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File:Tallahatchie River.jpg
Tallahatchie River south of Minter City

The Tallahatchie River is a river in Mississippi which flows Template:Convert<ref>Hopkins, Daniel J., editor (1997). Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary. (Third Edition). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Inc. Publishers. p.1155.Template:ISBN</ref> from Tippah County, through Tallahatchie County, to Leflore County, where it joins the Yalobusha River to form the Yazoo River,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite GNIS</ref> which ultimately meets the Mississippi River at Vicksburg, Mississippi. The river is navigable for about Template:Convert.<ref>Hopkins. Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary.</ref> At Money, Mississippi, the river's flow measures approximately Template:Convert per second.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Tallahatchie is a Choctaw name meaning "rock of waters".<ref>Stafford, James Douglas. (November 16, 1975). "The Way of the River". The Commercial Appeal. Mid-South Magazine. (Memphis, Tennessee).</ref> The sources of the Tallahatchie River have outcrops of iron sandstone.<ref>Rowland, Dunbar. (1925). History of Mississippi: the Heart of the South. 1. Chicago, IL-Jackson, MS: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co. pp. 38-39.</ref>

As part of the Flood Control Act of 1936, the federal government built an earth-filled flood control dam on the Tallahatchie near the town of Sardis, Mississippi, creating Sardis Lake.

TributariesEdit

  • Coldwater River
  • Old Yocona River
  • Yocona River Canal<ref>Mississippi State Highway Department. General Highway Map Panola County Mississippi. (Map) 1981.</ref>
  • Little Tallahatchie River
  • Old Little Tallahatchie River
  • Panola Quitman Floodway<ref>Mississippi State Highway Department. General Highway Map Tallahatchie County Mississippi. (Map) 1979.</ref>
  • McIvor Drainage Canal
  • Tippah River
  • Cassidy Bayou
  • Black Bayou
  • Ascalmore Creek
  • Tillatoba Creek

In popular cultureEdit

The river is mentioned in "Tallahatchie River Blues", recorded by Mattie Delaney in 1930. This blues song laments the devastation caused in the local African-American community by a flood on the normally shallow river. The river is Template:Convert deep with very sharp rocks.

The river has historical significance due to the 1955 murder of Emmett Till, an African-American boy visiting from Chicago, who was brutally murdered by white men in Money, Mississippi, for allegedly whistling at a white woman. In 2017, Till's accuser, Carolyn Bryant Donham, spoke to Timothy B. Tyson, a Duke University professor who has written a book, The Blood of Emmett Till. In it, he wrote that Donham said of her long-ago allegations that Till grabbed her and was menacing and sexually crude toward her, "that part is not true." Till was beaten, shot, and sunk in the river with a cotton gin fan tied around his neck by barbed wire.

This event is mentioned in the song, "Freedom Highway" by the Staple Singers, in the lines, "Found dead people in the forests, Tallahatchie River and lakes... whole world is wondering, what's wrong with the United States?"<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Till’s badly mutilated body was found near the river by two boys who were fishing.

The eponymous wooden bridge over the river was popularized in Bobbie Gentry's 1967 hit song "Ode to Billie Joe", which has the refrain, "Billie Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie bridge." A film was titled Ode to Billy Joe. The wooden bridge collapsed in 1972 after being set alight by vandals.<ref name="NME Rock 'N' Roll Years">Template:Cite book</ref> It crossed the Tallahatchie River at Money, Mississippi, about Template:Convert north of Greenwood, Mississippi. The bridge has since been replaced.

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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