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re: Drove US 71 between Pineville and Bossier today.
Posted on 1/28/24 at 9:13 am to Spankum
Posted on 1/28/24 at 9:13 am to Spankum
quote:
Only Bunkie appears to be thriving
Relatively maybe so. By and large, rural southern America is a corpse of its former self.
Greenville MS, Donaldsonville, Port Allen, all those old farm cities are just shells. Still some money lurking around all of them but by and large they're totally dead.
The Little Man is a historical documentary
Posted on 1/28/24 at 11:44 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
quote:
Greenville MS, Donaldsonville, Port Allen, all those old farm cities are just shells
Greenville was more of a port city than farm. That town has gotten so bad, the industrial park on the north side of tow. is creepy as frick. There’s a manufacturer of food processing equipment out there that makes stuff for the catfish plants, it’s pretty much all that’s left in business. There are probably a dozen shuttered factories around it overgrown with weeds
Greenville and Clarksdale have gotten bad. So has Yazoo City
Cleveland, Indianola, and Greenwood are still doing ok. Greenwood has Milwaukee tools, Viking appliances, and 2 catfish processors keeping it afloat. Cleveland has Delta State and Baxter pharmaceuticals and a few other manufacturing facilities. Indianola has Gresham Petroleum that owns all the Double Quicks and a lot of farm/catfish money. Also a big dollar general warehouse. Being the intersection of Hwy 82 and 49 helps
Belzoni though is in a sad sad state. It pains me knowing how much of a thriving town it was in the 90s and early 2000s. There’s nothing left there. When the catfish industry hit hard times in 2008 it was hit the hardest. Humphreys county at one time had 100,000 acres of catfish farms and 5 processing plants and produced 80% of the catfish in the nation. Today it has maybe 5,000 acres in production and two processors. It’s really sad
My little town of 900 people (Inverness) has managed to stay nice. 80% of the downtown buildings are occupied with businesses. 2 restaurants, insurance agency, Freemason lodge, 2 barbers, couple farm offices, 2 grocery stores, gas station and a laundromat. At least it’s not vacant and crumbling there was a concerted effort that started 20 years ago to try to prevent the town from befalling the fate of other delta towns by a few wealthy locals buying up vacant homes fixing them up and finding nice families to move into them without them being put on the market. This was done to keep demographics “favorable” for the town. We have a ton of young families and more members in the rotary club than Cleveland has. The people here really care a lot about this town
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