{{Redirect|Port Gibson|the hamlet in New York|Port Gibson, New York}} {{Infobox settlement |official_name = Port Gibson, Mississippi |settlement_type = City |image_skyline = ClaiborneCourthouseConfederate31Aug08.jpg |motto = "Too beautiful to burn" |imagesize = |image_caption = Claiborne County Courthouse and Confederate monument in Port Gibson |image_flag = Flag of Port Gibson, Mississippi.png |image_seal = |image_map = Claiborne_County_Mississippi_Incorporated_and_Unincorporated_areas_Port_Gibson_Highlighted.svg |mapsize = 250px |map_caption = Location of Port Gibson, Mississippi |image_map1 = |mapsize1 = |map_caption1 = |pushpin_map = USA |pushpin_map_caption = Location in the United States |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = {{flag|United States}} |subdivision_type1 = State |subdivision_name1 = {{flag|Mississippi}} |subdivision_type2 = County |subdivision_name2 = Claiborne |government_footnotes = |government_type = |leader_title = Mayor |leader_name = Willie A. White |leader_title1 = |leader_name1 = |established_title = |established_date = |unit_pref = Imperial |area_footnotes = <ref name="CenPopGazetteer2020">{{cite web|title=2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files|url=https://www2.census.gov/geo/docs/maps-data/data/gazetteer/2020_Gazetteer/2020_gaz_place_28.txt|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=July 24, 2022}}</ref> |area_magnitude = |area_total_km2 = 4.55 |area_land_km2 = 4.55 |area_water_km2 = 0.00 |area_total_sq_mi = 1.75 |area_land_sq_mi = 1.75 |area_water_sq_mi = 0.00 |population_as_of = 2020 |population_footnotes = |population_total = 1269 |population_density_km2 = 279.18 |population_density_sq_mi = 723.08 |timezone = Central (CST) |utc_offset = -6 |timezone_DST = CDT |utc_offset_DST = -5 |elevation_footnotes = |elevation_m = 36 |elevation_ft = 118 |coordinates = {{coord|31|57|22|N|90|58|59|W|region:US_type:city|display=inline,title}} |postal_code_type = ZIP code |postal_code = 39150 |area_code = 601 |blank_name = FIPS code |blank_info = 28-59560 |blank1_name = GNIS feature ID |blank1_info = 0676254 |website = |pop_est_as_of = |pop_est_footnotes = |population_est = }}

'''Port Gibson''' is a city and the county seat of Claiborne County, Mississippi, United States.<ref name="GR6">{{cite web|url=http://www.naco.org/Counties/Pages/FindACounty.aspx|access-date=2011-06-07|title=Find a County|publisher=National Association of Counties}}</ref> As of the 2020 census, Port Gibson had a population of 1,269.<ref name="Census2020PLLede">{{cite web|title=2020 Decennial Census Redistricting Data (Public Law 94-171)|url=https://api.census.gov/data/2020/dec/pl?get=NAME%2CP1_001N&for=place%3A59560&in=state%3A28|website=United States Census Bureau|year=2021|access-date=February 4, 2026|df=mdy}}</ref> It is bordered on the west by the Mississippi River.

The first European settlers in Port Gibson were French colonists in 1729; it was part of their ''La Louisiane''. After the United States acquired the territory from France in 1803 in the Louisiana Purchase, the town was chartered that same year. To develop cotton plantations in the area after Indian Removal of the 1830s, planters who moved to the state brought with them or imported thousands of enslaved Africans from the Upper South, disrupting many families. Well before the Civil War, the majority of the county's population were enslaved.

Several notable people are natives of Port Gibson. The town saw action during the American Civil War. Port Gibson has several historical sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places (National Register of Historic Places listings in Claiborne County, Mississippi).

In the twentieth century, Port Gibson was home to The Rabbit's Foot Company. It had a substantial role in the development of blues in Mississippi, operating taverns and juke joints now included on the Mississippi Blues Trail.

In the second half of the twentieth century many jobs in agriculture were lost because of industrialization, which, combined with a lack of other jobs, has led to a substantial loss of population and to poverty in the city and the surrounding county. Port Gibson's population peaked in 1950. The last major employer, the Port Gibson Oil Works, a cottonseed mill, closed in 2002. ==History== {{More citations needed section|date=March 2022}} thumb|right|Market Street-Suburb Ste. Mary Historic District

Port Gibson is the third-oldest European-American settlement in Mississippi. Its development began in 1729 by French colonists and was then within French-claimed territory known as ''La Louisiane''. The British acquired this area after the French ceded their colonies east of the Mississippi River in 1763,<ref name="kilborn"/> following their defeat in the Seven Years' War.

Following the U.S. acquisition of former French territory through the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, more Americans entered the area. Port Gibson was chartered as a town that year on March 12, 1803. The federal government carried out Indian Removal in the 1830s, pushing the Five Civilized Tribes, including the Choctaw and Chickasaw peoples, west of the Mississippi River to Indian Territory. It took over their lands in the Southeast for sale and development by European Americans.

Planters developed cotton plantations in the fertile river lowlands of the Mississippi Delta and other riverfront areas, dependent on the labor of enslaved Africans, initially brought from the Upper South. The African Americans comprised a majority in the county before the Civil War, and this continued.

With international demand high for cotton, such planters prospered. As the planter population increased, they founded the Port Gibson Female College in 1843 to educate their daughters. The college later closed and one of its buildings now serves as the city hall.<ref name="BlackBarnwell2002">{{cite book|author1=Patti Carr Black|author2=Marion Barnwell|title=Touring Literary Mississippi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0KeMcsq5fgEC&pg=PA179|access-date=August 19, 2012|year=2002|publisher=Univ. Press of Mississippi|isbn=978-1-57806-368-0|page=179}}</ref> Similarly, they founded Chamberlain-Hunt Academy in 1879, a military preparatory boarding school which became co-ed in 1971. CHA was the legacy of Oakland College founded in 1830 in nearby Lorman. Oakland was closed during the Civil War and the Oakland campus was sold to the State of Mississippi to create Alcorn A&M College, the first land-grant college for African Americans. Chamberlain-Hunt closed its doors in 2014. In 1990, the first African American students graduated from Chamberlain-Hunt.

Port Gibson was the site of several clashes during the American Civil War and figured in Union General Ulysses S. Grant's Vicksburg Campaign. He was attempting to gain control over the Mississippi River. The Battle of Port Gibson occurred on May 1, 1863, and resulted in the deaths of more than 200 Union and Confederate soldiers. The Confederate defeat resulted in their losing the ability to hold Mississippi and defend against an amphibious attack.

===Later nineteenth century to present=== Reportedly, many of the historic buildings in the town survived the Civil War because Grant proclaimed the city to be "too beautiful to burn". These words appear on the sign marking the city limits.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hendrickson|first=Paul|title=Sons of Mississippi|publisher=Alfred A. Knopf|year=2003|place=New York|isbn=0-375-40461-9|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/sonsofmississipp00paul}}</ref>

Despite postwar economic upheaval, the city continued as a center of trade and economy associated with cotton. In 1882, the Port Gibson Oil Works started operating, established as one of the first cottonseed oil plants in the United States.<ref name="PGOWMBNom">{{Citation | last1 = Gold | first1 = Jack A. | date = January 1979 | title = Historic Sites Survey: Port Gibson (cottonseed crushing) Oil Works Mill Building | url = {{NRHP url|79003422}} | access-date = August 5, 2018 | format = PDF }}.</ref> This historic industrial building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.<ref name="NPG">{{citation | last = National Park Service | authorlink = National Park Service | title = NPGallery: Port Gibson Oil Works Mill Building | url = https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/79003422 | access-date = August 5, 2018 }}.</ref> The mill finally closed in 2002.<ref name="kilborn">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/18/us/a-vestige-of-king-cotton-fades-out-in-mississippi.html|title=A Vestige of King Cotton Fades Out in Mississippi|last=Kilborn |first=Peter T. |work=New York Times| date=18 October 2002|access-date=8 October 2021}}</ref>

[[File:PortGibsonSynagogeExxon.jpg|thumb|''Gemiluth Chessed'' synagogue]] ''Gemiluth Chessed'' synagogue, built in 1892, had an active congregation when the town was thriving as the county seat and a trading center. It had attracted nineteenth-century Jewish immigrants from the German states and Alsace-Lorraine. After starting as peddlers, the later generations of men became cotton brokers and merchants. This is the oldest synagogue and the only Moorish Revival building in the state.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/09/29/us/small-town-south-clings-to-jewish-history.html|work=New York Times|title=Small-Town South Clings to Jewish History|author=Peter Applebome|date=September 29, 1991|access-date=September 1, 2011}}</ref> It is topped by a Russian-style dome. As the economy changed, the Jewish population gradually moved to larger cities and areas offering more opportunity, and none remain in Port Gibson.

The Rabbit's Foot Company was established in 1900 by Pat Chappelle, an African-American theatre owner in Tampa, Florida. This was the leading traveling vaudeville show in the southern states, with an all-black cast of singers, musicians, comedians, and entertainers.<ref name=abbott/>

After Chappelle's death in 1911, the company was taken over by Fred Swift Wolcott, a white planter. After 1918, he based the touring company at his plantation near Port Gibson, with offices in town. He continued to manage it until 1950, when he sold it. The Rabbit's Foot Company remained popular, but as some white performers joined and used blackface, it was no longer considered "authentic".<ref name=abbott>[https://books.google.com/books?id=u4rc-BKNCyoC&dq=%22Pat+Chappelle%22&pg=PA248 Lynn Abbott, Doug Seroff, ''Ragged But Right: Black Traveling Shows, Coon Songs, and the Dark Pathway to Blues and Jazz''], University Press of Mississippi, 2009, pp.248-268</ref>

In 2002 the ''New York Times'' characterized Port Gibson as 80 percent black and poor, with 20 percent of families living on incomes of less than $10,000 a year, according to the 2000 Census.<ref name ="kilbornb">PETER T. KILBORN, "A Vestige of King Cotton Fades Out in Mississippi", ''New York Times'', October 18, 2002.</ref>

==Legacy== A Mississippi Blues Trail marker was placed in Port Gibson to commemorate the contribution the Rabbit's Foot Company made to the development of the blues in Mississippi, in its decades of operation after the founder's death.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.msbluestrail.org/blues_trail/|title=Mississippi Blues Commission - Blues Trail|publisher=www.msbluestrail.org|access-date=2008-05-28}}</ref>

In 2006, an exhibition, ''The Blues in Claiborne County: From Rabbit Foot Minstrels to Blues and Cruise'', was shown in Port Gibson, exploring the history of the show, with artifacts and memorabilia.<ref name=hnet>[http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=h-southern-music&month=0608&week=e&msg=GmrMw4aB8fY4GBCoZ8IWgA&user=&pw= "Rabbit Foot Minstrel Exhibit in Port Gibson Until September 30, 2006". ''h-southern-music'']. Retrieved 10 July 2014</ref>

==Other National Register of Historic Places buildings and sites== *Van Dorn House, completed c. 1830, built by Peter Aaron Van Dorn, a lawyer, planter, and judge *McGregor, house designed in Greek Revival style by Van Dorn (above) for one of his daughters, completed 1835 *Windsor Ruins, 23 columns of a plantation house that burned c. 1890, located about ten miles southwest of the city that have been featured in two motion pictures *Wintergreen Cemetery, historic cemetery with burials of notable residents

==Geography== According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of {{convert|1.8|sqmi|km2}}, all land.

===Climate=== {{Weather box | width = auto | collapsed = yes | single line = yes | location = Port Gibson, Mississippi (1991–2020, extremes 1893–present)

| Jan record high F = 88 | Feb record high F = 87 | Mar record high F = 94 | Apr record high F = 94 | May record high F = 99 | Jun record high F = 104 | Jul record high F = 104 | Aug record high F = 107 | Sep record high F = 105 | Oct record high F = 97 | Nov record high F = 89 | Dec record high F = 84 | year record high F = 107

| Jan high F = 59.5 | Feb high F = 63.7 | Mar high F = 71.0 | Apr high F = 77.9 | May high F = 84.9 | Jun high F = 90.5 | Jul high F = 92.9 | Aug high F = 93.4 | Sep high F = 89.1 | Oct high F = 80.1 | Nov high F = 69.1 | Dec high F = 61.5 | year high F = 77.8

| Jan mean F = 47.6 | Feb mean F = 50.9 | Mar mean F = 58.4 | Apr mean F = 65.2 | May mean F = 73.2 | Jun mean F = 79.8 | Jul mean F = 82.3 | Aug mean F = 82.2 | Sep mean F = 77.2 | Oct mean F = 66.6 | Nov mean F = 55.9 | Dec mean F = 49.8 | year mean F = 65.8

| Jan low F = 35.7 | Feb low F = 38.1 | Mar low F = 45.9 | Apr low F = 52.5 | May low F = 61.5 | Jun low F = 69.1 | Jul low F = 71.8 | Aug low F = 70.9 | Sep low F = 65.3 | Oct low F = 53.1 | Nov low F = 42.7 | Dec low F = 38.1 | year low F = 53.7

| Jan record low F = -5 | Feb record low F = -1 | Mar record low F = 15 | Apr record low F = 26 | May record low F = 34 | Jun record low F = 45 | Jul record low F = 51 | Aug record low F = 51 | Sep record low F = 35 | Oct record low F = 23 | Nov record low F = 15 | Dec record low F = 4 | year record low F = -5

| precipitation colour = green | Jan precipitation inch = 6.10 | Feb precipitation inch = 5.06 | Mar precipitation inch = 6.01 | Apr precipitation inch = 5.45 | May precipitation inch = 4.47 | Jun precipitation inch = 4.05 | Jul precipitation inch = 3.94 | Aug precipitation inch = 3.56 | Sep precipitation inch = 3.75 | Oct precipitation inch = 4.11 | Nov precipitation inch = 4.44 | Dec precipitation inch = 5.32 | year precipitation inch = 56.26

| Jan snow inch = 0.2 | Feb snow inch = 0.2 | Mar snow inch = 0.1 | Apr snow inch = 0.0 | May snow inch = 0.0 | Jun snow inch = 0.0 | Jul snow inch = 0.0 | Aug snow inch = 0.0 | Sep snow inch = 0.0 | Oct snow inch = 0.0 | Nov snow inch = 0.0 | Dec snow inch = 0.0 | year snow inch = 0.5

| unit precipitation days = 0.01 in | Jan precipitation days = 9.9 | Feb precipitation days = 8.4 | Mar precipitation days = 8.8 | Apr precipitation days = 7.6 | May precipitation days = 7.9 | Jun precipitation days = 8.9 | Jul precipitation days = 9.4 | Aug precipitation days = 8.3 | Sep precipitation days = 6.8 | Oct precipitation days = 5.8 | Nov precipitation days = 7.4 | Dec precipitation days = 8.8 | year precipitation days = 98.0

| unit snow days = 0.1 in | Jan snow days = 0.1 | Feb snow days = 0.0 | Mar snow days = 0.1 | Apr snow days = 0.0 | May snow days = 0.0 | Jun snow days = 0.0 | Jul snow days = 0.0 | Aug snow days = 0.0 | Sep snow days = 0.0 | Oct snow days = 0.0 | Nov snow days = 0.0 | Dec snow days = 0.0 | year snow days = 0.2

| source = NOAA<ref name="NOWData">{{cite web |url = https://www.weather.gov/wrh/Climate?wfo=jan |title = NOWData - NOAA Online Weather Data |publisher = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration |access-date = October 16, 2023}}</ref><ref name="NCEI">{{cite web |url = https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/services/data/v1?dataset=normals-monthly-1991-2020&stations=USC00227132&format=pdf&dataTypes=MLY-TMAX-NORMAL,MLY-TMIN-NORMAL,MLY-TAVG-NORMAL,MLY-PRCP-NORMAL,MLY-SNOW-NORMAL |title = Summary of Monthly Normals 1991-2020 |publisher = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration |access-date = October 16, 2023}}</ref> }}

==Demographics== {{US Census population |1890= 1524 |1900= 2113 |1910= 2252 |1920= 1691 |1930= 1861 |1940= 2748 |1950= 2920 |1960= 2861 |1970= 2589 |1980= 2371 |1990= 1810 |2000= 1840 |2010= 1567 |2020= 1269 |footnote=U.S. Decennial Census<ref name="DecennialCensus">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census.html|title=Census of Population and Housing|publisher=Census.gov|access-date=June 4, 2015}}</ref> }}

{| class="wikitable" |+Port Gibson by race as of 2020<ref>{{Cite web|title=Explore Census Data|url=https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?g=1600000US2859560&tid=DECENNIALPL2020.P2|access-date=2021-12-07|website=data.census.gov}}</ref> !Race !Num. !Perc. |- |White |122 |9.61% |- |Black or African American |1,122 |88.42% |- |Other/Mixed |20 |1.58% |- |Hispanic or Latino |5 |0.39% |} As of the 2020 United States census, there were 1,269 people, 554 households, and 290 families residing in the city.

==Education== Port Gibson is served by the Claiborne County School District.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www2.census.gov/geo/maps/DC2020/PL20/st28_ms/schooldistrict_maps/c28021_claiborne/DC20SD_C28021.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220731221535/https://www2.census.gov/geo/maps/DC2020/PL20/st28_ms/schooldistrict_maps/c28021_claiborne/DC20SD_C28021.pdf |archive-date=2022-07-31 |url-status=live|title=2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Claiborne County, MS|publisher=U.S. Census Bureau|accessdate=2022-07-31}} - [https://www2.census.gov/geo/maps/DC2020/PL20/st28_ms/schooldistrict_maps/c28021_claiborne/DC20SD_C28021_SD2MS.txt Text list]</ref> Port Gibson High School is the comprehensive high school of the district.

The Chamberlain-Hunt Academy, a private military boarding school, opened in Port Gibson in 1879. It was promoted as a Christian school in the late twentieth century. Nonetheless, it suffered declining enrollment and closed in 2014.<ref>{{cite web | title = Chamberlain-Hunt Academy to Close | publisher = WAPT Jackson | date = July 30, 2014 | url = http://www.wapt.com/news/central-mississippi/chamberlainhunt-academy-to-close/27222426}}</ref>

==Notable people== * Samuel Reading Bertron, banker * Cleo W. Blackburn, educator<ref name="BodenhamerBarrows1994">{{cite book|author1=David J. Bodenhamer|author2=Robert G. Barrows|title=The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bg13QcMSsq8C&pg=PA323|date=22 November 1994|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=0-253-11249-4|pages=323}}</ref> * Pete Brown, golfer, first African American to win on the PGA Tour * Jay Disharoon, lawyer and Mississippi legislator * Lil Green, blues and R&B singer and songwriter * Henry Hughes, lawyer, sociologist, state senator, and Confederate colonel<ref name="Faust1981">{{cite book|author=Drew Gilpin Faust|title=The Ideology of Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Antebellum South, 1830–1860|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_JkulqInISsC&pg=PA239|date=1 September 1981|publisher=LSU Press|isbn=978-0-8071-0892-5|pages=239}}</ref> * Yolanda Moore, former professional basketball player and girls basketball coach<ref>{{cite web |title=Yolanda Moore Named Girls Basketball Coach At Heritage Academy |url=https://olemisssports.com/news/2011/5/6/Yolanda_Moore_Named_Girls_Basketball_Coach_At_Heritage_Academy.aspx |website=Ole Miss Sports |access-date=20 May 2020}}</ref> * Jacob S. Raisin, rabbi * Irwin Russell, poet * Bob Shannon, high school football coach, known for his work in East St. Louis, Illinois<ref name="Horrigan1993">{{cite book|author=Kevin Horrigan|title=The Right Kind of Heroes: Coach Bob Shannon and the East St. Louis Flyers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kb8gsAmo68QC|year=1993|publisher=HarperPerennial|isbn=978-0-06-097578-4|page=84}}</ref> * V. C. Shannon, born in Port Gibson in 1910, one-term member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Shreveport, serving from 1972 to 1974 * J. D. Short, Delta blues guitarist, singer, and harmonicist<ref name="KRAMPERT2016">{{cite book|author=PETER KRAMPERT|title=The Encyclopedia of the Harmonica|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YRsxDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA159|date=23 March 2016|publisher=Mel Bay Publications|isbn=978-1-61911-577-4|pages=159}}</ref> * James G. Spencer, U.S. Representative from 1895 to 1897<ref name="Capace2001">{{cite book|author=Nancy Capace|title=Encyclopedia of Mississippi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dlLDIiQv9twC&pg=PA405|date=1 January 2001|publisher=Somerset Publishers, Inc.|isbn=978-0-403-09603-9|pages=405}}</ref> * Clement Sulivane, Confederate officer, politician, and member of the Maryland Senate from 1878 to 1880<ref name="Krick2003">{{cite book|author=Robert E. L. Krick|title=Staff Officers in Gray: A Biographical Register of the Staff Officers in the Army of Northern Virginia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qKvqCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA278|date=4 December 2003|publisher=Univ of North Carolina Press|isbn=978-0-8078-6307-7|pages=278}}</ref> * Earl Van Dorn, Confederate Civil War general * Peter Aaron Van Dorn, lawyer, judge, plantation owner, and one of the founders of Jackson, Mississippi<ref name="Gupton2013">{{cite book|author=Linda Gupton|title=Seasons in the South: The Lives Involved in the Death of General Van Dorn|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OB8eDbukv9gC&pg=PA41|date=5 June 2013|publisher=Author House|isbn=978-1-4817-5365-4|pages=41}}</ref> * James E. Winfield (1944–2000), civil rights attorney, city prosecutor, and politician; born in Port Gibson<ref name="Gale-2002">{{Cite book |last=Gale Cengage Learning |first= |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Who_s_Who_Among_African_Americans/8rXe0X6oX1UC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=James+Eros+Winfield+1944&dq=James+Eros+Winfield+1944&printsec=frontcover |title=Who's Who Among African Americans |date=July 2002 |publisher=Gale Research International, Limited |isbn=978-0-7876-5729-1 |pages=1423 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="The Vicksburg Post-1974">{{Cite news |date=May 19, 1974 |title=James Winfield Opens Law Office At 1720 Clay St. |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-vicksburg-post-james-winfield-opens/181028992/ |access-date=2025-09-14 |work=The Vicksburg Post |pages=10 |via=Newspapers.com}}</ref> * F. S. Wolcott (1882–1967), minstrel show proprietor

==See also== {{Portal|Mississippi}} * ''NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co.''

==References== {{Reflist}}

==External links== {{Commons category}} * {{wikivoyage inline|Port Gibson}} * [https://southernlagniappe.blogspot.com/2009/09/town-too-beautiful-to-burn.html Southern Lagniappe site - many architectural images] * [http://www.isjl.org/history/archive/ms/portgibson.htm History of Port Gibson's Jewish community] (from the Institute of Southern Jewish Life) ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120207120054/http://www.isjl.org/history/archive/ms/portgibson.htm Archive]) * [https://www.nps.gov/vick/learn/historyculture/battleportgibson.htm The Battle of Port Gibson] * [http://www.portgibsononthemississippi.com/welcome.html Port Gibson on the Mississippi]

{{Claiborne County, Mississippi}} {{Mississippi county seats}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:Port Gibson, Mississippi