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He stands alone

Scott Walker October 11, 2016

Culturally Alone: He lives in Drew, Mississippi, which is a town within Sunflower County. The town has only 1,801 residents and needless to say, he stands out.

Since 1990, the population has been on the decrease in Drew. In 1991, the population rang in at 2,400 residents. By 2014, the number was down to 1,801 residents.

In Drew, 82.7% of the population is black while 16% are white. In other words, he represents 1.3% of the “Other” category. To make the math clear, only 23 people in Drew are either American Indian or directly from cultures outside the U.S.

If we were to further examine the numbers, 0.7% of the residents in Drew are Hispanic, 0.2% are American Indian, 0.2% are Asian and 0.2% are classified as being part of one or two more races.

Talk about being culturally alone, this would be a prime example of that. Sometimes being different is a good thing while other times it means you can't fully relate to your surroundings, others fail to relate to you and you stand alone.

In Drew, this man works hard for a living while owning his own gas station and grocery. He also operates a popular package store. However, people litter his property despite his significant request for them not to. He stands alone.

 

In people, People Tags Drew, Mississippi, Delta, Delta Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, street photographym, black and white, Sony, Sony Alpha, Scott Walker
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The prison saved the community

Scott Walker October 11, 2016

While the Corrections Corporation of America operates a prison directly behind his home, he does not work there. However, he does work security for a local company in the Delta of Mississippi. 

Tallahatchie County, Mississippi is a small community in the Delta that has a little more than 15,000 residents. Of that number, about 600 work in the prison behind this man’s home. The prison is contracted through the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Before the opening of the prison, the county was on the downfall quick. 

While standing in his front yard on a hot September day, he told me, “The only thing that made a difference was they put that private prison back here [pointing behind his home].” CCA pays property taxes to Tallahatchie County for the facility.

Since opening in year 2000, the prison has served as both a county jail and a prison that houses inmates from all over the country. The prison currently has inmates from Mississippi, Wisconsin, Colorado, Louisiana, Hawaii and California. 

In 2008, California sent 1,300 inmates to the facility in Mississippi. Soon after their arrival, a riot broke out between rival California gang members. This man remembered that day well, “I seen they was on top of the building. They had SWAT on top of the building and stuff like that.” He said the county had to shut the highway in front of the prison down until the problem was fixed and inmates back in their cells. 

Some may ask if the community likes having inmates from all over the country in their local facility. The answer would be an overwhelming yes. 

If other states did not send inmates to Tallahatchie County, the prison would fold and the town would see massive layoffs from CCA. That happened in 2001 when Alabama withdrew their inmates. The employee number went from 204 to 40 by the end of 2001. However, they have since recovered and continue to grow steadily. 

I think it is safe to say that all in all, the prison literally saved the county and the city of Tutwiler, Mississippi.

In people, People Tags Tallahatchie County Mississippi, Mississippi, Delta, Mississippi Delta, Tutwiler, Sony, Sony Alpha, Scott Walker, poverty
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Living the the impoverished Delta region of Mississippi

Scott Walker October 9, 2016

In Clarksdale, Mississippi I spoke to this man who told me that the jobs are gone and the youth has gone wild. He is retired and calls the Delta home.

“I’ve lived here about 55 years,” he told me. When asked to explain the area he stated, “I done saw the whole town change, there used to be plenty of jobs and everything, mostly all the jobs done left – it’s sad, but that’s the way it is – and people done changed too, the crime rate wasn’t as high as it is now and a lot of killings been going on here and back in the day, it wasn’t like that, people had love for one another.”

As for the biggest crimes in the Delta, he told me shootings and assaults. He then said, “You know, kids are raising their self. There’s no discipline in the homes. The average grandmother now is maybe 34-35 years old – when I was coming up the average grandmother was about 70 something.”

In people, People Tags Clarksdale, Mississippi, Delta, Mississippi Delta, poverty, Scott Walker, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, people, life, black and white
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Sunflower County in the Delta

Scott Walker October 8, 2016

I shot this photo in Sunflower, Mississippi in the Delta.

He was with three of his friends behind a convenient store and liquor store. However, before I left the owner asked all three to leave the area suggesting that all they do when behind the store is litter.

Sunflower County is often called Sunflower Country. It was named Sunflower in 1844.

In the 1930's, the county had over 66,000 residents. Today, that number is down to 27,005. It is one of the poorest counties in the state and also one of the poorest in the U.S.

The Mississippi State Penitentiary is one of the largest employers in the area. It is the home of Mississippi's death row and execution chamber.

In people, People Tags Mississippi, Delta, Sunflower, Mississippi Delta, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, Scott Walker, poverty, people, street photography, black and white
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Meet Henry of Nickson Juke Joint

Scott Walker October 4, 2016

He owns a small bar in the Delta of Mississippi. There were no windows and I felt as if I should knock to go inside.

There were about six men sitting out front drinking and smoking on a beautiful Sunday morning and they looked at me as if I were lost, however they invited me to go inside.

After I walked in I was greeted by Henry, the owner of Nickson Juke Joint… I did not see a sign on the front of the bar and his Mississippi drawl was long and sincere, but a foreign language to me. We then started to talk about the past as I sat down at the bar with my camera in hand.

Henry is 72 years old and has lived in Mississippi his entire life. He told me, “When I grew up around here, they was pickin’ cotton paying like $1.25 per hour for pickin’ cotton – mostly everybody, that’s what they was paying and $5 a day for driving-driving a tractor.”

I talked to him about growing up in the Delta and he said, “It was hard, during the time that I come up.” He then told me that his family lived in a small farm house, “My parents and them, we stayed on a farm like a sharecropper and picking cotton, pick ten bales of cotton a day they get $10 and they split the money with you.”

Juke joint: a bar featuring music on a jukebox and typically having an area for dancing.

 

In People, people Tags Nickson Juke Joint, Juke Joint, Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, poverty, people, street photography, black and white, Scott Walker, Sony, Sony Alpha, 24-70mm
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A swamp in the Delta of Mississippi

Scott Walker October 2, 2016

It looked like a painting both in life and in picture. The swamps of the Mississippi Delta. 

"I love to think of nature as an unlimited broadcasting station, through which God speaks to us every hour, if we will only tune in." -George Washington Carver

In Places Tags Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, Delta, nature, life, Scott Walker, Small Town Big World, Sony, Alpha, Sony Alpha, 24/70
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Farming, a way of life

Scott Walker October 2, 2016

On the move with big equipment: Even under dark rain filled clouds, every turn in the Delta region of Mississippi offers a new feast for the eyes of little boys who grew up with Tonka trucks and tractors. 

In Transportation Tags Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, Delta, John Deere, tractor, Scott Walker
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Hard Work in the Mississippi Delta

Scott Walker October 2, 2016

Hard work at a small used tire shop in the Mississippi Delta. 

"The price of success is hard work, dedication to the job at hand, and the determination that whether we win or lose, we have applied the best of ourselves to the task at hand." - Vince Lombardi

Tags Mississippi, mississippidelta, delta, scott walker, street photography, hard work, poverty, life, street photography black and white, people, sony, sony alpha, Mississippi Delta
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Lost her husband upon his return from Vietnam

Scott Walker October 2, 2016

She is one of nearly 11,400 residents in Yazoo, Mississippi, between the Yazoo River and the Mississippi River.

She has been a widow since her husband died shortly after his return from Vietnam. However, she was quick to tell me that he took very good care of her.

When asked if she would like to move, the answer was, “If I could move to D.C. where my kids are.” Like many children in the Delta region, once they are old enough to move on, they quickly do in search of better jobs as employment is scarce in the Delta. She told me that if she had the money, she would make the move to Washington D.C., but she doesn’t, so she will stay put. 

Tags Vietnam, Yazoo City, Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, Delta, poverty, people, Scott Walker, street photography, life, Sony, Sony Alpha, mirrorless, Small Town Big World
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100 Pound Watermelons in the Delta of Mississippi

Scott Walker October 2, 2016

He is a former Sheriff’s Deputy in Tunica County, Mississippi and he is now retired. He carries a small handgun in his left pocket at all times, as crime is quite high on the Delta. Health problems like diabetes keeps him home many days, but he has a love for his garden and his small dog.

He lives alone with his Chihuahua, but finds joy in his garden that sits in the front yard of his camper. He has grown everything from okra to watermelons. He said with a smile from ear to ear, “I have grown everything from sweet corn, green beans, whole beans, you name it and I have pretty well grown it.”

He recently grew several 100 pound watermelons that he took to a local school in Tunica County. He said, “I had some special seed that grew some extremely large watermelons and I donated a couple of them to the local private school over here (Pointing South) and after football practice one day they enjoyed some big watermelons.”

 

In people, People Tags Tunica, Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, Delta, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, mirrorless, street photography, Scott Walker, Small Town Big World
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This is my home

Scott Walker October 1, 2016

She has called the Delta of Mississippi her home her entire life. She, like many residents, like the slower pace of life compared to larger cities. However, she confirmed that jobs are scarce.

As far as change of the years, she said little is different. Farm jobs were lost years ago with new technology. Retail stores are scarce along with restaurants these days.

An article about the Delta in The Economist stated (2013):

“You can’t out-poor the Delta,” says Christopher Masingill, joint head of the Delta Regional Authority, a development agency. In parts of it, he says, people have a lower life expectancy than in Tanzania; other areas do not yet have proper sanitation.

Tags Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, Sony, Sony Alpha, Scott Walker, Small Town big world, Delta, street photography, black and white, life
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He was a track runner in the 1970's

Scott Walker September 30, 2016

Mr. Richard Townsend lives in a small house that was once where slaves called home in the Delta of the Mississippi. The home is approximately 15 feet long and 8 feet wide. It consists of two small rooms with a toilet and kitchenette that was added years and years after slaves, then sharecroppers made the house their residence.

Mr. Townsend who was born in Mississippi, later moved to California. While on the west coast and in his early twenties, he was known for running trackfrom 1976 to 1979. He ran for the Santa Monica Track Club. The track club in California received worldwide recognition in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s after setting numerous world and national records.

I was able to track down information that showed his name on an April 1977 schedule to run in event #33 during the Drake Relays. Townsend ran the 440 yard relay in heat number one. His relay team made the run in 41.34 seconds, placing second in their event.

Today, Richard Townsend pays $125 per month to rent the small home that he has lived in for about 15 years. The area in which he lives is surrounded by drug dealers who harass him on a daily basis and even throw bricks at his house. He told me that people make and sell meth and crack in the neighborhood and drink non-stop. Townsend told me, “As for me, I only drink coffee and juice.”

While talking to Townsend, I witnessed the harassment first hand. Mr. Townsend told the subject who walked up to his house to leave and said to him, “He’s interviewing me, you need to get outta’ here.” The man continued to harass Mr. Townsend until we were finished talking.

Townsend has numerous “No Trespassing” signs posted on nearly every side of the small house. He even has a gate across his front steps so people cannot enter his home. The two do little to keep people away.

As for why he moved back to Mississippi… It was to be with his mother who was near death. She passed away shortly after his arrival and is buried in a cemetery about a mile from his home.

As I left I could see that he was tearing up. I think he enjoyed reminiscing about his mother and his track days. He seemed to be a very kind, open and thankful man.

In people, People Tags Richard Townsend, Mississippi, Mississippi Delta, poverty, people, life, Scott Walker, street photography, Belzoni, Belzoni Mississippi, street photography black and white
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We are all similar

Scott Walker September 28, 2016

The Mississippi Delta: “I’m from Memphis,” he told me with a slow country slur. He moved to the Delta of Mississippi for a slower pace of life and less crime than the big city.

We are all human beings working on our hurts, sins and life together despite of our current living arraignments. Some of us live in the Delta while others live in large cities at a faster pace. But underneath our hats, many of us have similar past.

“Practiced on our sins
Never gonna let me win, uh huh
Under everything
Just another human being, uh huh"

"Yeah, I don't want to hurt
There's so much in this world
To make me bleed”

-Eddie Vedder, Just Breath

In People, people Tags poverty, Mississippi Delta, Delta, Mississippi, Sony, Sony Alpha, Alpha, mirrorless, street photography, Scott Walker, Small Town Big World
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Living in the Delta

Scott Walker September 26, 2016

Mississippi Delta – Land Lost: The Mississippi Delta is a very different region of the country when compared to other areas.

After the Civil War, many areas were undeveloped, despite the well balanced land to grow a variety of crops on. Today, many of the Delta areas are still undeveloped and lack jobs, hospitals, education and more.

The Delta is comprised of a flat low lying land that sits between the Mississippi River and the Yazoo River. The land in between is 200 miles long and 70 miles wide at its widest point.

This resident has lived in the delta her entire life, since 1961.

In people, People Tags Sony, Sony Alpha, Mississippi Delta, Mississippi, people, poverty, life, Scott Walker
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