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In Mississippi, summer can increase risk of hunger for 3 in 4 kids who rely on in-school meals

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For the third year in a row, Gov. Tate Reeves opted out of a state-federal partnership that would have given summer grocery benefits to roughly 320,000 Mississippi children who rely on free meals during the school year.  

Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia are enrolled in the program, called SUN Bucks, which doles out $120 for each eligible child during the months when school is not in session. By opting not to participate, Reeves turned down about $38 million in federal funding. 

Statewide, nearly three-quarters of students rely on free or reduced-cost school meals for consistent nutrition, according to the Mississippi Department of Education. In the summer, many of those children go hungry. On an average day in the summer of 2023, only 1 in 4 Mississippi children who depend on free or reduced-cost school meals made it to an in-person meal site, according to a national study conducted by the Food Research and Action Center. 

Shelby Wilcher, the governor’s spokesperson, told Mississippi Today that Reeves opted out of SUN Bucks because it was a pandemic-era program that was never meant to be permanent. 

“This program was originally intended to be a COVID-era policy to help bridge the gap during summer months while schools were forced to close,” Wilcher said in an email to Mississippi Today. 

However, Congress established the SUN Bucks program in 2024, long after the pandemic began. A brief released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture calls the program permanent. Wilcher then said that the program is “essentially the permanent continuation of Pandemic EBT.” 

Kelsey Boone, a summer EBT expert with the Food Research and Action Center, said this was an incorrect — albeit common — response. SUN Bucks is based on a series of successful pilot programs dating as far back as 2011. Boone also said she believes any program proven to reduce childhood hunger should be implemented regardless of whether the country is in a pandemic. 

“Summer EBT existed before pandemic EBT existed,” Boone said. “This is not a program that came out of a pandemic-era program. It is its own tested and evaluated program that is known to increase nutrition and decrease food insecurity in families.”

‘Why summer EBT was created’

Mississippi’s statewide summer meals program offers boxed lunches to children at 320 sites. Seventy-one of those locations allow families to pick up meals for the week in one trip. 

The option to pick up a week’s worth of meals helps, but it doesn’t solve the problem of transportation, said Boone, which has become a greater concern amid rising gas prices. It also doesn’t address the difficulty for low-income parents needing to take time off work to go to the sites at a specific time.

The fact that 3 in 4 Mississippi children who rely on school meals don’t make it to these sites highlights significant access problems and is “why summer EBT was created,” Boone said. 

Families can use EBT benefits at locations that are closer to home and shop at convenient times.

In 2024, after Reeves first opted out of SUN Bucks, a Jackson-based nonprofit called Springboard to Opportunities began its own version of the state-federal program. It currently reaches 327 families and 611 children in Jackson. 

A family’s ability to pick out foods they prefer is dignifying and necessary, especially when accounting for cultural differences, said Paheadra Robinson, director of strategic initiatives at Springboard to Opportunities. Robinson believes that choice shouldn’t go away for low-income families.

“I don’t think we should be in the habit of treating people as second-class citizens simply because they have a need that is going unmet, and the government has the ability to support them in meeting that need,” Robinson said. 

An internal survey conducted by Springboard to Opportunities in 2025 showed that summer EBT disbursement resulted in an 83% reduction in hunger among families who participated. 

That’s the case for Jasmine Samuel, a single mother of three boys ages 4, 6 and 12. 

Samuel, a lifelong Jacksonian, works at the Bingo Depot in South Jackson, and she said she struggles to make ends meet during summer. During the school year, her children rely on free school meals. When school lets out, Samuel picks up extra food and childcare costs without additional income. 

Her boys are growing fast and are always asking for snacks, often immediately after leaving the table from lunch or dinner. 

“I’m like, ‘I thought I had at least another 45 minutes!’” she laughed. 

Samuel remembers painful experiences in her past when her children were hungry, and she knew it would be difficult to make the food in her pantry last until the next paycheck. She said she has had to come up with creative ways to keep their mind off hunger, such as making popcorn and getting them excited about watching a movie.

Before she began receiving summer EBT benefits, buying groceries was an anxiety-inducing ordeal. She would count her last dollars at the register and was often forced to put back items she could not afford as other shoppers standing in the checkout line rolled their eyes.

“I don’t like to be embarrassed at the counter … I dreaded it sometimes,” Samuel said. “I feel like now I can go grocery shopping.”

Samuel is no stranger to hard work. The youngest of four children, she began working at a grocery store at 17 to help her mother cover household expenses. She delayed going to college, and while it’s been hard to go back, she has not given up hope. In 2024, she completed partial coursework to become a pharmacist. 

As a parent, Samuel said she tries to balance teaching her kids the value of hard work and protecting them from feeling stigmatized by poverty. 

“It just takes a toll on you,” Samuel said. 

John Jennings’s new exhibition explores the worlds he built — and the Mississippi that shaped them

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Past, present, and future come together at the Mississippi Arts + Entertainment Experience (The MAX), an arts and cultural center in downtown Meridian that honors Mississippi’s creative icons, showcases working artists, and nurtures the next generation.

A gateway to arts and culture across the state, The MAX features a museum celebrating Mississippi’s creative legacy, a two-story hall of fame showcasing the state’s groundbreaking artists, and dynamic studio and performance spaces where people of all ages explore their creative passions.

Now on view at The MAX, John Jennings: Build Your World, is an immersive new experience from one of the most innovative storytellers working at the intersection of comics, speculative fiction, and Afrofuturism.

Jennings fell in love with the imagined worlds in the Marvel comic books his mother gave him as a young boy in Flora, Mississippi. Filled with superheroes who helped people and fought against oppression and evil, those comics inspired Jennings to build his own worlds and “create comics that make people feel the way I felt as a kid… see[ing] what I saw when I opened a Marvel comic book.”

Now a New York Times bestselling, award-winning graphic novelist and a professor of media and cultural studies at the University of California at Riverside, Jennings has returned home for an exhibition that explores his extraordinary visual storytelling and world-building through four creative projects.

In Silver Surfer: Ghost Light (Marvel Comics), Jennings reinvents a forgotten Black character from the pages of the Marvel comic books he grew up reading, transforming Al B. Harper from a plot device to a cosmic guardian. The complex process of working with a behemoth like Marvel and its team of creatives is given a comprehensive overview, alongside art of the new Marvel hero Jennings created.

Two dozen original drawings from Kindred: A Graphic Novel Adaptation (Abrams ComicArts) show how Jennings builds on Octavia Butler’s seminal work of Black science fiction to create new worlds, using different sketch styles and color schemes to differentiate California in the 1970s from antebellum Maryland in the early 1800s.

Blue Hand Mojo: Hard Times Road (Rosarium Publishing), a solo project conceived, written, drawn, and colored by Jennings, blends history with folklore and magic in a gritty graphic novel set in 1930s Chicago. Original watercolor artworks show how Jennings richly layers new worlds using Mississippi culture.

Another solo project, Kenny Dreadful and the Hainted Hoodie,presents an original Southern Gothic tale that blends horror, folklore, and coming-of-age themes through the lens of a magical hoodie haunted by ancestral spirits. Jennings has complete control over every aspect of Kenny’s story, with early concept art alongside annotated sketches, showing influences from Mississippi folklore, African spirituality, and horror traditions.

Imagining futures is the central theme of Build Your World. Each project highlights Jennings’s unique ability to blend speculative fiction with Southern Gothic sensibilities. Soundscapes and interactive technology paired with sketches, storyboards, and finished art, allow visitors to explore how he has built entire worlds, bringing Black characters to the fore and infusing each alternative reality with the culture that shaped him.

For Jennings, “You can’t separate my work from Mississippi. It’s in every ghost and every future I imagine.”

Jennings returned home last fall as part of a site visit to plan the exhibition, and again in June for the opening of Build Your World. During that initial trip, Jennings traveled to the Delta, with stops at Graball Landing near Glendora, believed to be where Emmett Till’s body was brought from the Little Tallahatchie River; Dockery Plantation, home to blues legends like Charley Patton, Robert Johnson, Howlin’ Wolf, “Pops” Staples, and David “Honeyboy” Edwards; and the famed crossroads from the Robert Johnson blues mythology in Blue Hand Mojo.

These places hold particular significance for Jennings, who is working on a graphic novel about Till and considers the blues a major influence on his work—a connection he traces back to spending time at a juke joint “too young,” he once admitted.

On view through March 27, 2027, Jennings has several return trips planned during the exhibition’s run, including an artist residency this fall where he will travel the state to meet with students and discuss his work, followed by a visit to the Mississippi Book Festival in Jackson.

Related programming, including workshops on creating handmade zines, making your own monsters, and receiving hands-on guidance from Jackson Comics artists, will be offered at The MAX through next spring.

China resumes US soybean purchases under trade deal with Trump, but future for farmers remains ‘daunting’ 

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Crops are in the ground, the weather is cooperating, soybean prices are up slightly from 2025, and China — the biggest buyer of U.S. soybean exports — is once again placing orders after a trade agreement ended the country’s purchasing freeze last fall.

But while morale is higher among soybean farmers as the 2026 growing season gets underway, the cost to plant crops remains high, and U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows there is still a long way to go before China’s purchases reach pre-trade war levels.

“There have been some positive movements in trade relations with China, specifically with soybeans, that have caused markets to improve over last year,” said Stefan Maupin, executive director of the Tennessee Soybean Promotion Council. “However, we are definitely not where we were in years past. For most farmers out there, the big question in front of them is, will it get back?”

Soybeans are a major agricultural product nationwide, covering about 10% of all U.S. farmland. Roughly 40% of U.S. soybeans are exported, and in recent years, around half of exported beans went to China. 

Soybeans are the second-largest agricultural product in Mississippi behind chickens. Valued at around $1.6 billion a year, almost all of the state’s soybeans are destined for international markets. The state ranked 11th in U.S. soybean production in 2025, producing 97 million bushels on 1.7 million acres, according to the Mississippi State University Extension Service and USDA.

Will Maples, an agricultural economist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, said some markets have shown modest improvement this winter, including a 27% increase in soybean planting projections.

“We have seen a decent rally in soybean and cotton prices this winter. Margins are still expected to be tight, but things are slightly better,” Maples said in an April 8 Extension Service report. “Last year, tariff uncertainty weighed on soybean prices and contributed to reduced acreage in Mississippi. This winter, soybean prices have strengthened, making them more competitive relative to other crops.”

READ: Mississippi soybean farmers end dour year, hope for profitable ’26

China stopped purchasing U.S. soybeans in 2025 during tariff negotiations with the Trump administration, leaning instead on soybeans from South American trade partners. China ultimately agreed to purchase 12 million metric tons of soybeans in 2025 and at least 25 million metric tons each year through 2028.

USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden said he is confident that China will meet those numbers. 

“They have the entire marketing period to meet the 25 million metric ton commitment for this year,” Vaden told Brownfield, an agriculture-focused news outlet.

The current marketing period runs from September 2025 to September 2026.

Exports to China from January through March were up 57% compared to last year, USDA data shows. That’s explained by an increase in sales to China during the off-season in response to the trade agreement, said Andrew Muhammad, a professor of agricultural and resource economics at the University of Tennessee. 

In other words, China is now buying the soybeans that U.S. producers stored in fall 2025, when China halted its usual buys. Typically, China purchases most of its American soybeans in the fall, turning instead to Brazil and Argentina for soybeans during the South American harvest season in the spring. 

“But if we look at the accumulated total for the actual marketing year, going back to September, exports to China are still lagging what we did in years past,” Muhammad said.

From the start of September through March, China accounted for less than 30% of U.S. soybean exports — about half of their volume in previous years.

“We won’t really know until the end of this year whether or not China is able to keep up with these commitments,” Muhammad said.

Asked about China’s total soybean purchases lagging behind previous years, a USDA spokesperson stated that President Donald Trump “has made clear he will hold China to its commitments.”

“President Trump executed another historic deal with China after the previous administration refused to hold them accountable to its future purchase of American soybeans, sorghum, beef, and other commodities,” the spokesperson stated.

Long-term outlook still ‘daunting’

“The farmers and everybody with whom they do business feel better about that positive movement in the negotiations, but they’re not naive,” Maupin said of Tennessee soybean farmers. “They know … there is that potential that (China) will not fully buy what they have committed to buying.”

What really matters is whether commodity traders believe that China will fulfill those commitments, Maupin said. Market prices are currently stronger this year, but “the jury is still out on that.”

And despite improved prices compared to 2025, University of Tennessee data predicts that the price of soybeans at average yields still won’t be high enough for farmers to break even. 

“(Farmers) are now in their third year of the question, how much money will they lose on this crop?” Maupin said. 

The University of Tennessee estimated total losses of nearly $110 million for soybean farmers last year, on top of multimillion-dollar losses in 2024.

Those who are still farming this year likely made “major adjustments” to try to lower their expenses and input costs as much as possible to weather the financial hardships of the last two years, Maupin said, but trying to just break even is not sustainable, particularly when many farmers depend on financing tied to their property and equipment.

Government stockpiles and growing global markets

North Dakota farmer Tyler Stafslien stands in front of storage silos holding grain and soybeans. The tariff war with China forced Stafslien to store more of his soybeans in the 2025 harvest season, Ryder, North Dakota, Nov. 14, 2025. Credit: Gabrielle Nelson/Buffalo’s Fire

Muhammad said this type of trade deal also means governments are involved in agricultural markets.

“When you say to China, ‘We need you to buy so many soybeans,’ the only reason they could pull that off is because we’re not talking about capitalistic market purchases, we’re just talking about government stockpiling,” Muhammad said.

While the trade deal may appeal to U.S. producers, “once tensions die down, they’ll just start using what they’ve stockpiled. It almost comes across as a Band-Aid for a much more serious problem … the trade tensions between the U.S. and China,” he said.

Vaden said Trump sets targets in his trade deals, making outcomes measurable. The USDA did not respond to questions about the long-term effectiveness of trade targets.

Maupin said China has been known to stockpile goods and then cease purchasing or put excess goods back out on the world market. 

It’s this market instability that encourages farmers to develop relationships with other countries and find domestic uses for soybeans, Maupin said. Commodity farmers pay a percentage of the sale price of their products — called “checkoff dollars” — toward research and new market development.

During a 2025 Mississippi agriculture legislative committee meeting, one idea that was floated was building a processing plant in the state to create more demand and expand capabilities.

Vaden said that while China is an “important market” for the U.S., Canada and Mexico buy more U.S. agricultural products overall. 

“We’re not just focused on China,” he said. “We’re focused on our larger trading partners here in North America, as well as the many other markets that we need to open, because ultimately this is a game of addition. If we focus too much on any one country, we’re not keeping our eye on the overall ball, which is increasing sales worldwide.”

Maupin said representatives from the European Union visited Tennessee last growing season to see if the state’s soybean production meets their sustainability goals. Their feedback was positive, Maupin said. 

The U.S. is also looking to develop relationships with nations that could use soybean meal to feed livestock, or as a protein source for human consumption. 

The country has exported more soybeans to Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan and Japan since September, partially offsetting the decrease in sales to China, Muhammad said. 

“At the end of the day, worldwide, the demand for soybeans as an ingredient, mostly in animal feed, remains high, whether it’s in China or Mexico, the EU, or Egypt,” Maupin said.

Mississippi Today Economic Development Reporter Katherine Lin contributed to this report.

This story is a product of the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri in partnership with Report for America, with major funding from the Walton Family Foundation. 

Civil rights veteran the Rev. Ed King, who helped found the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, has died

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The Rev. Ed King, a white minister who challenged Mississippi’s dangerously segregated society in the 1960s and was one of the last living founders of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, died Saturday in Jackson on the same day the nation celebrated its 250th birthday of freedom. He was 89.

“He truly heard Jesus’ commands for us: loving your neighbor, meting out justice, taking care of the least of these and loving your enemy,” recalled former Assistant Secretary of State Constance Slaughter-Harvey.

At the time she met King in 1964, she was a sophomore at Tougaloo College, a private historically Black college in Jackson, where he served as chaplain and a sponsor for civil rights meetings. He supported her and the movement over and over, she said.

On May 28, 1963, King assisted Tougaloo students who engaged in a peaceful sit-in to integrate the Woolworth’s lunch counter in downtown Jackson. A white mob taunted and attacked the group, dumping ketchup, mustard, sugar and salt on them them and brutally beating and kicking student Memphis Norman until he passed out. Among the students engaged in the sit-in were Anne Moody, who later wrote the memoir “Coming of Age in Mississippi,” and Joan Trumpauer, now known as Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, the second white student in the 1900s to attend Tougaloo.

Trumpauer Mulholland said Sunday of King: “He was an inspiration, always encouraging, always welcoming. Everybody was always going by his house.”

King seemed like the least likely person to get involved in the Civil Rights Movement. His great-grandfather fought with Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and generations of his remained committed to segregation

But as he neared adolescence, he began to realize things needed to change.

“By the time I was 10 or 12 in Vicksburg, I had realized that America had not figured out yet how to deal with our history of slavery and continuing racism,” he said in a 2018 interview with a University of Mississippi Medical Center publication.

He had previously attended Millsaps College. There, he began to take part in meetings at Tougaloo College and met Mississippi NAACP leader Medgar Evers, who encouraged him.

After studying in Boston, King, encouraged by Evers, returned to Mississippi and began working at Tougaloo, which served as a safe haven for activists. He helped organize sit-in protests and was repeatedly jailed for his activism. 

Freedom Vote poster in 1963 promotes Aaron Henry for Mississippi governor and the Rev. Ed King for lieutenant governor. Credit: Mississippi Department of Archives and History

In 1963, he was a candidate in the Freedom Vote, a mock election that showed Black Mississippians wanted to take part in the democratic process even as they still faced poll taxes and violence that prevented most of them from becoming registered voters. More than 83,000 Black Mississippians cast ballots in that mock election.

Aaron Henry, a Black pharmacist from Clarksdale, was the candidate for governor; King was the candidate for lieutenant governor.

The interracial ticket drew national attention.

“Ed King really provided a lot of the political know-how taught by the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party,” said Leslie Burl McLemore, who served on the party’s first executive committee with King.

In 1964, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party activists including King, Henry and Fannie Lou Hamer challenged Mississippi’s all-white delegation to the Democratic National Convention. Although they lost, their fight helped remake the Democratic Party.

Mississippi’s segregationist leaders liked to claim that the Civil Rights Movement was led by “outside agitators,” but the involvement of Mississippi natives such as King, Hamer and Hollis Watkins demonstrated that claim was a lie, said McLemore, a retired Jackson State University political scientist who served on the Jackson City Council from 1999 to 2009.

Getting involved in the movement in those days meant “you were putting your life on the line every day,” he said. “You and your family could be harassed. You could lose your job. Lots of people lost jobs because of their involvement in the movement.”

In hopes of waking up Christians in the early 1960s, King challenged racial segregation in churches. He and Evers drove Tougaloo students to all-white churches. In most cases, the churches turned them away.

“Confronting segregation on Sunday morning was one of the more radical things that Ed King was involved in that people don’t know about,” said Millsaps history professor Stephanie Rolph, author of “Resisting Equality: The Citizens’ Council, 1954-1989.”

On the same night that President John F. Kennedy spoke about the grandsons of slaves still not being free, King’s friend, Evers, was killed by an assassin’s bullet.

Six days later, King and Tougaloo professor John Salter were injured in a car crash that shattered King’s jaw and tore up the right side of his face. He required numerous surgeries over the next dozen years.

King suffered severe injuries again in a second collision in Canton. Activists believed both crashes were attempts to kill movement leaders.

The Rev. Ed King, a former chaplain at Tougaloo College, sits in Woodworth Chapel on the campus in Jackson, Miss., on Saturday, June 25, 2016. King, who participated in the March Against Fear in 1966, was a chaplain at the historically Black private college that was a safe haven for civil rights activists. He was also active in the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, which challenged the state’s 1960s white establishment. King says people still need to continue challenging injustice. “You have to be able to say, ‘As an American, I have a right to ask these questions, to say that things aren’t perfect,’” King says. “We’re moving into a mood of despair now, and with despair you look for scapegoats to blame.” Credit: AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

Later on, King took a step back from that leadership, Rolph said. “He understood when it was right to let someone else lead.”

Instead, he served as an advocate and ally to the rising leaders in the movement, she said.

Throughout his life, King “sacrificed himself for the good of the cause,” Slaughter-Harvey said, “and that cause was justice and service and love.”

King was one of many plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in 1977 charging the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission with illegal surveillance of citizens. The state-funded agency operated from 1956 to 1977, spying on civil rights activists and feeding information to law enforcement officers. In 1994, a federal judge established a procedure to release the commission files. An appeals court upheld that decision two years later, and King appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that every person named in the files should have access to the documents before any public release. The high court declined to hear King’s appeal, and the files were later opened to the public.

King later worked for the University of Medical Center and co-wrote the 2014 book “Ed King’s Mississippi: Behind the Scenes of Freedom Summer” for University Press of Mississippi, which featured dozens of his never-before-published photos from the movement in Mississippi.

The book included an excerpt from a speech King gave at the University of Virginia in 2002, where he said an important part of the Civil Rights Movement was “to get the oppressed people to change their identity of themselves. They had to stand up and claim their freedom and claim their dignity.”

King said this was done by reminding people that they are children of God.

“We also had to … let America, let the rest of the nation, know that Black people weren’t just waiting to be saved by Washington, that they were standing up and demanding,” he said in the speech. “Now, that shocked America.”

Reena Evers-Everette, executive director of the Medgar & Myrlie Evers Institute, said King remained faithful to his friends and the movement. “He was such a loyal confidant and strategist with my father as well as a family friend. He continued fighting for civil rights for all of his life.”

CORRECTION 7/5/26: This story has been updated to clarify Joan Trumpauer Mulholland‘s status in Tougaloo College’s history.

America’s civil service protections were born from ‘Death by Lightning’ and put in jeopardy by Supreme Court

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An epilogue should be added to the recently released streaming miniseries “Death by Lightning” explaining how this past week’s U.S. Supreme Court decision gutted the governmental reform that was at the heart of the historical drama – the inception of American civil service protections.

“Death by Lightning” tells the story of James Garfield and his unlikely successful candidacy to become the nation’s 20th president in 1880.

Garfield, a preacher, attorney and Ohio congressman, campaigned on civil service protections and the end of the so-called “spoils system” where people were awarded governmental jobs as political favors. He also campaigned on ensuring that Black Americans who were recently freed from slavery were afforded the right to vote and other civil rights, in addition to access to educational opportunities. 

Garfield was tragically shot and killed in his first year in office by Charles J. Guiteau,  a mentally unstable man whose disturbingly persistent efforts to be rewarded as part of that spoils system were rejected by Garfield and his staff.

While Garfield’s tenure was one of the shortest in American history and thus his accomplishments were limited, his death did help to spur the nation’s first civil service reforms that ultimately provided some protections for government employees and based their hiring and employment on a merit system instead of the spoils system that had led to corruption throughout the history of the country.

The inception of the civil service system was viewed at the time as a reform furthering the still novel idea of American democracy.

This past week, the Supreme Court in a 6-3 decision in Trump v. Slaughter allowed President Donald Trump  to fire commissioners of various governmental commissions without cause. Many of the commissions were established by Congress and approved by past presidents to have both Democratic and Republican members regardless of who the president was. The intent was to remove politics, as well as the spoils system,  from governmental decisions when possible. Trump fired the Democratic members, and the Supreme Court ruled he had that authority.

The decision was viewed by many as a significant weakening of the United States civil service system that can trace its infancy to Garfield’s assassination.

Trump v. Slaughter came in conjunction with other recent rulings by the Supreme Court diminishing civil service protection. The nation’s highest court, for instance, recently rubber stamped the firing of a large number of employees of the Department of Education without cause.

The decision by the Supreme Court is the latest in their efforts to significantly limit the impact of landmark legislation that was viewed as important in the nation’s history and in the ongoing efforts to achieve a more just society.

Earlier this year, the Court gutted the Voting Rights Act that protected the voting strength of Black Americans and other minorities.

People died in furtherance of civil rights for Black people leading up to the passage of the Voting Rights Act. And, as depicted in “Death by Lightning,” a president was killed leading up to the passage of laws to create civil service protections in the 1880s.

In “Death by Lightning,” taking a bit of dramatic license, the former first lady, Lucreta Garfield, secretly visited  Guiteau in prison soon after her husband’s death. In a dramatic scene she said that she lied to her husband on his death bed by telling him he would be remembered as a great president.

In reality, she said, she knew what could have been a great president would be a historical footnote because of his short tenure caused by Guiteau’s bullet. But she goes on to deliver the ultimate blow to the egotistical Guiteau, who had illusions of grandeur, by telling him he would be even less of a footnote.

Perhaps, she was wrong.

Thanks to the 2026 version of the United State Supreme Court, it could be argued the legacy of Charles Guiteau lives.

This summer’s ‘dead zone’ in the Gulf will be larger than average, but task force claims progress is being made 

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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration expects a so-called “dead zone” roughly the size of New Jersey to develop in the Gulf of Mexico this summer.

Also known as a hypoxic zone, a reference to the low-oxygen conditions that kill fish and marine life, this year’s measurement is expected to cover more than 7,000 square miles.  Although that forecast falls below the record size of nearly 8,800 square miles in 2017, it is higher than the four-decade average of just over 5,200 square miles.

“The trend has been one of growth mostly since they started measuring it,” said Doug Daigle, a research associate at Louisiana State University and coordinator of the Louisiana Hypoxia Working Group of researchers, government agencies and other stakeholders focused on the issue.

As a researcher with years of experience working on the Gulf’s dead zone, Daigle said it’s important to focus on the overall goal to reduce the size of the dead zone. 

“We don’t get too hung up on any particular year because what we’re interested in is affecting the trend over time,” Daigle said.

That’s a goal shared by the Environmental Protection Agency’s Mississippi River/Gulf of America Hypoxia Task Force, a cooperative of federal, state and tribal agencies. Currently, the group is working to shrink the deadzone to 1,900 square miles — or 5,000 square kilometers — by 2035.  

The annual dead zone forms due to an overabundance of nutrient pollution, such as nitrates and phosphorus, that is caused primarily by agricultural industries and urban areas throughout the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers. This excess in nutrients then causes algae to overgrow, die, decompose and then deplete oxygen in the surrounding waters. 

With little to no oxygen, fish populations in the Gulf sharply decline, along with those of shellfish, coral and aquatic plants. As a result, both the seafood and tourism industries have suffered critical losses.

The Mississippi River meets the Gulf of Mexico. For 2026, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasts that nutrient pollution from the river will create a low-oxygen deadzone covering more than 7,000 square miles in the Gulf. Credit: La’Shance Perry/The Lens. Aerial support provided by SouthWings

“So it not only has ecological and environmental impacts, it has economic impacts as well,” said Kelly McGinnis, executive director of One Mississippi, a national nonprofit that works on conserving and restoring the river.

But along with the levels of discharge, Daigle said each year’s measurements can be affected by climate conditions such as drought, flooding or rainfall. If the forecast is high, he said that usually means there’s been rain or flooding upstream.

“And then when you have the dry periods, it’s less, but a lot of those nutrients will get flushed out later,” Daigle said.

While changing weather can affect the annual results, the work toward reducing the size of the dead zone appears to be progressing, Mike Naig, the secretary of agriculture for Iowa and co-chair of the Mississippi River/Gulf of America Hypoxia Task Force, said in a mid-June press release. The task force  announced then that it had achieved its interim goal of reducing pollution from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers into the Gulf by 20%. 

According to the group, that’s likely a result of states in the basin — such as Missouri, Illinois and Wisconsin — implementing their own nutrient reduction programs. 

“State-driven, science-based strategies and local partnerships are critical to continue scaling up conservation practices, accelerating implementation and delivering measurable results,” said Naig in the press release.

Each year, NOAA uses multiple models and datasets, such as the U.S. Geological Survey’s, to track nutrient levels, which help to inform its hypoxia forecast model and identify sources. In turn, the members of the task force use the data to support their states’ nutrient reduction strategies and the overall goal for the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. Meanwhile, researchers have also conducted a cruise survey for over four decades to compare dead zone predictions in the Gulf.

The Gulf of Mexico dead zone and Mississippi River Delta are seen by satellite south of Louisiana in 2017. Credit: National Ocean Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Despite the many years of collaborative efforts, Daigle does not expect the dead zone to disappear completely. Yet, he is concerned about the future of hypoxia reduction programs both in the Mississippi River and in the Gulf downstream. 

“What a lot of folks don’t realize is that it’s never really gotten the resources adequate to reverse the trend,” he said.

As such, Daigle’s Louisiana Hypoxia Working Group — along with 62 other organizations in agriculture and conservation — signed a letter last December to ask Congress to support their efforts. Previously, lawmakers authorized funding for fiscal years 2022 through 2026 for the EPA to implement its hypoxia program in the Gulf. Without future funding secured, advocates like McGinnis said the reduction goal for 2035 seems “highly unattainable.”

“I want the federal government to be successful in reaching that goal,” she said, “but it is hard to see the pathways that will lead to it.”

This story is a product of the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri in partnership with Report for America, with major funding from the Walton Family Foundation.

Sweet as Kickapoo Honey: Civil engineer finds harmony as a beekeeper 

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story.

CLINTON – Mauricka McKenzie didn’t grow up imagining he’d become a beekeeper one day.

By profession, he is a civil engineer and president of Cornerstone Engineering, LLC, in Clinton.

“I love it so much out here,” Mauricka McKenzie said about his honey bees at Kickapoo Honey on Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. “Sometimes, I just come out here, sit and talk to my bees.” Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

His path to beekeeping began in one of those subtle, unexpected ways: as a casual, out-of-the-blue suggestion from a friend after McKenzie purchased acreage along Kickapoo Road in rural Clinton that was once a pecan orchard. 

“I thought, ‘I’ll rejuvenate this pecan farm.’ Sell pecans,’” McKenzie said. “But Mother Nature had other ideas. Those trees just weren’t producing like I knew they could. One day, a friend of mine said, ’Get you some honey bees.’” 

For McKenzie, that planted a seed. 

“I liked the idea of it,” said McKenzie. “Honey bees.” 

Even now, the thought of those first inklings makes him smile. And Kickapoo Honey was born.

“So I started doing the research. I learned about types of honey bees, cross-pollination, which flowers attract bees and the honey they produce. My bees are Italian honey bees. They’re gentle and famously industrious,” he explained. “They’re known for their calm temperament and steady honey production. Ideal for Mississippi’s long, warm seasons.”

Kickapoo Honey worker bees deconstruct a damaged queen cell containing new queen larvae, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

“My first year, I started with two nucs, consisting of a queen and ten thousand bees,” McKenzie said. “My bees did pretty good and I realized how much I loved being out here. They fascinate me and I admit, I’ve become a bit obsessed. I also planted a couple of acres of wildflowers and white clover.”

Nucs, pronounced “nukes,” is short for nucleus colonies of bees. They are “starter” beehives and are the most popular way for people to begin their journey into beekeeping. Italian honey bees, like McKenzie’s, have been prized in American apiaries since the 1850s.

By year two, McKenzie had grown his apiary, a bee yard, to six nucs and had successfully caught two swarms, producing 10-15 gallons of honey. However, disaster struck in his third year. Mites decimated nearly half his hives. 

“That was unexpected and kind of scary, and I knew I had to do more research,” he said. “I learned a lot online and from other beekeepers like Mack Busby in Soso. He’s been a beekeeper for ages. I treated my bees, saving those the mites hadn’t reached.” 

Beekeepers treat their bees against mites using miticides – organic acids such as formic acid and oxalic acid, or synthetic chemicals used in vaporizers. A popular, nontoxic method is dusting bees with powdered sugar. Bees groom themselves and other bees. Powdered sugar compels bees to groom, which rids them of mites before the mites can attach.

An Italian honey bee from Kickapoo Honey gathers pollen and nectar from a white clover blossom, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Kickapoo Honey’s spring honey is produced by honey bees gathering pollen and nectar from white clover. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

Out at his farm, McKenzie spotted a swarm trap he’d placed in a nearby tree, covered in hundreds of honey bees. He explained how he traps wild bees or bees that have swarmed from his own hives by tricking them.

“See all these bees on the outside of the trap? That tells me the box is full and it’s time to move these bees to a hive,” he said. “For the trap, what I do is soak a cotton ball with lemongrass oil. It smells similar to a queen bee’s pheromone. A scout bee picks up the scent and alerts other bees to my box.”

He donned a beekeeper’s suit and ignited the contents of his smoker before heading to the hives. McKenzie took a moment to survey his hives, watching his honey bees zip to and fro to gather pollen and nectar before returning to the hives. 

“The smoke doesn’t hurt them,” McKenzie said. “It just blocks their pheromone signals to attack. They’ll tell you what they need if you pay attention.”

Kickapoo Honey’s fall honey, left, and spring honey from white clover are shown Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

He checked on a frame covered in bees and honey.

“Sometimes, I come out here and just sit and talk with them. It’s calming listening to them, their rhythmic hum. And their honey boosts immune systems by providing antioxidants. You know, a lot can be learned from that hive mentality. It teaches how to work together for a common goal, for the good of the family.”

This bear of a man doused his smoker, and sat on a bucket watching as his tiny honey bees covered his outstretched, gloved hand. 

“You see, they don’t panic. They just work,” McKenzie beamed. “They love the white clover I planted out here, and they make the most delicious raw spring honey. My busy li’l bees turn fall wildflowers into a darker, richer honey, but the spring honey is my favorite and really popular with customers.” 

This is the honey that is building Kickapoo Honey’s reputation: clean, light and unmistakably tied to the land.

Contact Kickapoo Honey: 600 E. Northside Drive, Clinton. The honey store is open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Before you go, call to be certain someone is at the store: 601-946-4450.

“All these bees on the outside of my bait box tells me the box is full and it’s time to relocate these bees to a hive,” said Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie shares bee ambrosia or bee bread, a mixture of pollen, honey and bee digestive enzymes with a worker bee, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie discovers multiple queen cells, (the tan, nut-like structures), in one of his hives. The queen cells are a sign that the current queen is old and not producing as many eggs as she once did. The yellow substance on the tool is bee ambrosia or bee bread, a mixture of pollen, honey and bee digestive enzymes. It is used to feed larvae and young worker bees, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
A curious drone bee, right, noses around a damaged queen cell containing new queen larvae, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
A cotton ball soaked with lemongrass essential oil attracted these wild honey bees to a swarm trap or bait box. The scented oil mimics pheromones released by scout bees that will attract the rest of the colony to the trap location, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey worker bee gathers pollen from a white clover blossom, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Kickapoo Honey’s spring honey is produced by honey bees gathering pollen and nectar from white clover. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie uses a smoker at one of his hives effectively masking the warning signals from guard bees to attack a perceived threat to the hive, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
A smoker is used to mask warning signals from guard bees to attack a perceived threat to the hive, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie pulls a frame from a hive to check on his bees, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Italian honey bees tend to cells in their hive at Kickapoo Honey, Friday, June 12 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie shows a frame of honey bees pulled from one of his bee hives, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today
Kickapoo Honey owner Mauricka McKenzie scrapes away old honeycomb because over time, beeswax degrades and exposes the hive to toxins and diseases, Friday, June 12, 2026, in Clinton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

Some paid the ultimate price to enact voting rights. Their survivors see America turning backward

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story.

WASHINGTON — Holiday gatherings and major life events have come with an empty seat. Certain dates on the calendar meant time at a cemetery, standing before granite stones.

They are a relatively small group of people, scattered across different states, but they share a common bond that stretches back decades: Each had a family member die violently in the struggle for voting and civil rights, victims on a long and difficult path marked by blood that ended when the country seemed to mature into the nation of its creed.

But 61 years later, and as the country marks its 250th anniversary, those sacrifices are in question. In a series of decisions over the past dozen years, including one in April, the Supreme Court has effectively dismantled the law that their family members died to see enacted, the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

“My mother’s blood is on that bill. We were always proud of that, and now it’s gone,” said Anthony Liuzzo, whose mother, Viola Liuzzo, died on an Alabama highway between Selma and Montgomery while driving marchers in 1965.

Critics of the law argue that times have changed, a point Chief Justice John Roberts made in a 2013 decision that was the first major step in rolling back the law.

Survivors of lost loved ones disagree, pointing to the speed with which Republican-led state legislatureseliminated majority-Black congressional districts after the court’s April ruling, which severely weakened a section of the law that had protected voting rights for minority communities. They feel anger and sadness that a milestone political victory decades ago has been reversed, but they are committed to keep fighting.

A church bombing and a chunk of concrete

Lisa McNair was born Sept. 19, 1964. Her older sister, Denise, died in the Sept 15, 1963, bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. The church had been a central organizing point for civil rights protest.

The explosion killed Denise McNair, 11, Addie Mae Collins, 14, Carole Robertson, 14, and Cynthia Morris Wesley, 14. Nearly two dozen others were injured. Three Klansmen were convicted years later.

Lisa McNair arranges flowers on the grave of her late sister, Carol Denise McNair, Monday, June 1, 2026, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) Credit: AP Photo/Mike Stewart

One of Lisa McNair’s early memories of her sister was of the box that their grandmother kept from the funeral home. It included Denise McNair’s shoes, a purse and a rock-sized piece of concrete that had been embedded in her skull.

The crime brought the civil rights struggle onto the national stage and outraged Democratic President John F. Kennedy.

The times were tumultuous, McNair said, but it seemed the nation was heading in the right direction. Most of her life, “I’ve seen advances” on television, in commercials, with interracial marriages, civil rights and voting rights, “a plethora of rights that we got over the greater part of my lifetime.” But that has changed, she said.

McNair, 61, said she is “physically sick” about the Supreme Court decision and subsequent actions by lower courts and legislatures.

“I am constantly working to pray my way through it, so I can get up and go to work in the morning and do what I need to do. But I just want to ask every white person I see, What more do you want?” she said. “Why do you hate us so?”

They left for Freedom Summer and never came home

On Father’s Day 1964, civil rights workers Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner were ambushed and killed in Philadelphia, Miss. Their murders gripped the nation and helped lead to the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964. Credit: FBI archives

Michael Schwerner, known as Mickey, came from a family in which human rights activism and challenging social norms were expected. He was in Mississippi in 1964 as part of Freedom Summer when he, Andrew Goodman and James Chaney vanished one day in June while investigating a bombing at a Black church.

Their bodies were found weeks later, buried in an earthen dam in a rural area of Neshoba County. Schwerner, 24, and Goodman, 20, were white; Chaney, 21, was Black.

Stephen Schwerner, who died earlier this year and was a social activist in his own right, told The Associated Press in a 2023 interview that as soon as the family heard his younger brother and the other men were missing, they knew they were dead.

“Our family was very out front in the media that the only reason there was international attention was two of the young men were white,” said Stephen’s daughter, Cassie Schwerner. “Had all three of those young men been Black, they would have ended up absent from our history and our narrative.”

Cassie Schwerner, executive director of Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility, said her family has followed voting rights through their ups and downs. That includes the 2013 Supreme Court decision that allowed states and counties with a history of discriminatory voting rules to make changes without prior approval from the Department of Justice.

The court’s April decision, she said, brought rage “and a good deal of sadness — not for me and my family, but for this country.” There is, she said, work to be done on multiple fronts.

Rights paid for in blood turned out to be fragile

Tamara Orange said among her many thoughts when she heard of the Supreme Court decision in this year’s Voting Rights Act case, there was relief — “relief that my dad is not here to see that; that Jimmie Lee Jackson is not here to see it; that Viola Liuzzo is not here to see it,” she said. “I’m relieved for them because to me, it’s as though the sacrifices that were made were done in vain.”

Her father, James Orange, was working with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to organize voting rights protests in Marion and Perry County, Alabama, in 1965. When juveniles joined the effort, he was arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors. Concern arose that Orange was going to be taken out of the jail and lynched.

A protest to intervene ended with Jackson, a 26-year-old Black church deacon, being shot in the stomach by a state trooper while Jackson tried to shield his mother and grandfather.

His death was the catalyst for what became the Selma to Montgomery march and “Bloody Sunday.”

Orange stayed in the movement all his life and died in 2008, Tamara Orange said. But even after the Voting Rights Act passed, “He would say, be careful or we’re going to lose it.”

‘We got bad news for you’

Anthony Liuzzo had just turned 10 when his mother, 39, left their middle-class neighborhood in Michigan and headed for Selma, Alabama. She had cried as she watched scenes from “Bloody Sunday” on television.

Viola Liuzzo participated in a portion of the second march and then helped drive other civil rights protesters around the Black Belt region of the state. On March 25, 1965, she was driving one protester between Selma and Montgomery when a vehicle pulled alongside and fired into the car.

An iron fence surrounds the memorial to civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo on Friday, July 7, 2000, near Lowndesboro, Ala., on U.S. 80. Credit: AP Photo/Dave Martin

The phone call came around midnight. Anthony Liuzzo remembers the caller asking his dad, “Is your wife Viola? We got bad news for you. She’s been shot.” When his father asked whether she was all right, the caller said “No, she’s dead,” and then hung up.

An informant for the FBI quickly identified members of the Ku Klux Klan as her killers. The three men charged would escape conviction on state charges but be convicted in federal court.

Anthony Liuzzo and his siblings lived with the lost birthdays and other missed milestones. His comfort was that the voting rights she had died for had become a reality. But the April ruling by the Supreme Court and the subsequent rush by Republican-led legislatures in several Southern states to eliminate congressional districts represented by Black lawmakers left him angry and distraught.

Even so, he said he is still proud his mother had the courage to go to Selma “when others sat in their pretty little houses.”

One morning, the Klan returned

The inscription at the bottom of Vernon Dahmer Sr.’s tombstone reads simply: “If you don’t vote, you don’t count.”

It is a message that embodies his life’s work and the story behind his death.

Even after Democratic President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, not every state was eager to implement the new law. In Mississippi, it came with a “poll tax.” The amount was $2, but in a world where a farmworker’s wages might only be $5 a day, that was substantial, said Dahmer’s son, Dennis Dahmer Sr.

Dennis Dahmer, whose father Vernon Dahmer Sr. was killed when the Ku Klux Klan firebombed the family home 1966, holds a photo of his brothers as they overlook the destroyed home after, after retiring home from military service, in Hattiesburg, Miss., Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Credit: AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

The elder Dahmer, 57 at the time of his death, was a successful businessman who owned a store, sawmill and farm near Hattiesburg. He also was a civil rights leader and NAACP president in Ford County. He offered to pay the $2 for Black residents who wanted to register to vote.

He had already been under scrutiny by the local Ku Klux Klan. There was harassment and there were threatening phone calls. The windows were shot out of his store, but no one challenged him directly because his sons were always present and armed.

That seemed to trail off after Johnson signed the law.

“The Klan quit calling,” Dennis Dahmer said. “They quit shooting out the windows, so my family thought that all of this was behind us.”

That changed in the early hours of Jan. 10, 1966, when two carloads of Klansmen showed up. They firebombed the house and adjacent grocery store and began shooting at the house. The elder Dahmer shot back, using his ample arsenal to fight off the attack.

His wife and the three children who were home survived, but he suffered severe injuries from inhaling the smoke and fumes from the flames. He died later that day.

Dennis Dahmer was 12 as he stood next to his dad’s hospital bed. He wondered why some people wanted his father dead just for trying to help Black people vote.

A copy of a poll tax receipt sits in the old schoolhouse meeting place, as part of the legacy of Vernon Dahmer, Sr., who was killed when the Ku Klux Klan firebombed the family home 1966, in Hattiesburg, Miss., Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Credit: AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

A former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, Sam Bowers, was convicted in 1998 for the attack and sentenced to life.

Like the families of other survivors, Dennis Dahmer’s family has witnessed the methodical dismantling of the Voting Rights Act.

“Finally, they basically turned it into a relic,” he said.

His plan now is activism, to speak out and promote the need for a massive voter turnout. He also wants to remind people of the price that certain families paid for everyone to have the right to vote and be represented by someone of their choosing.

“We’re living in a time when America has a lot of the same characteristics of the 1960s that I grew up in,” he said. “People say, are we going back? Hell, we’re already there.”

On nation’s 250th birthday, tiny Itta Bena and the Mississippi Delta provide a window into America

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story.

Mississippi Today Ideas is a platform for thoughtful Mississippians to share their ideas about our state’s past, present and future. Opinions expressed in guest essays are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent those of Mississippi Today. You can read more about the section here.. 


“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” 

— Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776 


For 250 years, America has wrestled with the meaning of these words. 

The history of one small Mississippi Delta town offers a window into how we’ve grown into these ideals.


Benjamin Grubb Humphreys was a founding father of the Magnolia State. A planter, slaveholder, military officer and politician, Humphreys helped build the antebellum Mississippi we read about in history books.

When his family’s Claiborne County plantation fell on hard times in 1846, Humphreys steamed up the Yazoo River and selected a plantation site near Roebuck Lake. The rich Delta soil surrounding it, farmed by the Choctaw for centuries and opened to settlement through the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, was an ideal spot for a plantation. 

Humphreys named his new plantation after the Choctaw phrase for a home in the woods: Itta Bena. 

As war approached, Humphreys devoted himself to the Confederacy, serving with distinction at Antietam, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg and Chickamauga. 

After the war, Humphreys returned to Mississippi politics and became the state’s first post-war governor. Like many members of Mississippi’s planter class, he sought to restore the social hierarchy that had defined his successful antebellum life. 

Nason Lollar Credit: Courtesy photo

As governor, Humphreys opposed ratification of the 13th and 14th Amendments and enacted the infamous Black Codes. These laws imposed harsh restrictions on newly freed slaves and helped establish the segregated order that would dominate Mississippi for generations after the war.

Gov. Humphreys and his contemporaries rebuilt the post-war South, characterized by sharecropping, disenfranchisement and discrimination that dominated the Delta for decades.


Five miles west of Humphreys’ old plantation site stands a historical marker commemorating the 1925 birthplace of Riley B. King in a sharecropper’s home. 

Born in the cotton fields of Itta Bena, King learned the hard realities of a sharecropper’s life early on. In the blazing Mississippi sun, children would spend long days chopping cotton, picking cotton and singing about it alongside the adults. 

Orphaned by age 9, Riley bounced across the state, moving from Itta Bena to Kilmichael, then to Lexington and eventually to Indianola. 

In this photo taken May 6, 2015, a commercial truck drives past the Mississippi Blues Trail marker that proclaims an area adjacent to Bear Creek in the Berclair Community near Itta Bena, Miss., as the birthplace of B.B. King. King claimed Indianola as his hometown after moving there as a teenager. King died Thursday, May 14, 2015, at age 89 in Las Vegas, where he had been in hospice care. Credit: AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

Religion was a big part of Riley’s life. Early on, he was enthralled by a preacher’s unconventional delivery, which included using a guitar in his sermons. While he continued to move and change jobs, the music stayed with him. 

By the time he was 20, King had progressed to performing on street corners. And as soon as he learned that playing the blues yielded more tips in his open hat than the old religious standards, he escaped life in the fields and moved to Memphis. There, the hardships of his upbringing became a source of opportunity. 

King’s first job off the farm was serving as a disc jockey at WDIA. Soon after, calls and fan mail flooded into the radio station addressed to the personality they knew as “The Beale Street Blues Boy.” The nickname stuck and was eventually shortened, creating the name history remembers: B.B. King. 

Born into extreme poverty and surviving on his own as a kid, King used talent, discipline, persistence and a surprisingly positive outlook on a hard life to escape his situation and master a form of music deeply rooted in the suffering and endurance of the Mississippi Delta. 

Years later, King reflected on the role the blues played in his life in his autobiography. 

“As a little kid, blues meant hope, excitement, pure emotion. Blues were about feelings. They seem to bring out the feelings of the artist and they brought out my feelings as a kid. They made me wanna move, or sing, or pick up Reverend’s guitar and figure out how to make those wonderful sounds.” 

Widely regarded as one of the greatest guitarists in history, this great-grandson of slaves carried Mississippi’s music to the world stage and became one of the most celebrated musicians in America.

In 1946, as King fled the Delta, the Mississippi Legislature continued taking steps to keep society segregated. That year, lawmakers authorized the creation of the Mississippi Vocational College as a separate institution for Black students. 

After local protests prevented the school from opening at the old Greenwood Army Air Base, legislators selected another, more remote, location six miles to the west. And in a twist that could only take place in the Mississippi Delta, old plantation land in Itta Bena was transformed into an institution of higher learning for the descendants of the enslaved. 

Dr. James Herbert White was recruited to lead that institution when it opened in 1950. 

Also the son of sharecroppers, White envisioned something greater than an isolated vocational school designed to preserve the state’s “separate but equal” vision. White devoted himself not simply to constructing buildings and classrooms, but to constructing hope. 

Dr. White dreamed of building a true institution of higher learning that could lift students into lives of opportunity, dignity and excellence. Under his leadership, the school became Mississippi Valley State College, reflecting a vision that had grown well beyond its vocational beginnings. Today, the university nicknamed “The Valley” continues to produce educators, professionals, athletes and leaders whose influence extends far beyond the Mississippi Delta.

Take a Sunday drive through the Mississippi Delta, and you’ll notice historical markers everywhere. 

A few miles north of Itta Bena, there’s a marker on the banks of the Tallahatchie River memorializing the site of Emmett Till’s 1955 death. A couple of hours south, another one describes how Gen. Ulysses S. Grant used Mississippi College’s Provine Chapel as a field hospital during the Vicksburg campaign. Everywhere in between, marker after marker tells the story of how events from the front pages of American history played out across the Delta. 

A historical marker near the Tallahatchie County Courthouse in Sumner, Miss., highlights the 1955 trial of Emmett Till’s killers, who were acquitted in the courthouse across the street, on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

What other stretch of soil could intertwine the stories of a plantation owner, a musician, an educator and the president of the United States? 

Four months after the Battle of Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln gave voice to an understanding of the American experiment that would eventually transform a thousand different corners of America, including Itta Bena. 

Standing among the graves of those who died preserving the Union, he returned to the Declaration of Independence and its central claim that all men are created equal. Lincoln acknowledged that America remained engaged in unfinished work, bringing the nation’s actions into closer alignment with its founding ideal. It was work to which he ultimately gave his life. 

Lincoln’s greatest contribution to those of us looking back across 250 years of the American experiment, though, may have been the challenge he left behind. Speaking to a generation enduring circumstances far worse than our own, he called on his countrymen to show an “increased devotion” to the cause of liberty. 

Itta Bena, Mississippi, offers a remarkable view of the American experiment today because it demonstrates that Lincoln’s challenge did not end at Gettysburg. Slowly but surely, generations of Americans accepted the responsibility of enlarging the promise contained in the Declaration.

Today, the only visible evidence of Benjamin Humphreys’ plantation is an aging historical marker at the intersection of Humphreys Street and Mississippi Highway 7 in downtown Itta Bena. 

Itta Bena Downtown Marker Credit: Nason Lollar

Glance east while reading it, and you can picture the columned porch of a plantation home still rising above the Delta landscape. Walk a few minutes in any direction, and you are standing in fields once worked by Humphreys’ slaves nearly two centuries ago. 

But other than those fields stretching to the horizon, neither Humphreys, Jefferson nor Lincoln would recognize much of the small Delta town today. Those fields that once supported a plantation produced one of the most celebrated musicians in American history and gave rise to a state-supported, historically Black university. Free elections have taken place across the Delta for decades now, with candidates from all parties up and down the ballot. 

The meaning of Itta Bena was not settled at the time Benjamin Humphreys founded it. As the American story unfolded, it eventually outgrew the antebellum world that created it.

The window it offers into the American experiment is one of hope.

Viewed through the lens of history, the American experiment in self-government is much more than a battle over political opinions. Every generation inherits an unfinished country. Progress isn’t just a debate over who wins elections; it is about what we choose to build. 

If the United States of America someday celebrates a 500th anniversary, it will not happen because Americans agree on everything. We never have, and we never will. It will happen because generation after generation of Americans accepted Lincoln’s challenge, overcame their differences and devoted themselves to preserving a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. 

In the Mississippi Delta, those fading historical markers tell the story of how previous generations helped our country achieve those founding ideals. Hopefully, the historical markers that have yet to be placed will say the same about us someday.


Nason Lollar was born in Leflore County. He currently serves as principal of Germantown Middle School in Madison County. Over his 26-year career in Mississippi’s public schools, he has served as a teacher, coach, assistant principal and principal. He holds a doctor of education degree from William Carey University and is the author of “The Five Principles of Educator Professionalism: Rebuilding Trust in Schools.” A husband and father of four, he writes about education, leadership, Mississippi history and life in his spare time. 

ICE must provide bond hearings within 90 days to detainees awaiting removal decision, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals says 

Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story.

Mukta Joshi is an investigative reporter at Mississippi Today. She is spending a year as a New York Times Local Investigations fellow examining immigration and criminal justice issues. She can be reached at mukta.joshi@nytimes.com.

Immigrants arrested within the country are entitled to a bond hearing within 90 days of detention, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 Thursday. The court, which covers Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, held that unjustified detention beyond this period would violate the due process guaranteed by the Constitution.

More than 58,000 immigrants held by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement have petitioned federal courts across the country, challenging their detention. Nearly 600 of those petitions have been filed in Mississippi. The federal judge assigned to all of their cases, David Bramlette, has not decided on the merits of a single one, leaving hundreds of detainees in limbo. Some have been held in Mississippi for more than a year. 

The decision Thursday was made by a panel of three judges, which means the government will have an opportunity to seek a rehearing of the panel’s decision by the full appeals court.

Earlier this year in a separate case, the same court had interpreted the federal statute invoked by ICE to deny bond hearings en masse.

For decades, federal courts across the U.S. had distinguished between people arrested and detained at the border while trying to enter the country and people who had already been living in the United States for years. Those arrested inside the United States were automatically provided bond hearings by ICE. Bond hearings are the stage at which an immigration court would determine whether the detainee was dangerous, or posed a flight risk. 

But in 2025, the Trump administration began enforcing a mandatory detention policy, meaning most people would be denied bond hearings and be held in ICE custody until an immigration court decided whether they should be deported or allowed to remain in the country. 

As a result, federal courts across the country were flooded by constitutional habeas corpus petitions by ICE detainees challenging their continued detention without bond hearings. The decision on Thursday said the situation was creating “enormous difficulties” for district courts. 

In February, the conservative New Orleans-based appeals court became one of two circuits upholding this mandatory detention policy. It held that federal law did not make any distinction between where people had been arrested and how long they had been living in the U.S.

On Thursday, the same court, while agreeing that the statute made no distinction, held that ICE could hold detainees “for ninety days but no longer” without a bond hearing, because continued detention without justification would violate the Constitution. 

The case decided on Thursday came before the court on appeal when judges in Texas granted bond hearings to three ICE detainees who had filed habeas petitions. Federal immigration authorities challenged those decisions, arguing they had the right to hold those detainees without providing them with bond hearings.  

The three petitioners, who were all detained by ICE during traffic stops, had entered the country more than a decade before, resided in the United States and were fathers to U.S. citizens. When Texas judges granted their habeas petitions after months of detention, the government had argued that they were not entitled to due process and had no right to a bond hearing. 

The court upheld that freedom from detention is a fundamental right the Constitution provides to all human beings within American jurisdiction, not just U.S. citizens. Referring to the Board of Immigration Appeals, the court said Thursday, “Even though the BIA reinterpreted the meaning of statutory language, the Constitution has not changed.”