the               Delta               to               the               Industrial               North.
               The               famous               bearhunter               and               ex-slave               Holt               Collier               trapped               a               bear               for               President               Theodore               Roosevelt               to               shoot               while               on               a               hunting               trip               in               Greenville,               and               when               Roosevelt               could               not               shoot               it,               the               Teddy               Bear               was               born.
               Resulting               from               the               first               village               fading               away               after               the               American               Revolutionary               War,               and               the               second               hamlet               being               destroyed               in               the               May               1863               Battle               of               Vicksburg,               Greenville               is               the               third               city               in               Mississippi               to               contain               that               name.
               In               August               1877               Yellow               Fever               ravaged               Greenville,               and               in               1890               the               city               suffered               its               first               major               flooding               by               the               Mississippi               River,               then               was               destroyed               again               by               the               Great               Mississippi               Flood               of               1927,               but               grew               into               the               largest               river               port               on               the               Mississippi               River.
               Major               industries               that               have               been               found               in               Greenville               include               cotton,               shipping,               agriculture,               education,               newspapers,               lumber,               and               casino               gambling.
               Major               Corporations               that               have               been               located               in               Greenville               include               the               Delta               Democrat               Times               Newspaper,               the               Chicago               Mill               and               Lumber               Company,               the               Harlow's               Casino               Resort               and               Hotel,               the               Lighthouse               Point               Casino,               the               Bayou               Caddy's               Jubilee               Casino,               and               more.
               Popular               Greenville               area               Attractions               include               the               Nelson               Street               Chitlin'               Circuit               Blues               Clubs,               the               Winterville               Mounds               Historic               Site               from               the               Mississippian               Indian               culture,               the               Holt               Collier               National               Wildlife               Refuge,               the               1857               Belmont               Plantation,               one               of               the               very               few               Antebellum               homes               not               burned               by               Union               forces               during               the               Civil               War,               the               Cottonlandia               Factory               Museum,               the               Belzoni               Historical               Museum,               the               Old               Number               One               Fire               Museum,               and               the               Mississippi               Delta.
               Series:
               The               United               States               Series               I               am               writing               here               on               associatedcontent.com               provides               an               indepth               look               at               all               fifty               States               that               make               up               this               Great               Country               of               ours               and               their               five               largest               cities.
               The               current               list               of               Articles               for               the               United               States               Series               I               have               published               to               date               includes:
               So               This               Is               Sweet               Home               Alabama               
               Alaska               -               The               Land               of               the               Midnight               Sun               
               Arizona               -               The               Valley               of               the               Sun               
               Arkansas               -               People               of               the               South               Wind               
               California               -               The               Golden               Gate,               Earthquakes               and               Grizzly               Bears               
               Colorful               Colorado               -               The               Rocky               Mountains,               Skiing,               and               High               Technology               
               Connecticut               -               The               Land               of               Steady               Habits               
               Delaware               -               The               Small               Wonder               
               Florida               -               The               Snowbirds               R               Us               State               
               Georgia               -               Goobers,               Peaches,               and               Buzzards               
               Hawaii               -               Luaus,               Pineapples,               and               Beaches               
               Idaho               -               The               Gem               of               the               Mountains               and               Potatoes               State               
               Illinois               -               Mining,               Factories,               and               Labor               Unions               
               Indiana               -               Land               of               Steel               and               Ducks               
               Iowa               -               The               Ethanol               and               Food               Capital               of               the               World               
               Bleeding               Kansas               America's               Flattest               State               
               Kentucky               -               The               Land               of               Tomorrow               
               Louisiana               -               The               Child               of               the               Mississippi               
               Maine               -               Lobsters,               Lighthouses,               and               Black               Bears               
               Maryland               -               The               "Oh               Say               Can               You               See"               State               
               Massachusetts               -               The               Cradle               of               Liberty               
               Michigan               -               The               Automotive               State               
               Minnesota               -               The               Bread               and               Butter               State
               Comments               from               readers               are               always               welcome               so               let               me               know               what               you               think               about               these               Articles.
               Sources:
               This               Article               was               compiled               from               several               websites               that               provide               much               more               information               about               Mississippi               including:
               visitjackson.com,               gulfport.ms.us,               discoverourtown.com,               gulfcoast.org,               and               visitgreenville.org






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