Winthrop Sargent of Massachusetts, the first governor of the Mississippi Territory, arrived in Natchez in 1798. Courtesy Mississippi Department of Archives and History.
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Map of the Mississippi Territory. Map modeled after J.T. Adams, Atlas of American History, (1943)
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Rolling hogshead of early settler. Some settlers, unable to afford better vehicles, put their worldly goods in barrels, or hogsheads, and pulled them by horses, oxen, or by hand into the new country. Drawing by Charles J. Hiers.
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The Great Migration to the Mississippi Territory, 1798-1819
By Charles Lowery
Americans have always been a people on the move. The first settlers at
Jamestown and Plymouth had barely established a foothold in the early
1600s when they began to push into the continent’s interior. Adventurous
settlers, anxious to improve their fortunes, took up new lands in the
west, confidently expecting them to be better than the lands they left
behind. Westward movement of the colonists continued throughout the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. By the time they declared their independence
from Britain in 1776, Americans had pushed the line of settlement westward
to the Appalachian Mountains.
After the Revolution, the westward movement of Americans intensified.
During the first two decades of the nineteenth century, Americans moved
west in such great numbers that historians refer to that mass movement
as the Great Migration. In 1800 there were only two states
west of the Appalachians Kentucky and Tennessee. In 1820 there
were eight: Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana, Illinois, Indiana, Mississippi,
and Alabama. The population of these eight western states had grown from
386,000 persons in 1800 to 2,216,000 in 1820. Mississippi was a product
of the Great Migration.
The Mississippi Territory
The Mississippi country was opened to settlement in 1798 when Congress
organized the Mississippi Territory. (Until it became a separate territory
in 1817, Alabama was part of Mississippi.) A few settlers already lived
in Mississippi when it became a territory. They were concentrated in two
principal areas the Natchez District and the lower Tombigbee settlements
above and west of Mobile. Approximately 4,500 people, including slaves,
lived at Natchez, considerably more than the combined free and slave population
of 1,250 that inhabited the Tombigbee settlements in 1800. Outside of
these two areas, the territory was populated only by American Indians.
Immigrants coming into the country could expect none of the conveniences
or comforts of the civilized world they left behind. The deprivation and
hardship that awaited the immigrant in the raw, primitive Mississippi
wilderness of 1800 raises a fundamental question: Why would a person choose
to leave the comfort and convenience of an established farm in one of
the older communities for the perilous uncertainty of life in the Mississippi
wilds? The answer to this question, in a word, is Opportunity.
For the average person, economic opportunities had diminished in the
older southern agricultural states as the available supply of fertile
land dwindled. Generations of ruinous agricultural practices had, by 1800,
exhausted the soils of the old plantations. This made the rich virgin
land of Mississippi all the more attractive. The decline in soil fertility
of the upper South had been accompanied by a sharp decrease in demand
for tobacco, the region's staple product.
The Cotton Kingdom
After the Revolution the decline in European demand for southern staple
products, especially tobacco and rice, caused anxiety among southern farmers.
In the 1790s, the invention of the cotton gin, together with a sharp rise
in the foreign demand for southern cotton, created outstanding economic
opportunities for southern farmers and fueled the Great Migration. The
rich soils of the Mississippi Territory, its favorable environment for
cotton culture, and the high prices being paid in England for cotton,
led to the genesis of the Cotton Kingdom. Mississippi, with soil and climate
ideally suited to cotton culture, became the center of southern cotton
production during the first half of the nineteenth century.
Closely linked to the notion that Mississippi offered exceptional economic
opportunities for the immigrant was the widespread belief that the Territory
was an idyllic“ Garden of Eden, an unlimited expanse of fertile
country like the land of promise, flowing with milk and honey.
One Mississippi immigrant described his new home as a wide empty
country with a soil that yields such noble crops that any man is sure
to succeed. Another new settler wrote to family back in Maryland
that the crops [here] are certain..., and abundance spreads the
table of the poor man and contentment smiles on every countenance.
Thousands of Mississippi immigrants moved to the Territory believing
they were taking up residence in a land of unsurpassed opportunity. Hard
work and resourcefulness were sure to be rewarded with prosperity, security,
and happiness. Mississippi was a land where opportunities for immigrants
to achieve economic independence and wealth seemed boundless. For white
Americans, though certainly not for black slaves, Mississippi symbolized
the promise of American life.
Settlers Pour into Territory
During the first phase of the Great Migration, which began in 1798 and
continued until 1819, two distinct waves of immigrants swept into the
Territory. The first wave began when the Territory was organized and subsided
when the War of 1812 began. The second wave developed after the war ended
in 1814. It peaked in the years 1818-1819 and receded after the Panic
of 1819 brought about a general economic depression. In the period from
1798 to 1812, the flow of immigrants was steady but unspectacular, at
least by comparison with the 1815-1819 period. In the first period, settlers
moved primarily into three general areas the Natchez country, the
lower Tombigbee River basin, and the Tennessee Valley.
Of these three regions, Natchez received the largest number of settlers
during the first period of migration. In 1798 Natchez had a total population,
white and black, of 4,500 persons. Two years later the counties of Adams
and Pickering (later renamed Jefferson County), into which Natchez had
been divided in 1799, contained a total population of 4,446 whites and
2,995 slaves. By 1811, a tier of five new counties lying north and south
of Adams county and eastward to the present Alabama state line had been
created. The total population of these counties amounted to 31,306 persons,
14,706 of whom were slaves.
During the same period, the settlements along the lower Tombigbee, in
what became part of Alabama in 1817, grew much more slowly than the Natchez
country. The Mississippi portion of the Territory increased by almost
27,000 persons during the period 1798-1880. The settlements in south Alabama
grew by less than 3,000.
Migration to the Territory slowed during the War of 1812. But after peace
was made in 1814, immigration resumed and surpassed anything that had
ever been witnessed. Thousands of immigrants began to pour into the country.
By horse, by wagon, by boat, and on foot, the flood of humanity swept
into the Territory. One traveler, during nine days of travel in 1816,
counted no fewer than 4,000 immigrants coming into the Territory during
nine days of travel. Residents of the older states, such as Virginia and
the Carolinas, began to fear that the Mississippi Fever would
depopulate their states. Everyone seemed to be moving to Mississippi.
A State is Born
In 1819 an economic panic, followed by a general depression, arrested
the migration. But by that time enough immigrants had settled in the country
to allow both Mississippi and Alabama to come into the Union as new states
Mississippi in 1817 and Alabama in 1819. During the 1810-1820 decade,
Mississippi’s population more than doubled to 42,176 whites and 33,272
slaves. The total population had grown by more than 44,000 persons during
the decade.
The Alabama portion of the Territory grew even more during the ten years,
increasing sixteen fold. In 1810, 6,422 whites and 2,624 slaves lived
in the Alabama section of the Territory. In 1820, the numbers had grown
to 99,198 whites and 47,665 slaves, an increase of 137,817 persons.
The Panic of 1819 ended the most important phase of the Great Migration.
In the 1820s and 1830s immigration into Mississippi would resume. But
Mississippi's future had already been set. The Great Migration had brought
into the state an agricultural people seeking good land for growing cotton.
They found that. In a remarkably short time, they made Mississippi one
of the principal cotton-producing states of the Old South. Cotton would
make Mississippi one of the wealthiest states of the Union by mid-nineteenth
century.
Charles Lowery, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, Mississippi
State University.
Posted November 2000
Further reading:
Abernethy, Thomas P. The South in the New Nation, 1789-1819,
Volume V of A History of the South, Baton Rouge, Louisiana State
University Press, 1961.
Billington, Ray Allen and Ridge, Martin Westward Expansion: A History
of the American Frontier, New York and London, Macmillan Publishers,
1982.
Bettersworth, John K. The Land and the People, Austin, Texas,
Steck-Vaughn Co., 1981.
Skates, John Ray Mississippi: The Study of Our State, Walthall
Publishing Co., 1998.
Southerland Jr., Henry D. and Brown, Jerry E. The Federal Road Through
Georgia, the Creek Nation, and Alabama, 1806-1836, University
of Alabama Press, 1989.
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