Memphis Blues, Mississippi Delta Roots
A random jaunt through the hallowed region that flavors the culture of its urban cousin to the north
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian.com, April 16, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
“Looks like it,” I conceded, wondering about this little guy playing freely all by himself. He was small, but had the toughened air of a much older boy. “How old are you?” I asked.
“Nine.”
“Are you with your parents or somebody?”
At that, his eyes widened and he tore off across the lot, looking back warily every ten yards or so.
I think I just met Huckleberry Finn.
So now I’d missed both the gospel service in Memphis and the Delta Blues Museum, but I still had this growing feeling that there’s something powerfully different about this corner of the world. I just couldn’t quite put my finger on it, and realized it might be a long time before it really sunk in. I decided to head east toward Oxford, the home of Faulkner, the University of Mississippi, John Grisham and the Oxford American. Must be a fairly civilized place, I thought, though it was also the site of violent white resistance in 1962 when James Meredith enrolled as the university’s first black student. President Kennedy had to dispatch 16,000 federal troops to restore peace.
Not five minutes out of Clarksdale, the torrential rains caught up with me again. Radio reception cut out, the road disappeared under water, and an 18-wheeler rumbled by at about 75 miles per hour in the opposite lane, sending a small tsunami my way. I barely saw it coming. I decided to play a stupid game: I’d count to 30, and if the visibility didn’t improve, I’d pull over and wait it out. At 23, it started to relent. I kept going.
Halfway to Oxford, you pass though Marks, Mississippi, which happens to be the birthplace of Fred W. Smith—founder and CEO of Memphis-based FedEx. But the town’s claim on history comes mostly from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who was stirred to tears by the conditions he found there in 1968—poverty so entrenched that hundreds of children went without shoes or regular nutrition. He decided that Marks was an appropriate place to begin his Poor People’s March to Washington, D.C.—an epic campaign he didn’t live to see concluded. One-third of Marks’ residents still live in poverty.
Oxford, Mississippi, deserves a journey of its own—I’m afraid my quick foray through the Ole Miss campus and some charming downtown streets only whetted my appetite. Having just fallen under Ms. Nickki’s spell, though, I was more curious to continue on to her native Holly Springs, to complete the circle.
There are other important Memphis connections in Holly Springs. It was the birthplace of the legendary Memphis machine politician E.H. “Boss” Crump, and of Ida B. Wells, the early civil rights advocate and feminist who published her newspaper, Free Speech, in the basement of the First Baptist Beale Street Church. Holly Springs was also one of the hometowns of the Confederate general Nathaniel Bedford Forrest, who was so lionized in Memphis that in 1904, the city erected an impressive equestrian statue to mark his grave site in the Union Avenue park named for him. Considered a brilliant military tactician, he was also accused of massacring black Union prisoners under his command at Fort Pillow in 1864; Forrest was later installed as the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. For his Confederate zeal, he is still revered by white supremacists, more so than the kinder, gentler Robert E. Lee, for example. Needless to say, Forrest’s continuing place of honor in a majority African-American city sparks some controversy.
Holly Springs today has a satisfying old main square that made Oxford’s even look a little fussy. But it was late in the day when I finally arrived, and there were notable sights I’d probably never get to see, such as the juke joint Robert Gordon described as his all-time favorite. He was taken there by Junior Kimbrough, a local bluesman. “It was in a house in the middle of a cotton field,” Gordon recalled. “The party was roaring. They were selling fruit beer in the kitchen, and Junior was throwing down in the living room.”
In case you’re unfamiliar with that expression, it’s a high compliment.
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Comments (3)
My name is Richard Broadnax, Born in Camden, Arkansas (USA). I live now in Zürich, Switzerland for many years.Your artical was so well written, it brought memories of joy and tears to my eyes."THANK YOU"!!. GOSPEL RICHARD
Posted by Richard Broadnax on June 1,2012 | 07:20 PM
I think the Oxford American is based out of Conway, Arkansas where Hendrix College is located and not Oxford, MS.
Posted by Que on October 17,2010 | 12:35 PM
I have to tell you a few years ago (8 now) I followed the chitlin and grits tour through the South. It is one of my most memorable, leave work at the door side moments, I have ever had. There is something truly seductive about the deep south, that is hard to relate to the general public, especially those who have never visited. When you see the $1.25 Extra Value meals at MacDonald's (BIG CORPORATE AMERICA) playing to its level in the place it finds itself, you almost know this experiment is working.
Posted by John Rogge on April 20,2010 | 02:19 AM