
Steamboats and the Cotton Economy
This history of the steamboat era in the region covers a century, from the 1820s when itinerate steamers of the Mississippi River mosquito fleet rushed into the Delta for cargoes and passengers, until 1920 when Mississippi River towboats and their barges entered the Delta waterways. Between these decades, young men who came of age along the Yazoo River gained control of their waterways in the late antebellum period and tried to hold them for the Confederacy during the war years. Re-establishing their control in the postbellum Cotton Kingdom, Captain Parisot and his associates fought a futile battle against the business giants of New Orleans. During the final days of the era, when they were confined to the Delta waterways, Yazoo steamboatmen faced the new challenge of the railroads. By 1900, the locomotive supplanted the steamboat for most interregional shipping, but steamers continued to transport large quantities of freight and thousands of passengers each year. After more than a century, steamboats, which had played such a vital role in the building of the Mississippi-Yazoo Delta, yielded to the internal combustion engine and the era ended.
- Alaotsikko
- River Trade in the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta
- Kirjailija
- Harry P. Owens
- ISBN
- 9781578066223
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 333 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 30.7.2003
- Kustantaja
- University Press of Mississippi
- Sivumäärä
- 277