We face even
colder weather this morning. Brrr! Although certain that the mercury has fallen to
20°, I must admit that Pearl’s thermometer reads in the mid-40s. Today’s wan
sunshine probably brings a dearly desired coolness to the area in summer,
unwelcome now during the waning days of winter.
Bear, ever the
morning commandant, rounds us up and chases us out of the door by 9 AM. We leave our Airbnb nest reluctantly, worried
about a week of inhabiting kitchen-less hotels and the bad restaurant food we
will be forced to consume in desperation. But the boys soldier on, stuffing
Pearl and her hat with our worldly belongings. We haven’t quite succumbed to
refugee status. Katrina descended upon the
Gulf in 2005, not 2014. But as we
approach a month on the road, have we not become gypsies?
Bright-eyed and
bushy-tailed, Bear, our wonderful morning chauffeur, steers Pearl up toward Baton
Rouge once again. Passing Baton Rouge,
we turn north on state route sixty-one, heading for the scariest place in the
United States: Mississippi. Where were
the civil rights workers slain? Mississippi. Where was teenaged Emmett Till
tortured and murdered? Mississippi. Where was Medgar Evans assassinated?
Mississippi. What’s the locale for every scary movie about the Klan?
Mississippi. Does driving a new car in the land of conservatives scream
liberal? This place scares the bejeebers out of me.
Ten miles inside
the state, my fears spring to life. The
Mississippi Highway Patrol, a police force whose cruelty knows no bounds (per
the 1960s and Hollywood), stops all motorists. Pearl trembles as my heart rises
to my throat, beating so loudly as to be heard a mile away. Ominously, to the
right, on the road’s shoulder, we see a white boy cuffed standing behind his
car. “Oh my gosh,” I think, shaking in panic, “we have Colorado plates. These
boys will have a good old time looking for marijuana, ripping Pearl, her hat,
and Sven asunder.” Our inanimate
partners quiver with barely suppressed terror.
We picture ourselves on the side of the road in Mississippi, our belongings
strewn everywhere. Sven, conflated with
Pearl’s transmission, both in a million pieces, blow about in the wind. We cry helplessly seeing our lives scattered all
over the roadway, while the police laugh heartlessly.
The patrolman
approaches. “Good morning, sir,” he
drawls, “license and registration please.” Keith hands over the requested
documents quickly, the only sign of nervousness he displays. The officer scans Keith’s driver’s license
and examines Pearl’s registration.
Looking at the front license plate, he begins to guffaw. “Colorado, eh?
Ha Ha Ha. Cold out there, huh? Enjoy your travels in Mississippi. Have a
good day.”
Keith explains
that “stop ‘em all” provides much needed money to rural police departments, now
a standard revenue source in the South. Ask
every driver passing by to produce a valid driver’s license and registration
while searching for unpaid traffic tickets and outstanding warrants, and no one
can complain about discrimination. People
failing the checks face jail, requiring them to shell out more moolah to escape
authority’s clutches. Living in poverty,
people allocating scarce economic resources between electric bills and traffic
tickets will often leave the latter unpaid.
The rich, who would squawk and quash the practice, will sail through
these tests; the Republicans will be glad to see the boys working at keeping
the riff-raff in line.
A mere forty-five
minutes later, my adrenaline level finally subsides as Pearl drives into Melrose
Plantation of Natchez National Park. We find, wonder of wonders, a picnic
table! Exiting Pearl, we sit amidst
blooming chickweed, enjoying the sunny, open space. The boys heat our lovely lunch, prepared last
night by the ever industrious Keith. We enjoy our chicken, zucchini and pasta.
Unfortunately we couldn’t convince Bear to prepare meals for an entire week, no
matter how much assistance we proffered.
“We don’t have a refrigerator Beaver, much less a freezer. You’re being
ridiculous, worrying far too much about the Sysco truck.” “But we have a cooler and ice,” I feebly
responded. And I hadn’t said a word
about that darn truck!
In 1990, the
National Park Service (NPS) acquired Melrose Plantation, including the Greek
Revival mansion and surrounding buildings that once created the plantation’s wealth. The NPS has busily restored the
property. Sven and I motor about on
paved trails. We see slave cabins and various
outbuildings, entering the accessible ones.
Displays teach us more about slavery.
We learn that the
overseer, not the aristocratic planter families, determined a slave’s quality
of life. The planter would contract with
the overseer for a projected profit. If the overseer failed to produce adequately,
the agreement generally permitted the planter to dock the overseer’s pay.
Cotton plantations
ran on debt, generally 70% of their value.
Planters borrowed heavily to buy slaves, land and seed. A slave cost $500 and was expected to
generate $100 to $200 each year. With
patience and luck, a plantation would eventually turn a profit.
Success or failure
depended upon the slaves’ survival and continued ability to work. People, both
planter and slaves, would die in cholera and yellow fever epidemics. Every plantation had a slave infirmary, where
the mistress of the house’s duties included nursing people back to health.
The South welcomed
many planters who had exhausted their Virginia land growing tobacco. Selling their depleted northern land, they
would move farther south to new land.
Borrowing heavily, they established cotton plantations, bound by both
their new and old obligations.
For the enslaved,
tobacco farming required the least amount of labor, cotton more, and sugar the
most. Sugar plantations subjected
exhausted people to horrendously dangerous processes, often proving lethal. Succumbing
to accidents and overwork, people on sugar plantations seldom saw forty.
Leaving the
Melrose Plantation, Pearl cruises a few miles west to deliver us to the
Longwood Octagonal house. Jumping out of
the car, we sign up for the tour.
Sven comments,
“Like we ever jump, Beaver.”
“Poetic license,
Sven, poetic license.”
“Who gave you a
license, Beaver? You don’t even drive
anymore.”
“Why the State of
Colorado did!”
“Poetic license or
a driver’s license?”
“Ok, you win, now
hush.”
Sven subsides as
the tour begins, focusing all attention on our guide.
In the 1850s, a
planter named Haller Nutt developed an important strain of cotton. Flush and arrogant, Nutt began contemplating
Longwood in the late 1850s. He planned a
33,000-square-foot, six-story octagonal masterpiece, larger than Thomas
Jefferson’s mammoth plantation at Monticello.
Designed by northern architects, the house eschewed the currently
fashionable Greek Revival style so often adopted elsewhere. Nutt’s architects incorporated the then-current
ideas of health into Longwood, specifying windows and a coal fireplace for
every room. Work began in 1860 but the
outbreak of the Civil War quickly interrupted construction, as Nutt’s craftsmen
fled north. Hiring local workers, Nutt only
managed to complete the 10,000 square-foot basement before dying of pneumonia
in 1864, leaving his house unfinished and his affairs a mess. His neighbors long ago renamed the uncompleted
mansion Nutt’s Folly.
The Civil War
brought economic collapse in its wake. Nutt
lost nearly all his wealth as both armies ravaged his plantations. Julia, his widow, sold off land to satisfy
debt and moved into the basement with her eight children, raising them there.
Being from
Colorado, we are the seven-day wonder here.
Our guide, a large, fiftyish, balding, potbellied man notices our
Colorado license plates. “Well,” he says “I sure wish that Mississippi would
legalize pot. But we will be the last state to do so. Marijuana is a lot better
for you than alcohol. What would somebody smoking pot do? Rob a grocery store
for a Twinkie? I’ve smoked it before, and I would smoke some now, if I had it.”
Taken aback, we
respond, “Well, we don’t have any marijuana with us. But people and money are pouring into
Colorado. We want the taxes to fund our
schools. We’re embarrassed to admit that we’re fortieth or so in spending on
education.”
“I’m sure
Mississippi is worse,” the big man opines.
(Correct: Mississippi consistently ranks 48th.) “Years ago, when the government told us we
had to integrate, the people in power chose to send all the white kids to
private schools and not spend a cent on public schools. That’s what generated
the mess we’re in now. Maybe marijuana would be a way out,” he muses.
Leaving our guide
to his fancies, Pearl drives off to nearby small-town Southern America:
Natchez, MS. Though comprising only a few city blocks of handsome old brick
buildings, Natchez has its own National Park downtown: the William Johnson
house.
Johnson, a freed
slave (presumably his white father manumitted him), founded the town’s barber
shop. Over the years, guided by sound investments and his own good business
sense, he became quite rich. As owning other human beings marked one as a
person of importance, Johnson eventually bought several slaves; once, he even
sold a frequent runaway down the river, an action that he records in his diary
as keeping him from sleep one night.
Although rich,
Johnson died at forty-two when he was gunned down in a property dispute. His
assailant, another free black, claimed some 1/16th white ancestry
and got off scot-free – black people couldn’t testify against white people in
criminal cases. (Later research showed the assailant to be part American
Indian, not white, but the court ruled that evidence inadmissible.) William
Johnson had straddled both worlds of the racial divide, rising to wealth in the
antebellum South, but in the end his skin color still determined his fate.
Departing, we at long
last reach the Natchez Trace, today’s goal. Evolving from an ancient Indian highway, the Trace
spans 440 miles from Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville, Tennessee. In the early 1800s, people in the Ohio river
valley would load all sorts of trade items (cash crops, animals, anything they
could sell) on a flatboat and float down the Mississippi. Reaching New Orleans,
the self-made merchants would sell all, including their raft for lumber. Goods-free
and cash rich, they would then walk back up the Natchez Trace to their homes. The boys ruminate about the manhood-building
potential induced by hiking the entire Natchez Trace, deciding right there upon
a future vacation adventure. Sven rolls
his eyes.
The federal
government began building the Natchez Trace Parkway in 1936. Finally completed in 2005, the Trace greatly
reminds us of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Did the Park Service employ the same
engineers or just repeat success? Ten
miles into the Trace, Bloodroot stops Pearl near a huge earthen mound named the
Emerald Mound. Constructed by
Mississippian Indians in 1200 CE, the second largest mound in the Americas
(after Cahokia) looms over us, dwarfing us.
We climb to the top of the mound to watch the sunset. Descending, we notice that the darkness has
also descended. Pearl insists upon
leaving the park. “There’s nothing but bends and shadows, kids,” says
Pearl. “I vote for safety and
expediency.”
Exiting the park,
Pearl returns to Highway 61 for our last amazingly painful half hour’s drive of
the day. Ultimately arriving in
Vicksburg, we find ourselves weary, sore and hungry. First stop, Fairfield Inn,
where we reserved an accessible room. At
the front desk, we learn that we’ve arrived too late for a handicapped room.
“We’ve rented them all. It’s a good
night,” says the desk clerk. “Yeah, good
for you, not me,” I think.
Resigned to
failure, we check into our room and I head to the bathroom. Ugh! The room lacks bars around the toilet. Can’t
we just put bars around all toilets? We’re all getting old! From Sven, I must standup without support,
turn around and sit on the pot. Scary!
We decide to use Tinky instead. I can spin him around, only banging in
the walls a wee bit, and sit. Tinky also helps me stand when the time comes.
Enough about
toilets and cripples already!
While I flounder in
the bathroom, Bloodroot and Barkley busy themselves finding a restaurant.
Consulting Urban Spoon and Yelp, the boys recommend a place called Roca’s.
Bloodroot drives,
easily following directions downloaded onto his iPhone. (The more I age, the
more I’m surrounded by technology I don’t understand, like iPhones.) Venturing a bit out of town, up a winding
road, we stumble upon what appears to be a country club.
We enter the
restaurant and sit down for dinner amongst all the movers and shakers of
Vicksburg, Mississippi. The Springfield
Grill in Youngstown, Ohio, comes to mind, home of the selfsame people and mediocre
food. Full of trepidation, I begin with
a green tomato and crab cake appetizer, something I’ve never had before—and
it’s good! Appearances can be deceiving,
yes? The boys get an A+.
A table across the
room erupts repeatedly into unrestrained cheering as some basketball team beats
another. We think it might be Arkansas versus Kentucky. Giving the server our dinner order, we
struggle to be heard over the mayhem.
Concentrating on the appealing food, we attempt to ignore the
increasingly enthusiastic shouting, the kind you’d recoil from in an outdoor
football stadium. The table’s occupants appear to be somewhat trashed.
Fortunately, the
game ends while we dine. The loud people
rise to leave. One of the gentlemen stops by our table to apologize for the
noise — very Southern. He explains that he and his friends, all lawyers, went
to the University of Arkansas, which has just very handily beaten Kentucky. Asked
which team we support, we mumble that we’re from Colorado.
“Colorado!” The
man exclaims. “I’ve been skiing in Colorado.” He then launches into a very long
story telling us each and every slope he has skied down. He begins demonstrating his schuss skiing
techniques by jumping about at our table. We sit spellbound, watching this very
drunken man regale us with skiing stories while flapping both his arms and legs
all over the place.
“Once going
downhill, at Vail, I crashed into a rock, losing my goggles, skis and helmet. I
looked up to see people on the lift worried about me. I waved to show them I
was alive…” At this moment, his friends
walk by and collect him. Our
storyteller’s friends presumably usher him to a waiting car, so we never get to
hear the end of the story. How did he get off the rock? I’m totally sucked into the magic of the captivating
tale, told the way only a Southern boy can tell it, and poof, he’s gone.
Shoot! An eternal mystery!
We finish our
dinner, enjoying a sumptuous dessert, and head back to the Fairfield Inn for
the night. The boys dream of the Civil
War, planning tomorrow’s exploration of the Vicksburg battlefield while they
sleep.
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