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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Goin' Where the Southern Cross the Dog -- Mississippi Delta Blues



Where Southern Cross the Yellow Dog...Blues Photo by Susan Klopfer



I actually found this famous Mississippi Delta Blues spot one day while driving around the Mississippi Delta doing research for my book, WhereRebels Roost; Mississippi Civil Rights Revisited.

The story goes that bandleader W. C. Handy was waiting for a train at the Tutwiler railway station around the year 1903 when he heard a man playing slide guitar with a knife and singing “Goin’ where the Southern cross’ the Dog.” Handy later published his version of this song as “Yellow Dog Blues,” and later became known as the “Father of the Blues” after he based many of his popular blues pieces on the sounds he heard in the Delta.

The little town Tutwiler, just a few miles from Parchman Penitentiary where I lived, has been christened “the birthplace of the blues” in honor of  Handy’s chance meeting with the unnamed guitarist who was performing one of the earliest documented blues songs.  

Handy went on to lead an orchestra in nearby Clarksdale from 1903 to 1905, traveling the Delta and beyond, stopping to play dances for both white and African American audiences with music that incorporatd blues into his repertoire, after  hearing the Tutwiler guitarist and a string band playing twangy Delta blues in Cleveland, Mississippi. Although Handy’s writings never gave a specific date for the Tutwiler event, the U. S. Senate accepted 1903 when it declared 2003 the centennial “Year of the Blues.”

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You are invited to read a free chapter from my book, Where Rebels Roost; Mississippi Civil Rights Revisited  -- just Click Here. Your reviews and comments are always welcome.

Thanks -- Susan

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Ever Hear of the Mississippi Delta Blues?

Clarksdale, Mississippi Delta Blues Mural (Photo by Susan Klopfer)

Ever hear of the Mississippi Delta Blues? I hadn't, until I moved to the Delta several years ago. This mural appears in the town of Clarksdale today, reminiscent of the town's early blues and civil rights history. One of my favorite Clarksdale residents was not a bluesman, Aaron Henry. He was a man of great character who helped bring dramatic change to his hometown. You won't read much about Mr. Henry in typical civil rights history books, and yet he was fascinating, controversial and certainly an important agent of change. I have written about him, and you are invited to read a chapter here from my book, Where Rebels Roost, Mississippi Civil Rights Revisited. Just Click Here.

I will enjoy your comments and thoughts. Susan

Saturday, October 20, 2012

View across the bogue near Drew, Mississippi; free eBook Sample -- Who Killed Emmett Till?



This small bogue is just outside of Drew, Mississippi near the place where 14-year-old Emmett Till was beaten and murdered before his body was dumped into the Tallahatchie River. I once lived near this site and spent many long days talking to people of the Mississippi Delta who remembered when this even took place back in 1955. It is a fascinating history that I share in Who Killed Emmett Till?. You are invited to read a free sample of this eBook ...

Click Here --

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Mississippi Delta Slide Show and FREE eBook

Courthouse in Belzoni, Mississippi

CLICK HERE to view the Mississippi Delta Slide Show, and then Click Below and read a FREE online book about the Delta, Where Rebels Roost; Mississippi Civil Rights Revisited, by Susan Klopfer

CLICK HERE TO READ your free online book.




From Cuenca, Ecuador to Loja

...a beautiful trip through the mountains from Cuenca, Ecuador to Loja.


Saturday, October 13, 2012

The Mississippi Delta as the sun goes down

I love the Mississippi Delta. We moved there in 2003 and this opened a new door to the world for me.  I am a John Grisham fan, and reading his books while experiencing the Delta was quite a thrill. Each little town could have provided the back drop for a new Grisham novel. People were very friendly and many shared their stories of the Delta, good and bad. We lived next to the site where 14-year-old Emmett Till of Chicago was murdered in 1955 after whistling at a white woman, the owner of a small grocery story in the cotton hamlet of Money. I followed this story and others, and ended up writing a book about the region and the modern civil rights movement (Who Killed Emmett Till?). Today as I live in Ecuador, I still cherish my time spent in the Delta.
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