
Mississippi Facts, State Trivia & Information
- In 1963 the University of Mississippi Medical Center accomplished
the world's first human lung transplant and, on January 23, 1964, Dr.
James D. Hardy performed the world's first heart transplant surgery.
- Borden's Condensed Milk was first canned in Liberty.
- In 1902 while on a hunting expedition in Sharkey County, President
Theodore (Teddy) Roosevelt refused to shoot a captured bear. This act
resulted in the creation of the world-famous teddy bear.
- The world's largest shrimp is on display at the Old Spanish Fort
Museum in Pascagoula.
- The first bottle of Dr. Tichener's Antiseptic was produced in
Liberty.
- The world's largest cactus plantation is in Edwards.
- Elvis Presley was born in Tupelo, on January 8, 1935.
- H.T. Merrill from Luka performed the world's first round trip
trans-oceanic flight in 1928.
- In 1884 the concept of selling shoes in boxes in pairs (right foot
and left foot) occurred in Vicksburg at Phil Gilbert's Shoe Parlor on
Washington Street.
- The first female rural mail carrier in the United States was Mrs.
Mamie Thomas. She delivered mail by buggy to the area southeast of
Vicksburg in 1914.
- Historic Jefferson College, circa 1802, was the first preparatory
school established in the Mississippi Territory. Located in Washington
the educational institution is also the site where tradition holds Aaron
Burr was arraigned for treason in 1807, beneath what became known as
Burr Oaks.
- William Grant Still of Woodville composed the Afro-American
Symphony.
- Burnita Shelton Mathews of Hazelhurst was the first woman federal
judge in the United States and served in Washington, the District of
Columbia.
- Dr. Emmette F. Izard of Hazelhurst developed the first fibers of
rayon. They became known as the first real synthetics.
- The first nuclear submarine built in the south was produced in
Mississippi.
- In 1871 Liberty became the first town in the United States to erect
a Confederate monument.
- Mississippi was the first state in the nation to have a planned
system of junior colleges.
- Leontyne Price of Laurel performed with the New York Metropolitan
Opera.
- Mississippi is the birthplace of the Order of the Eastern Star.
- The rarest of North American cranes lives in Mississippi in the
grassy savannas of Jackson County. The Mississippi Sandhill Crane stands
about 44 inches tall and has an eight-foot wingspan.
- Guy Bush of Tupelo was one of the most valuable players with the
Chicago Cubs. He was on the 1929 World Series team and Babe Ruth hit his
last home run off a ball pitched by Bush.
- S.B. Sam Vick of Oakland played for the New York Yankees and the
Boston Red Sox. He was the only man ever to pinch hit for the baseball
great Babe Ruth.
- Blazon-Flexible Flyer, Inc. in West Point is proclaimed to make the
very best snow sled in the United States, which became an American
tradition. It is called The Flexible Flyer.
- Friendship Cemetery in Columbus has been called Where Flowers Healed
a Nation. It was April 25, 1866, and the Civil War had been over for a
year when the ladies of Columbus decided to decorate both Confederate
and Union soldiers' graves with beautiful bouquets and garlands of
flowers. As a direct result of this kind gesture, Americans celebrate
what has come to be called Memorial Day each year, an annual observance
of recognition of war dead.
- The largest Bible-binding plant in the nation is Norris Bookbinding
Company in Greenwood.
- After the Civil War, famed hat maker John B. Stetson learned and
practiced his trade at Dunn's Falls near Meridian.
- In 1834 Captain Isaac Ross, whose plantation was in Lorman, freed
his slaves and arranged for them to be sent to Africa, where they
founded the country of Liberia. Recently, representatives of Liberia
visited Lorman and placed a stone at the Captain's gravesite in honor of
his kindness.
- The world's largest cottonwood tree plantation is in Issaquena
County.
- David Harrison of Columbus owns the patent on the Soft Toilet Seat.
Over 1,000,000 are sold every year.
- The first football player on a Wheaties box was Walter Payton of
Columbia.
- Greenwood is the home of Cotton Row, which is the second largest
cotton exchange in the nation and is on the National Register of
Historic Places.
- The oldest game in America is stickball. The Choctaw Indians of
Mississippi played the game. Demonstrations can be seen every July at
the Choctaw Indian Fair in Philadelphia.
- The International Checkers Hall of Fame is in Petal.
- Natchez was settled by the French in 1716 and is the oldest
permanent settlement on the Mississippi River. Natchez once had 500
millionaires, more than any other city except New York City.
- Natchez now has more than 500 buildings that are on the National
Register of Historic Places.
- The Natchez Trace Parkway, named an All American Road by the federal
government, extends from Natchez to just south of Nashville, Tennessee.
The Trace began as an Indian trail more than 8,000 years ago.
- The Vicksburg National Cemetery is the second largest national
cemetery in the country. Arlington National Cemetery is the largest.
- D'Lo was featured in "Life Magazine" for sending proportionally more
men to serve in World War II than any other town of its size. 38 percent
of the men who lived in D'Lo served.
- Mississippi suffered the largest percentage of people who died in
the Civil War of any Confederate State. 78,000 Mississippians entered
the Confederate military. By the end of the war 59,000 were either dead
or wounded.
- Pine Sol was invented in 1929 by Jackson native Harry A. Cole, Sr.
- The world's largest pecan nursery is in Lumberton.
- Greenwood is called the Cotton Capital of the World.
- Belzoni is called the Catfish Capital of the World.
- Vardaman is called the Sweet Potato Capital of the World.
- Greenville is called the Towboat Capital of the World.
- Root beer was invented in Biloxi in 1898 by Edward Adolf Barq, Sr.
- Of Mississippi's 82 counties, Yazoo County is the largest and Alcorn
County is the smallest.
- The Mississippi River is the largest in the United States and is the
nation's chief waterway. Its nickname is Old Man River.
- At Vicksburg, the United States Army Corps of Engineers Waterways
Experiment Station is the world's largest hydraulic research laboratory.
- At Pascagoula the Ingalls Division of Litton Industries uses
leading-edge construction techniques to build the United State Navy's
most sophisticated ships. At the state's eight research centers programs
are under way in acoustics, polymer science, electricity,
microelectronics, hydrodynamics, and oceanography.
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