Mississippi
Getting its name from the Mississippi River, the Natchez, Chickasaw, and Choctaw inhabited the state before the Spanish and French set up settlements by 1699. A dependent on the slave economy, Mississippi became a top producer of cotton and, after secession from the union, suffered massive losses during the civil war in 1861. The civil rights movement of the early 60s found the state still a hotbed of racism and discrimination, which has seen Mississippi ranked as the most impoverished state in America in this century. The teddy bear is also said to originate from Mississippi after an Onward hunting incident where President Roosevelt refused to shoot a trapped bear as a host of governor Andrew Longino.
Our AutoTransport.com vehicle shipping operations in Mississippi are greatly improved by the state’s well-developed highway network on which our car carriers move truckloads of trucks. I-20 from Vicksburg takes vehicle movers to Jackson via Clinton and then continues eastwards via Morton and forest inside the Bienville national forest. Past newton and the city of meridian, the highway exits the state for Alabama. I-55 heads north across Mississippi through Mccomb, Brookhaven, Hazlehurst, and Jackson, where it junctions with I-20. The dynamic speedway then proceeds north to Winona, Grenada, and Batesville alongside A-55. I-55 is familiar with AutoTransport.com vehicle movers who take their cargoes to Crystal Springs, Brookhaven, and McComb. I-22 connects with A-45 at Tupelo Corinth, while the southern part from Columbus is used by mobile home movers to get to Scooba and Meridian. I-59 from Meridian to Hattiesburg takes highway 49 to either the Desoto National Forest or northwards to Jackson through Magee and Collins.