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Jackson Purchase

Region in Kentucky


Region in Kentucky

FieldValue
common_nameJackson Purchase
subdivisionCountry
nationUSAUnited States
demonymChickasaw
status_textTerritorial acquisition
government_typeFederal & State
title_leaderU.S. negotiator
title_deputyU.S. negotiator
leader1General Andrew Jackson
year_leader11818
deputy1Ex-governor Isaac Shelby
year_deputy11818
todayWestern Kentucky & West Tennessee
event_startClaimed by U.S.
date_start1792
event_end1818
event1U.S. acquired in Treaty of Tuscaloosa
date_event1October, 1818
event2Annexed to Kentucky & Tennessee
date_event21819
eraWestward expansion of the U.S.
image_mapFile:Map of Kentucky highlighting Purchase.png
image_map_captionCounties comprising the Jackson Purchase region
stat_year12020
stat_area16,202.5
stat_pop1196,876
area_gained1Western Kentucky, West Tennessee,
gained_from1The Chickasaw Nation
area_gained_year11818
StatusFormer disputed territory
DivisionsCounties
DivisionsNames

The Jackson Purchase, also known as the Purchase Region or simply the Purchase, is a region in the U.S. state of Kentucky bounded by the Mississippi River to the west, the Ohio River to the north, and the Tennessee River to the east.

History

Origin

The land was ceded after prolonged negotiations with the Chickasaw Indians in which the United States was represented by Andrew Jackson and Isaac Shelby, while the Chickasaws were represented by their chiefs, head men, and warriors including: Levi Colbert, his brother George Colbert, Chinubby, and Tishomingo. On October 19, 1818, the two sides agreed to the transfer by signing the Treaty of Tuscaloosa. The United States agreed to pay the Chickasaw people $300,000, at the rate of $20,000 annually for 15 years, in return for the right to all Chickasaw land east of the Mississippi River and north of the new state of Mississippi border.

After statehood

Although claimed as part of Kentucky at its statehood in 1792, the land did not come under definitive U.S. control until 1818, when General Andrew Jackson and ex-Kentucky governor Isaac Shelby, representing the United States federal government, purchased it from the Chickasaw nation through several treaties, including the Treaty of Tuscaloosa.

Historically, this region has been considered the most culturally "Southern" of Kentucky: it had an agricultural economy tied to cotton plantations and the use of enslaved labor before the Civil War and was settled by people from Eastern and Central Kentucky, as well as backcountry areas of Tennessee, Virginia, Georgia, and the Carolinas. The Purchase in the years after the war voted as the most staunchly Democratic region in Kentucky, owing to heavily pro-Confederate sentiment in the region. For well over a century, it provided such overwhelming margins for Democratic candidates that Kentucky Democrats routinely called it the "Gibraltar of Democracy." The most widely circulated newspaper and media outlet in the Purchase, The Paducah Sun, was once named the Paducah Sun-Democrat (see WPSD-TV). Due to changing demographics, most counties in the Purchase in the early 21st century have populations that are overwhelmingly white. Many African Americans left the area after the Civil War and during the Great Migration of the 20th century, many of them migrating to cities in the Midwest and West for industrial jobs.

During the Civil War, the Purchase was the area of strongest support for the Confederate cause within Kentucky. On May 29, 1861, a group of Southern sympathizers from Kentucky and Tennessee met at the Graves County Courthouse in Mayfield to discuss the possibility of aligning the Purchase with West Tennessee. Most records of the event were lost, possibly in an 1864 fire that destroyed the courthouse. After the War the region heightened its sense of being "Southern."

In 1907, Fulton County judge Herbert Carr declared in a speech that the Mayfield Convention adopted a resolution for secession, and a historical marker in front of the courthouse also proclaims this as fact. But, the surviving records of the meeting, authored by a Union sympathizer, make no mention of this resolution. Historian Berry Craig states that the convention believed the whole of Kentucky would eventually secede and make unnecessary a separate resolution for the Purchase to break away.

Records do show that the convention adopted resolutions condemning President Abraham Lincoln for "waging a bloody and cruel war" against the South, urging Governor Beriah Magoffin to resist Union forces and praising him for refusing to answer Lincoln's call for soldiers, and condemning the provision of "Lincoln guns" to Union sympathizers in Kentucky. The convention nominated Henry Burnett to represent Kentucky's First District in Congress. The Mayfield Convention was a precursor to the later Russellville Convention, that formed the provisional Confederate government of Kentucky.

Kentucky congressional districts as of 2023

Since the late 20th century, the Purchase has voted for Republicans in national elections while giving higher percentages to candidates of the Democratic Party in state and local elections. This trend is similar to realignment among white conservatives in other parts of the South. , however, the region's delegation in the Kentucky General Assembly included both Republican Party and Democratic Party representatives. For the first time in history, the region elected Republicans for both of its two state senators. The Jackson Purchase is within Kentucky's 1st congressional district.

Geography

The Purchase comprised what is now eight counties, with a combined land area of 3,394.8 square miles (6,202.5 km2), about 6.03% of Kentucky's land area. Its 2010 census population was 196,365 inhabitants, equal to 4.53% of the state's population. Paducah, the largest city and main economic center, has just over 25,000 residents. The region's other two largest cities, Murray and Mayfield, have about 18,000 and 10,000 residents respectively. The main educational institution is Murray State University.

Counties

  • Ballard County
  • Calloway County
  • Carlisle County
  • Fulton County
  • Graves County
  • Hickman County
  • Marshall County
  • McCracken County

Largest municipalities

RankNamePopulationAreaCountyInc.
1Paducah†27,13720.75 mi2McCracken1838
2Murray†17,30711.68 mi2CallowayJanuary 17, 1844
3Mayfield†10,0177.38 mi2Graves1846
4Benton†4,7565.10 mi2Marshall1845
5Calvert City2,51418.51 mi2MarshallMarch 18, 1871
6Hickman†2,3653.58 mi2FultonFebruary 18, 1841
7Fulton2,3572.98 mi2Fulton1872
8Clinton1,2221.62 mi2Hickman1831
9LaCenter8720.60 mi2Ballard
10Bardwell†7140.87 mi2Carlisle1878

Economy

Though chiefly an agricultural economy, tourism is an important industry in the Purchase, focused chiefly on water-related activities at the TVA-created Kentucky Lake. Together with the portion of the Tennessee River north of Kentucky Dam, it forms the eastern border of the Purchase.

Notable people

Notable people from the region include:

  • Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States, 1949–1953
  • Julian Carroll, 54th Governor of Kentucky, 1974–1979
  • Steven Curtis Chapman, Christian music artist
  • Irvin Cobb, humorist and author
  • Jackie DeShannon, singer/songwriter
  • Steve Finley, major league baseball player, 1989–2007
  • Joe Fulks, basketball player
  • Robert H. Grubbs, Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, 2005
  • Lloyd Tilghman, Confederate general
  • Harry Lee Waterfield, lieutenant governor of Kentucky, 1955–1959 and 1963–1967

References

References

  1. (May 18, 1992). "Encyclopedia of Kentucky". University Press of Kentucky.
  2. Rolater, Fred S.. (March 1, 2018). "Treaties".
  3. "Indian Land Cessions in the United States 1784-1894 (United States Serial Set, Number 4015)".
  4. Hoskins, Patricia. (May 9, 2008). "'The Old First is With the South:' The Civil War, Reconstruction, and Memory in the Jackson Purchase Region of Kentucky". Auburn University.
  5. Craig, Berry F.. (Autumn 2001). "The Jackson Purchase Considers Secession: The 1861 Mayfield Convention". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society.
  6. Olive, W. W. "Geology of the Jackson Purchase region." ''Kentucky: Roadlog for the Geological Society of Kentucky field excursion: Kentucky Geological Survey'', Ser 10.11 (1972).
  7. Davis, Darrell Haug (1923). "Geography of the Jackson Purchase". ''Kentucky Geological Society''.
  8. All included in Kleber, John E., ed. (1992). [https://archive.org/details/kentuckyencyclop0000unse/page/n7/mode/2up "The Kentucky Encyclopedia"].
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