The city of Jackson will hold a virtual town hall at 11:00 this morning. The Zoom information is posted below.
Credit: Library of Congress |
A website of news, commentary, culture, & jackassery in the Jackson, Mississippi area.
Jackson Jambalaya - Copyright © 2008 · Theme by Brian Gardner · Bloggerized by Zona Cerebral and GirlyBlogger
9 comments:
Any follow up?
Since I am at work, are there any updates on this meeting?
Lake Hico was filled and is sustained by a five mile pipeline from the Rez.
I would love to see a map showing exactly where that pipeline is located.
3:58, I believe it's connected to a pump on the Pearl River, not the reservoir.
Pretty sure it's from the Rez, not the Pearl River.
Why not open it up? Polluted?
Not polluted at all.
A massive gator was found to be thriving in Lake Hico just a few years ago.
And yes, the Lake was unofficially closed during the early 1960's due to
racial segregation.
However, that segregation era was long over by the time "Mayors" Kane Ditto, Harvey Johnson and
Frank Melton took office.
Entergy Mississippi remains the current owner of Lake Hico.
Recently It's closure has been more about safety and insurance liability than anything relating the old segregation days.
Wikipedia says that the water is pumped from the Pearl River. That makes sense since Lake Hico predates the Rez. Hico is on 16th section land leased to Entergy.
"Wikipedia says"
Lord have mercy.
I'm older than the "Boomers" and remember the construction of the Rez.
Lake Hico was an afterthought between the Hinds County Board of Supervisors and Mississippi Power & Light.
( That company would become Entergy )
Controversy about the reservoir was rampant even back then.
Notice the original square concrete structure on the left when one is traveling across the dam to Rankin County. Pretty sure that's where the pipeline to Lake Hico starts.
But yeah. I would be very surprised if that makes it to Wikipedia.
However, what do I know ? . . . I only watched the Rez being constructed.
I'm not Wikipedia.
But there is no way Lake Hico predated the Ross Barnett Reservoir.
The Mississippi Department of Archives and History can prove that fact in a casual search.
Post a Comment