MEMPHIS, Tenn.
The largest city in Tennessee, Memphis is
located in the southwestern corner of the
state. It overlooks the Mississippi
River.The African American blues
composer W.C. Handy immortalized the
city's Beale Street in one of his songs.
Elvis Presley started his rock-and-roll
career in Memphis. DJ Paul & Juicy J
of the Three 6 Mafia and Eightball &
MJG are well on their way to becoming rap
pioneers of Memphis. Although numerous
other rappers are in this area, they do
not get the national attention that they
deserve.
Graceland,
Presley's Memphis home and burial site,
attracts thousands of visitors every
year. The civil-rights leader Martin
Luther King, Jr., while visiting Memphis
in 1968 in support of a sanitation
workers' strike, was assassinated on the
balcony of the Lorraine Motel by a
sniper's bullet. Since 1931 Memphis has
held an annual cotton carnival every May.
Educational institutions in Memphis
include Christian Brothers College,
LeMoyne-Owen College, Memphis State
University, a state technical institute,
and the University of Tennessee Center
for the Health Sciences.
Memphis is
one of the commercial and transportation
centers of the South. The farms and
forests of western Tennessee, eastern
Arkansas, and northern Mississippi send
their cotton and lumber to Memphis. The
city is one of the world's leading cotton
and hardwood markets. It is also one of
the busiest river ports in the country,
with several bridges to carry heavy
railroad and highway traffic across the
river. Local manufacturers produce animal
feed, drugs and chemicals, paper,
furniture, and cottonseed products.
Memphis is noted for its livestock and
poultry, cotton, soybeans, and forest
products.
Because of its location on a major river,
Memphis is named for the ancient Egyptian
city on the Nile. It was originally the
site of a Chickasaw Indian village and a
United States fort. During the 17th and
18th centuries the French and English
tried to gain control of the site. The
land was ceded to the United States by
the Chickasaw in 1818. It was
incorporated as a town in 1826 and
granted a city charter in 1849.
Memphis
was the scene of an American Civil War
naval battle that resulted in its capture
by Union forces. The city remained
occupied through the rest of the war. In
the 1870s the population of Memphis was
greatly reduced by a yellow-fever
epidemic. The city went bankrupt and was
forced to surrender its charter. A new
city charter was granted following
sanitary reforms and economic recovery.
In 1991 Willie Herenton became Memphis'
first African American mayor. Memphis is
the seat of Shelby County. It has a
mayor-council form of government.
Population (1990 census), 610,337.
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