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==History== Mississippi County is located in what was formerly known as "Tywappity Bottom," a vast floodplain area bordered by the Scott County Hills on the north, St. James Bayou on the south, the Mississippi River on the east, and [[Little River (St. Francis River tributary)|Little River]] on the west. In 1540, the Spanish explorer [[Hernando De Soto]] penetrated to the [[Arkansas River]] and perhaps well into present-day southeastern Missouri, which was then populated by various Native American tribes, including the [[Osage Nation|Osage]]. Under pressure from a constantly advancing white settlement, the Native Americans gradually retreated westward. The area of southeastern Missouri was noted for its level swampy lowlands, subject to the seasonal flooding of the Mississippi River, which had resulted in extremely fertile soil. By 1820 American pioneers, many migrating from the southern states, had settled most of the present counties of southeastern Missouri. The settlers were primarily farmers who came from [[Illinois]] and the states of the Upper South: [[Virginia]], [[Kentucky]], and [[Tennessee]]. They were drawn by the fertile and cheap lands found in the area of present-day [[Charleston, Missouri]]. Cotton was cultivated through the 19th century, and the planters depended on enslaved African-American workers before the Civil War and [[freedmen]] afterward. There were marked adjustments as people adjusted to the free labor market. The first American settlers reached what became Charleston in 1830. Seven years later, Thankful Randol sold Joseph Moore 22Β½ acres of land. Moore used it to lay out a plan for the city of Charleston. Its original boundary was 12 blocks square - four north and south, and three east and west. The Original Plat was filed on May 20, 1837. The General Assembly passed an act to incorporate the city of [[Charleston, Missouri|Charleston]] on March 25, 1872. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, violence increased against black Americans as the state disfranchised minority voters and enforce the Jim Crow segregation laws. Four African Americans were [[Lynching in the United States|lynched]] in Mississippi County, the second-highest number in the state and tied with [[Callaway County]].<ref name="lynching">[https://eji.org/sites/default/files/lynching-in-america-third-edition-summary.pdf ''Lynching in America''/ ''Supplement: Lynchings by County, 3rd edition''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023063004/https://eji.org/sites/default/files/lynching-in-america-third-edition-summary.pdf |date=October 23, 2017 }}, Montgomery, Alabama: Equal Justice Initiative, 2015, p. 7</ref> Three of these murders took place in the county seat of Charleston. The fourth man was killed in [[Belmont, Missouri]] in 1905. Sam Fields and Robert Coleman were lynched in Charleston on July 3, 1910, allegedly for committing murder and robbery. The joint lynching was witnessed by a crowd of about 1,000.<ref name="monroe"/> Roosevelt Grigsby was lynched in Charleston in December 1924 by a mob of 200, who accused him of attempting to rape a woman.<ref name="monroe">[http://www.monroeworktoday.org/explore/map2/indexif.html ''Map of White Supremacy mob violence, 1835 - 1964''], Monroe Work Today</ref><ref>[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/map-shows-over-a-century-of-documented-lynchings-in-united-states-180961877/#5XC6GSKltKIx3TYK.99 Danny Lewis, "This Map Shows Over a Century of Documented Lynchings in the United States"], ''Smithsonian Magazine'', January 27, 2017; accessed April 12, 2018</ref> At the turn of the 20th century, the virgin forests attracted timber barons. Following the clearing of the timber, the state assisted in the construction of [[levees]], forming drainage districts to redevelop the land. As hundreds of miles of levees and dikes were constructed within the Little River Drainage District, thousands of acres of land were drained and "reclaimed" for agricultural use. The reclaimed land, highly fertile due to centuries of flooding from the Mississippi River, was cultivated for cotton, corn, and wheat. Since the late 20th century, [[soybeans]] and rice have been important commodity crops and are grown on an industrial scale.
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