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==History== Named after President [[Grover Cleveland]], {{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} the town began formation in 1869 as people moved inland from the [[Mississippi River]]. The [[Louisville and Nashville Railroad|Louisville, New Orleans & Texas Railroad]] ran through the town and a portion of the railroad remains there today. Early records show the community was called '''Fontaine''' in 1884 and at some point '''Coleman's Station'''. Moses W. Coleman built the first home on the [[bayou]] in the area. In 1885, it was officially named '''Sims''' after Rueben T. Sims, who owned part of the land on which the town stood. The village of Cleveland was chartered on March 25, 1886, and the United States Post Office recognized the town as such on August 5, 1887. It was Sims's son, B.C. Sims, who was responsible for the name change to Cleveland.{{Citation needed|date=April 2023}} The town grew steadily and by 1901 Cleveland was named the second county seat and a new courthouse was erected. Bolivar County is one of ten counties in Mississippi with two judicial districts.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://courts.ms.gov/trialcourts/circuitcourt/circuitcourt.php | title=Circuit Courts - State of Mississippi Judiciary|website=Courts.md.gov|access-date=2024-02-24 }}</ref> As more trees were cleared, more land was put into cultivation. In the early days, all of the planting and harvesting was done by hand. At the end of WWI, African Americans left Bolivar County in great numbers, but many stayed, becoming tenant farmers. There was an increasing demand for labor and Delta planters began to recruit overseas. Today, in addition to the first settlers of English, Scottish, German, Irish, and African descent, Bolivar County is its own “melting pot” of ethnicities.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.biggestuscities.com/demographics/ms/bolivar-county | title=Bolivar County, Mississippi Demographics - Income, Housing, Race, Business |website=Biggestuscities.com|access-date=2024-02-24}}</ref> The African-American influence in Cleveland's history is quite evident. Nearby Dockery Plantation is designated with a [[Mississippi Blues Trail]] marker declaring the location as the probable “Birthplace of the Blues.” Many of the early Delta Bluesmen lived and worked around Dockery, influencing each other and educating the next generation.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Home |url=https://msbluestrail.org/ |access-date=2023-03-09 |website=The Mississippi Blues Trail |language=en-US}}</ref> In the early 1920s, as the State Legislature considered a location for a new Normal college, Cleveland became the obvious choice due to its central Delta location, the railroad, and the donation of land. However, perhaps the most important factor in the equation was the City leaders’ willingness to relocate the infamous Black Bear Saloon that was located between the depot and the soon-to-be Delta Normal College, now Delta State University. In the early 1950s city leaders were able to attract [[Baxter Laboratories]] and Mississippi Power & Light’s Delta Steam Electric Station just north of town. The population of Cleveland basically doubled over the following decade.<ref name="auto">{{cite web | url=https://clevelandmschamber.com/community/welcome-guide/ | title=Welcome Guide | Cleveland-Bolivar County Chamber of Commerce|website=Clevelandmschamber.com|access-date=2024-02-24}}</ref> In 1967, Senators [[Robert F. Kennedy]] and [[Joseph S. Clark Jr.]] began Senate hearings to assess the effectiveness of the [[War on Poverty]] programs. The first field hearings were held in [[Jackson, Mississippi|Jackson]], Mississippi, and the following day Kennedy and Clark set out to visit "pockets of poverty" in the [[Mississippi Delta]]. They arrived in Cleveland, along with [[Marian Wright Edelman|Marian Wright]] and [[Peter Edelman]], for [[Joseph S. Clark's and Robert F. Kennedy's tour of the Mississippi Delta|a tour]] conducted by [[Amzie Moore]]. There they observed barefoot, underfed African-American children in tattered clothing, with vacant expressions and distended bellies. Kennedy told Edelman that he thought he had seen the worst poverty in the nation in West Virginia, but it paled in comparison to the poverty he observed in Cleveland.<ref>{{cite book | last = Schmitt | first = Edward R. | title = President of the Other America: Robert Kennedy and the Politics of Poverty | publisher = University of Massachusetts Press | year = 2011 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ClOAXj4OkRAC&pg=PP1 | pages = 178, 179| isbn = 9781558499041 }}</ref> Most recently, the City of Cleveland and Bolivar County, partnering with DSU, was able to see the realization of the Grammy Museum adjacent to Delta State’s campus. It is the most technologically advanced music museum in the world. Cleveland is also home to the Railroad Heritage Museum, housing the largest O gauge model layout in the southeast, thousands of railroad artifacts, and a 1941 Illinois Central caboose, all paying tribute to Cleveland's railroad beginnings. The Mississippi Delta Chinese Heritage Museum is located on the third floor of the Delta State Archives & Museum. The Boo Ferriss Baseball Museum, located beside the DSU baseball stadium, honors the late Red Sox pitcher and Hall of Famer, [[Boo Ferriss]], a Shaw, Miss. native and legendary coach at DSU. The Amzie Moore House is the actual home of the late Civil Rights leader, which has been preserved and converted into a museum, paying tribute to his efforts. The home has also been designated as a stop on the [[Freedom Trail]].<ref name="auto"/>
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