Welcome
to Issaquena County, Mississippi. Formed
under the Second Constitution (1832-1869), March 23, 1844, from the southern
portion of Washington County, Issaquena County was named for the Choctaw
Indian word meaning "deer river." Issaquena County contains 441.4 square
miles with a current population of 2,274. A part of the vast Yazoo-Mississippi
Delta region, Issaquena has played an important role in the agricultural
development of Mississippi throughout its history.
More
county history
Issaquena County Census Records
1840 Washington County Federal Census
Complete 1850 Federal Census
Complete 1860 Federal Census
1860 Federal Census Schedule 2: Slave Enumeration
1880 Oakley Plantation Census
1930 Federal Census Index
Civil Divisions Map: 1930 Census
Issaquena County Property Records
Land Patents: Range 8 West
Land Patents: Range 9 West
Land Patents: Miscellaneous Ranges
Mississippi Indian Cession Map
1863 Deer Creek - Steele's Bayou Plantations Map
Steele's Bayou Land Ownership Plat: 1886
Fitler Plantation Deed
Robert M. Smith Deed: 1846
1846 State Tax List
Issaquena County Civil War Records
Skirmish at Langley's Plantation
Grave's Issaquena Artillery
The Steele's Bayou Expedition
Stephen Duncan Letter to Mary Duncan
Mary Duncan Letter to Abraham Lincoln
Tallulah Courthouse Expedition
James B. McPherson Letter
Southern Claims Commission Records
Robert J. Turnbull
Lewis C. Watson
B.B. Fore for Charles J. Fore
Mrs. R.L. Wright
Issaquena County Geography
Historic Maps of Issaquena County
Contemporary Map of Issaquena County
Issaquena County Geographical Landmarks
Issaquena County Communities
Brief History of Rolling Fork
Issaquena County Biographies
The Balfour Family
The Catching Family
Dr. William I. Chaney
The Chotard-Eustis Families
Richard Christmas
Will E. Collins
Fielding Davis
Dr. Stephen Duncan
Alexander de la Plaunche DuVal
George W. Faison, Jr.
George W. Faison, Sr.
Richard B. Faison
Dr. R.D. Farish
Robert Elisha Foster
Daniel Webster Gary
The James Gwin Family
The Wade Hampton Family
Colonel John Heath Sr.
Dr. T.A. Heath
James P. Heath
The Hibbard/Thomson Family
The Keep-Lum Families
Willis Elbert Mollison
Mrs. Luly L. Nelson
Isaac Nicholson
Livingston Peyton
Allen N. Smith
Robert M. Smith
The Turnbull Family
Issaquena County Photographs
Archival Photograph Gallery
The Great Flood of 1927 in Issaquena County
Crosby Lumber Company
The Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad
The Flood of 1922
J.C. Newman Sr. Portraits
Issaquena Deer Hunting Party ca. 1900
Dr. J.B. Benton Portrait
Joe Miller Picking Cotton
Thomas K. Benton Standing in Flood Waters
The Newman Family by Flood Waters
The Flood of 1929
The Newman Photograph Collection
The James M. McQuaid Monument
The Robert M. Smith Monument
Mayersville Historical Marker
Thomas Andrew Moore
Miscellaneous Issaquena Records
Records from the House and Senate Journals: US Congress
Early Newspaper Abstracts Pertaining to Issaquena County
Eustatia Plantation Slave Census: 1860
County Physicians' Register: 1882-1907
County Cattle Brand Registrants
Issaquena County Letterheads
Dr. Thomas A. Heath Obituary
Heath-Stewart Letter: 1890
Heard-Heath Letter: 1886
T.W. Stewart Election Certificate
Poll and Road Tax Receipts: 1929
John Heath Estate Appraisal
Clover Ridge Plantation Maps: 1891
Elias Pharr Tax Receipt: 1852
Elias Pharr Probate Records: 1853-54
Henry P. Duncan Last Will & Testament
Dr. Stephen Duncan Last Will & Testament
Joseph L. Bernard Trust Deed: 1848
Horatio Sprague Eustis Obituary: 1858
Issaquena County Post Offices: 1851-1859
Issaquena County Concise History: 1891
Issaquena County State Officials: 1846-1890
A History of the Levee System
Roosevelt Bear Hunt: 1903
The 1913 Flood
W.E. Collins Letter to Boston
Deer Creek Cotton Estates
The Eliza Winston Case
1865 Freedmen's Contracts
Stephen Bingaman Duncan Obituary: 1912
Quick Links with Issaquena County Information
Below is a listing of valuable links with Mississippi and Issaquena
County genealogical information. If any researcher knows of
additional links pertaining to Issaquena County or Mississippi genealogy,
please submit them for publication. These links are not part of the Issaquena Genealogy and
History Project.
The Eustatia Plantation Account Book is from Eustatia Plantation, operated by Catherine Chotard Eustis, widow of Horatio Sprague Eustis of Issaquena County. This old account book was digitized by the Ohio Historical Society for the project The African American Experience in Ohio. This priceless volume gives a daily account of life in Issaquena County during antebellum times. Located on this site are both images and a text transcript of the entire volume.
The
1880 US Federal Census located at the LDS Family Search site
is an excellent resource! Be sure to look for your Issaquena County ancestors
in this massive database of the entire US 1880 Federal Census.
Issaquena
County Largest Slaveholders of 1860 and African American Surname
Matches from 1870 is a part of Tom Blake's excellent site covering several
states and counties.
Issaquena
County World War I Draft Registrants are located on the excellent USGenWeb
Mississippi Archives Index of WWI Registrants site. Just click the Issaquena
County link.
The National Register of Historic Places Issaquena
County Inventory page contains interesting information about historic
sites in Issaquena County.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Family
History Library Catalog Issaquena County listings gives detailed information
on what is available pertaining to Issaquena County.
The Mississippi Department of Transportation web has an excellent collection
of Mississippi county
road maps, including Issaquena County. Very detailed showing sections,
townships, ranges, creeks, cemeteries, roads and much more, these maps
are in Adobe PDF format.
The
Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System is an excellent resource from
the US National Park Service. This system includes a computerized database
containing basic facts about servicemen who served during the Civil War.
The database currently contains approximately 2.7 million soldier names
from over 30 states and territories including 174,699 soldiers from Mississippi.
The
Official Land Patent Records Site is an excellent resource from the
US Department of Interior - Bureau of Land Management. Image access is
provided to more than two million Federal land title records for Eastern
Public Land States, issued between 1820 and 1908, including all the land
patents of Issaquena County.
Looking for a location in Issaquena County? If so try the USGS
GNIS database. Contains information on cemeteries, creeks, post offices
and much more!
The Political Graveyard Issaquena
County page contains several valuable links pertaining to Issaquena
County as well as links to biographies of politicians who were either born
in, or were residents of Issaquena County.
Plotting
your Ancestor's Deeds is a basic illustrated tutorial on discovering
the location of your ancestor's property in Issaquena County using deeds
and maps.
Issaquena County is in the area covered by The Vicksburg Genealogical Society. This society produces the quarterly, Mississippi River Routes. Mississippi River Routes features items of genealogical and historical interest for the Mississippi counties of Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Franklin, Hinds, Humphreys, Issaquena, Jefferson, Lincoln, Pike, Sharkey, Warren, Washington, Wilkinson and Yazoo, and the Louisiana parishes of Avoyelles, Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, East Carroll, Franklin, LaSalle, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union and West Carroll.
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African Ancestored Genealogy Links
AfriGeneas
African American
Cemeteries Online
Cyndi's List: African-American
African-American
Genealogy on the Web
About.com: African-American
Genealogy
Sankofa's African Slave Genealogy
The Freedmen's Bureau Online
Library of Congress: African American Perspectives
Genforum: African American Forum
American Civil War Research Links
The United States Civil War Center
Confederate Regimental History Links
Union Regimental History Links
The American Civil War
American Civil War Homepage
Message Boards, Queries and Mailing Lists for Issaquena County
Rootsweb.com
Message Board
Genforum Message
Board
Rootsweb.com
Mailing List
1907 Issaquena County Profile
Issaquena County was established January 23, 1844, during the first
administration of Governor Albert G. Brown. Its name is an Indian word
meaning deer river. Its territory was formerly embraced within the limits of Washington county,
and its limits were defined as all that part of Washington county south
of a line, “commencing on the Mississippi river between townships 13 and
14, and running east, between said townships, to the western boundary of
Yazoo county. March 29, 1876, together with Washington county, it contributed
to form the county of Sharkey. Issaquena constitutes
one of the later subdivisions of the so-called New Purchase acquired from
the Choctaws in 1820. It is a long, narrow county on the western border
of the State, in the Mississippi and Yazoo delta, and is bounded on the
north by Washington county, on the east by Sharkey and Warren counties,
on the south by Warren county and on the west by the Mississippi river.
It has a small population composed very largely of negroes and possesses
no towns of any size. It has a land surface of 473 square miles. Its wealth
lies in its fertile plantations and its extensive and heavily timbered
areas. The county seat is Mayersville, a river town in the northern part
of the county, which has a population of 250 souls and was named for David
Mayers, an extensive land owner in the county. Other small towns in the
county are Duncansby and Chotard, on the river, and Valley Park, Grace
and Booth on the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley R. R., which touches the
county at its northeastern and southeastern extremities. The Mississippi
river washes most of its western boundary, affording excellent and cheap
transportation by steamboat. Other waters are Deer creek, on the eastern
border; Steele’s Bayou, Lake Lafayette, Moon Lake, Five Mile Lake and
Cypress
lake. About two thirds of the county is heavily timbered with a heavy growth
of cypress, oaks, ash, gum, hackberry, hickory, locust, walnut and sassafras.
The soil is a rich alluvial loam and will produce luxuriant crops of cotton,
corn, oats, etc., even with improvident and negligent cultivation. When
the soil is properly handled, it will raise from one to two bales of cotton
per acre and from forty to eighty bushels of corn. Too much attention has
been paid to raising cotton in the past and not enough to the production
of corn, oats and meat, for which the region is peculiarly adapted.
The twelth United States census, 1900, yields the following statistics:
Number of farms, 1,646; acreage in farms, 90,676; acres improved, 55,052;
value of land exclusive of
buildings, $1,456,110; value of buildings, $413,870;
value of live stock, $334,035, and total value of products not fed, $887,071.
The number of manufacturing establishments was 38, capital, $174,390; wages
paid, $13,989; cost of materials used, $49,393; and total value of products,
$119,363. The total assessed valuation of real and personal property in
the county in 1905 was $1,489,928 and in 1906 it was $1,517,410.50 which
shows a gain of $27,482.50. The population in 1900 was composed of 622
whites, 9,778 colored, a total of 10,400 and a falling off since 1890 of
1,918.
From:
Mississipi: comprising sketches of counties, towns, events, institutions,
and persons, arranged in cyclopedic form
By Dunbar Rowland
Southern Historical Publishing
Atlanta, Georgia
1907
Issaquena
County Families
Note: The following links are to various
sites on the internet and are not part of the Issaquena County Genealogy
and History Project. These links are to websites that contain information
about Issaquena County families. Any visitor who has a website devoted
to an Issaquena County, Mississippi family is invited to submit the link
for inclusion on this list.
The
Coulter Family
The
Duncan Family
The
Birdsong Family
The
Farmer Family
The
Thomas Family
William Stamps Farish Biography
Mississippi Delta History &
Humanities Links
Mississippi
Delta Blues and Heritage Festival
Fatal Flood: A Story of Greed, Power and Race
For Further Research
Whenever you see the GeneaTip mouse on a page within the Issaquena
County Genealogy and History Project, additional information about the
resources on that page will be shown immediately under the mouse. For links,
names and addresses of Issaquena County libraries, local government, area
newspapers and state government be sure and visit the Issaquena Genealogy
and History Project Researchers' Directory.
The USGenWeb Search Us is a special project in the USGenWeb Project. Researchers can search all the local projects at once from any given state including local projects that have no search engine. Definitely a nifty tool that is long overdue for the genealogical and historical researcher.
The Mississippi 1885 Atlas and Gazetteer site contains a listing of all places found in Mississippi during 1885, as well as 1885 maps of each of Mississippi's counties.
Richard P. Sevier, state coordinator for The
Mississippi Digital Map Library, a part of the USGenWeb Archives Digital
Map Library, has created an excellent collection of historic Mississippi
maps. Be sure to visit this excellent site.
Mississippi History and Genealogy Notes blog is an excellent site devoted entirely to research in Mississippi. The site contains, not only current news relating to Mississippi research, but many excellent Missisisippi links as well.
Documenting the American South is an electronic collection sponsored by the Academic Affairs Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It provides access to digitized primary materials that offer Southern perspectives on American history and culture. It supplies teachers, students, and researchers at every educational level with a wide array of titles they can use for reference, studying, teaching, and research.
The Mississippi Historical Society's online publication Mississippi History Now is a facinating online magazine devoted entirely to Mississippi History. Be sure to click the Search the Archived Features link for numerous interesting articles devoted entirely to Mississippi history.
Cyndi's List of Genealogy
Sites on the Internet: US - Mississippi, contains an abundance of excellent
links to various internet sites dealing with Mississippi genealogy and
history.
The Online Books Page History: United States (Regional), and the Americas Section, contains links to scores of valuable 19th century and earlier regional histories, biographies and other works.
Making of America, (MoA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. The collection currently contains approximately 8,500 books and 50,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints.
Discover Mississippi
The Official Mississippi Travel and Tourism Guide
Vicksburg Convention and Visitors Bureau
Greenville/Washington County Convention and Visitors Bureau
If you have DSL, Cable or Broadband internet access, take a glorious, sweeping tour of the beautiful state of Mississippi. The storyteller keeps you wanting more and more of the grand scope of the majestic aerial views, the charm of our small towns, the sophistication of our cities, the humor of our personalities, the achievements of our artists, writers and musicians, the depth of our history and heritage, and the excitement of our outlook for the future. To view the movie, I Am Mississippi, simply click the movie screen above. The movie will open in a new window. Simply close the window to return to The Issaquena Genealogy and History Project.
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