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Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Friday, October 31, 2025

November 11, 2025: The Forgotten Role of Natchez in the Reconstruction Era of Mississippi: Speaker Jere Nash, author of Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1862-1877.



We will take a look at the 10-year period after the Civil War. This turbulent and eventful era of reconstruction was a time when Black Mississippians embraced their new freedom and how White Mississippians could not.
A native of Greenville, Mississippi, Jere Nash was a political consultant until he retired several years ago.
He is co-author with Andy Taggart of two books: Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2008 (2nd ed.) and Mississippi Fried Politics: Tall Tales from the Back Rooms. The former was recognized by the Mississippi Historical Society as the best book of Mississippi history published in 2006 and by the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters as the best non-fiction book published in Mississippi in 2006.
Nash is co-author with Haley Barbour of America's Great Storm: Leading Through Hurricane Katrina. His narrative history of Reconstruction in Mississippi is part of the Heritage of Mississippi series.
The event will start with a social at 5:30 p.m. and the program at 6:00 p.m., November 11, 2025 at 108 South Commerce Street, Natchez, MS 39120. The program is free to the public, and hosted by the Natchez Historical Society.  

Monday, July 2, 2018

Politics of Summer



Summertime.
Garden-district cottage.
Cats on the porch.
Ancient oaks. Peaceful.
Shady.

Tomatoes -- blood red --
and mayonnaise,
salted, peppered,
waiting
on the table.

Last week a feather
in the kitchen.
Yesterday a wing in the hall.

A cardinal batters
the bedroom window,
knocking to come in.
A wren batters from within.
How do I get out?
How did you get in?

Last night, a fight. Barking
In the den.  Flick the light
and then, a raccoon
dashes for the door.

Soon half a squirrel,
intestines twirled
on the front steps. Cats
draped on benches,
lick themselves.

Sweet scent of summer
Smells like death.

~ Elodie Pritchartt
07/02/2018