Place:Hancock, Mississippi, United States

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source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Hancock County is the southernmost county of the U.S. state of Mississippi and is named for Founding Father John Hancock. As of the 2010 census, the population was 43,929. Its county seat is Bay St. Louis.

Hancock County is part of the GulfportBiloxi, MS Metropolitan Statistical Area. It is situated along the Gulf of Mexico and the state line with Louisiana. The area is home to the John C. Stennis Space Center, NASA's largest rocket engine test facility.

The county was severely damaged from Hurricane Katrina on August 29, 2005, which caused a huge storm surge and catastrophic damage.

Contents

History

the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

This area of Mississippi was inhabited by indigenous peoples at the time of European colonization; the French were the first settlers and traders in the area. They imported African slaves as laborers, and in time a Creole class of free people of color developed.

After the United States conducted Indian Removal in the 1830s, more Protestant Americans migrated into this area, but it retained French and African Catholic influences. Located on the Gulf Coast, the county was regularly hit by hurricanes but its residents learned to handle these incidents.

In 2005, the county was the scene of the final landfall of the eye of Hurricane Katrina, and its communities and infrastructure suffered some of the most intense damage inflicted by that storm. Over the entire beach front, not one building or home was left intact. Nearly the entire first block off the beach was destroyed for the entire stretch.

Homes as far inland as were flooded by the historic storm surge, which occurred during a full moon high tide. All rivers and waterways were inundated by the surge. Highway 603 south from Interstate 10 was completely submerged, and the Highway 90 - Bay St. Louis Bridge was left looking like a stack of dominoes.

Houses were floated off their foundations. In Waveland and Bay St. Louis, some homes were stranded atop the railroad tracks and others in the middle of streets. Towns like Pearlington, Waveland, Bay St. Louis, Diamondhead, and Kiln suffered catastrophic damage.

FORMATION OF HANCOCK COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

The History of Hancock County, compiled by the Works Progress Administration

   West Florida came into the possession of the United States in 1810, and the Mississippi coast was quickly divided into two districts, of which the western, known as "Viloxie" included the territory between the Bay of Biloxi and Pearl River and between the thirty-first parallel and the Gulf of Mexico. On December 14, 1812 this section was formed into a county named Hancock, after John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress. The boundary is stated as follows in the act of the territorial legislature: "All that tract of country lying south of the thirty-first degree of north latitude, and west of the line running due north from the middle of the Bay of Biloxi to the first degree of north latitude and east of the Pearl River shall compose a county and shall be known by the name of Hancock."
   The original extent has been reduced by subsequent acts of the state legislature to approximately one-fourth of the area stated. The present counties of Harrison, Stone and Pearl River have all been carved out of the old district.
   There were a number of acts redefining the line between Hancock and Jackson counties, evidently to reconcile the county boundaries with the survey made after 1812; but these changes were mainly technical in character of very minor significance.
   Harrison county was the first to be separated from Hancock. On February 5,1841 an act of the state legislature created the county. ...the said county hereby created shall be called the county of Harrison.
   The larger part of this territory was taken from Hancock county, of which was the richest part, including the cities of Biloxi and the future Gulfport. Stone county was later created out of the northern part of Harrison.
   By an act of the state legislature passed February 22, 1890, the northern part of Hancock was cut off to form Pearl River county. The act specifies the boundaries, which are very irregular, especially on the north, where the line is never more than one mile from the thirty-first of north latitude, but on that line for only about half the distance. The line separating the new county from Hancock, ... was originally from the southeast corner of township 4, south, range 14 west to Pearl River.
   By an act effective March 18, 1908, an election was held on May 14,1908 by which another part of Hancock was given to Pearl River county. This leaves the repeatedly diminished territory within boundaries legally describes as follows: " Beginning at the SE corner of township 4, south, range 14 west, and thence west to the SE corner of township 4 south, range 16 west; thence south on the range line nine miles to the SE corner of section 132, township 6, south, of range 16 west; thence west to the NE cor¬ner of section 21, township 6, south, of range 16 west; thence south along range line between range 16 and range 17 to the SE corner if section 1, township 7, south, of range 17, west; thence west to Pearl River; thence down said river by the middle thereof to the most eastern junction of said river with Lake Borgne and thence south to the southern boundary of the state; thence eastwardly with said boundary, including all is¬lands within six leagues of the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and Lake Borgne to a point due south of the entrance of the Bay St. Louis; thence north to the middle of said entrance; thence northward along the middle of the Bay St. Louis to the range line between ranges 14 and 14 (sic); thence north along said range line to the point of beginning."
   The present county is ir¬regularly oblong in shape, its greatest length being north and south. It contains 469 square: miles, and has a population , by the census of 1930, of 8,427 white persons and 2,988 Negroes and others, a total of 11,415. The total assessed valuation of property in the county in the same year was $4,582,392.00.
   The act organizing the county specifies no county seat. It was provided by an act passed February 2, 1825, that sessions of the county courts be held part of the year in Bay St. Louis and part of the year in Pearlington, and that the use of either jail for the confinement of prisoners was left to the discretion of the sheriff. Court was also held two or three years at a place called Center, somewhere near the present Caesar.

CENTER

   Thigpen as quoted in Lou¬isiana's Loss, Mississippi's Gain, tells us that Steven Jarrell, a Frenchman, discovered a Choctaw settlement, on a bluff which today is in the northwest part of Pica¬yune. This settlement, called Hobolochito, was named after the dis¬tinguished Chief Hobolo, to whose name was added "chito," the Muskhogean word for stream. Thus, the meaning of the name was "Hobolo's stream." Jarrell es¬tablished a trading post there. About 1800, he bought the land on which the village stood, from Chief Muchihira, who had suc¬ceeded Hobolo.
   After the sale of his land at Hobolochito, Chief Muchihira and his band moved to a village lo¬cated in the fork between Catahoula Creek and Playground Branch. This community was located "on a beautiful sloping hum¬mock by which runs clear sparkling Catahoula creek on the east I side, and Playground branch, an 1 ever-running little stream of clear cool water, on the west side...The land there is a rich sandy loam underlaid (sic) with red clay gently sloping toward the streams, with perfect drainage."
   The Indian name for this community was a Muskhogean word meaning "coming together" or "where everybody meets." White settlers referred to it by a corresponding word. They called it  "Center."
   Later the town of Gainesville, on the Pearl River, then a shipping point of some importance, now a neglected little village, was made the county seat, but the time is uncertain. Information that has not yet been verified fixes the date at 1846. Fire destroyed the courthouse on April 1, 1853, and the county seat was subsequently moved to Bay St.

Louis. In addition to losses by fire, some of the county records are said to have been destroyed by Federal troops in 1863. Whether this was at Gainesville or Bay St. Louis is uncertain. Bay St. Louis was discov¬ered by Bienville on the day of St. Louis in 1699, but the country was not occupied for many years afterwards, except by hunters and, pos¬sibly, a few miserably poor and ignorant squatters. The eighteenth century is almost a blank. In the 1780's we begin to get traces of land grants which indicate that permanent settlements were being made. Among the grantees several names seem to be especially prominent. Simon Favre was the progenitor of a large family of de¬scendants. Noel Jourdan gave his name to the river. Ambrose Gaines and Thomas Shields are remem¬bered by Gainesville and Shieldsborough, the latter applied to Bay St. Louis and to the customs port. John B. Saucier is also remem¬bered and has left many descen¬dants.

COUNTY SEATS

   When West Florida came into the possession of the United States the part now belonging to Mississippi was divided into two districts, or parishes, Biloxi and Pascagoula, the former extending from the Bay of Biloxi to the Pearl River. Captain and Dr. William Flood, of New Orleans, was sent to organize them. On the Pearl River Simon Favre, who held one of the earliest land grants in the county, and who is described as "an edu¬cated and prosperous planter on the eastern bank of the Pearl River," was designated as Justice of the Peace and given a set of the civil code of the territory and of the laws and act of the legislature, A similar commission and set of books were also given to Philip Saucier, at Bay St. Louis, who also had a very early land grant.

Dr. flood was unable to find anybody at the "Bay of Viloxy" who could read and write, so he appointed Jacque L'Adner, in spite of his illiteracy, and also left him a set of books. The next year, 1812, the district south of the 31st parallel between Pearl River and the Bay of Biloxi was made the County of Hancock. The early records (as mentioned previously) were destroyed by fire, so that oral information cannot be confirmed by legal records in this county. It is stated and believed, that sessions of the court were held during one-half of the year at Pearlington, and during the other half at Bay St. Louis. In view of the difficulties of travel this ar¬rangement was obviously a great convenience to litigants. No information can be had of sessions at or near Biloxi. On April 1,1853, the courthouse at Gainesville burned with the county and court records. The fire, eighty-two years s ago, occurred so long before the memories of the oldest inhabitants begin that the early history of the county is almost a blank, except as date is preserved in state and national records. Certain deeds to property were brought back after the fire for rerecording, but the information obtainable from these is very incomplete and partial. On October 17, 1838, R. R. Pray and Saria L. Pray deeded to the county of Hancock for the erection of a courthouse the lots of ground in the village of Shieldsborough on which the n county court house now stands. This gift of land, more than a generation before the county seat was moved, is interesting as it evidences a campaign, even in those early days, for the change subsequently made. During the war of 1861- 65 Gainesville, as well as the whole shore, was subject to raids by Federal troops who occupied New Orleans, and also had a base on Ship Island. There were also disorders of a serious kind by "jay-hawkers, who took advan¬tage of the disturbed times and of the absence of almost all able-bodied men in the army to perpetrate many outrages"; but all evidence of their activities has been carefully de¬stroyed. Of Federal raids there are only tantalizing suggestions. For the session of the Board of Police Court, the governing body of the county, on July 4th, 1864, the following entry appears: "Ordered by the Board that the sum of fifteen Dollars be al¬lowed Thomas P. Moore for saving the Minute of the Probate Court of said County from the Yankee, and that a warrant issue: The minutes show monthly meetings through 1863 and 1864 un¬til April 3rd, 1865. These are kept in a small book which had been in¬tended for some other purpose, but the first pages of the book were fas¬tened together and the balance used by the secretary. The records are very scanty, giving only hints of the exciting time. On January 2nd, the minutes show that the meeting was begun and held at the Court House of said county in the Town of Gainesville. By March this had evi¬dently become impracticable for a minute worth quoting on account of its quaint phraseology read as fol¬lows: "At a regular term of the Po¬lice court of Hancock County begun and held at Jourdan's Smith School House on the 1st Monday, the 6th day of March, A..D. 1865, in accor¬dance with an order of said board at the January term A.D. in 1865, in these words and figures to wit, or¬dered by the board that the Board meet at Smith's school house in fu¬ture." Another minute at the March session orders the board back to Gainesville. There was a meeting on April 3rd and then no more un¬til August 7th, which was limited to appointing road overseers and fixing the county treasurer's bond at $5, 000.00. A sheet is torn out of the book. Then came the min¬utes of a meeting held October 16th. In this appears the follow¬ing: "Ordered by the Board that G. H. Noble be hereby allowed the sum of twenty dollars to re¬move the books and papers of the Clerk office from D.S. Byrd back to Gainesville, and that warrant issue." The county records had evidently been deposited for safe keeping somewhere in the great forest (which) covered almost the whole county. The circuit court records show the following, (sic) interest¬ing as a peculiar method of desig¬nating a date: "Circuit Court, April Term, 1861. The State of Mississippi. At a regular term of the Circuit court begun and held in and for the County of Hancock in the State of Mississippi on the first Monday after the fourth Monday April A.D., 1861, at the court house of said county in the town of Gainesville." The records then show that no meeting was held for four years. On May 1st., (Monday) 1865, an attempt was made to hold court in Buck Branch., a place in the present territory of Pearl River County, but the judge, John Hancock, failed to appear. Court was dismissed until the next day, when, the judge still be¬ing absent, it was finally ad¬journed by the sheriff. No other session was held until December 4th., 1865, when the court was able to return to Gainesville in peace, and a considerable amount of business was transacted. About this time the ques¬tion as to the transfer of the county seat was evidently being warmly agitated. One of the first indica¬tions is in the minutes of the board of Police for Jan. 6th., 1867. "It is ordered by the Board that a special meeting of the board be holden (sic) at the Court house of said county on Monday, the 14th., day of Jan. inst. 1867, to re¬ceive proposals for the building of a jail for this county." The minutes for the 14th show that: "The contract for the building a jail for this county was put up at the lowest (?) bidder and struck off to W.J. Poitevent at the sum of Twenty one hundred dol¬lars ($2100.00) he being the low¬est and best bidder." This is the first record of a county jail. Although there is an authorization during the war for the sheriff to sell the jail irons at auction. The reason for the sale is not given. If a jail were actually built in Gainesville it would, of course, be an argument against removing the county seat. In 1867 an act of the state legislature authorized an election to determine the future county seat. Again we lack any account except the dry facts in official re¬cords, but we can imagine a very intense rivalry. The minutes of the board of Police for a special March term in 1867 show the following: "Thereas at an election held at the various precincts of Hancock County of the 3rd Mon¬day, 18th day of March 1867, un¬der recent act of the Legislature of the State of Mississippi for the county seat of justice of said county, and it appearing further to the satisfaction of the Board that Gainesville retained (?) the highest number of votes for the said seat of Justice. "It is therefore ordered by the Board that the said town of Gainesville and is this date de¬clared the seat of Justice of this county." The county board, obvi¬ously partisan in the matter, did not have the last word, as shown by re¬cords of the circuit court for the first Monday after the fourth Mon¬day in April of the same year. "Board of Police of Han¬cock County. On motion for pre¬emptory (?) mandeaus to proceed to provide public buildings and es¬tablish the seat of Justice at Shieldsborough. "It appearing to the satis¬faction of the court that the major¬ity of the qualified voters of Han¬cock county at the election held of the Legislature approved the 16th day of Feb. 1867, were cast for the city of Shieldsborough and that the said defendants sec. Board have hitherto failed and refused to estab¬lish the county seat at Shieldsbor¬ough. "It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, and the Court by virtue of the power and authority vested by the constitution and laws of the state of Mississippi does hereby command that the said defendant as such Board of Police to forthwith, proceed to establish the seat of justice of the county in conformity with the choice of the qualified voters of the same as evinced at said election at the place designated thereby." The May term of the Police Court was held at Shieldsborough in accordance with the decision above cited, and the following resolution was adopted: "It appearing to the satis¬faction of the Board that the city of Shieldsborough in said county received the majority of the legal votes of said county for the perma¬nent county seat of Justice. "It is therefore ordered by the Board that the said city of Shieldsborough be and is hereby declared from and after this date the permanent seat of Justice of the county." We can only guess at the bitterness of the contest that is in¬dicated by these formal records, and at the meaning of the distinc¬tion between "the highest number of votes" specified in one resolu¬tion and the "Majority of the legal votes" stated in the other. The de¬cision must have been intensely unpleasant for the members of a board that was so evidently in favor of Gainesville. An act of the state legisla¬ture was passed in 1872 authoriz¬ing an election on the same sub¬ject, but no record is found that anything came of it. Gainesville, which was formerly a busy and prosperous town, manufacturing lumber and shipping cotton from as far away as Columbia, has lost all its business and become a lone¬some, unimportant community. Bay St. Louis, formerly Shieldsborough, is a thriving little city and an important summer resort town. It remains the county seat, with no probability of any change.

Timeline

Date Event Source
1812 County formed Source:Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources
1812 County formed Source:History of Handcock County, compiled by the Works Progress Administration
1820 First census Source:Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790-1990
1853 Court records recorded Source:Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources
1853 Land records recorded Source:Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources
1853 Marriage records recorded Source:Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources
1853 Probate records recorded Source:Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources
1910 No significant boundary changes after this year Source:Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790-1990

Population History

source: Source:Population of States and Counties of the United States: 1790-1990
Census Year Population
1820 1,594
1830 1,962
1840 3,367
1850 3,672
1860 3,139
1870 4,239
1880 6,439
1890 8,318
1900 11,886
1910 11,207
1920 10,380
1930 11,415
1940 11,328
1950 11,891
1960 14,039
1970 17,387
1980 24,537
1990 31,760

Note: Population for 1860 is that published in the 1860 report as "estimated".

Research Tips

External links

www.rootsweb.com/~mshancoc/


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