Thursday, February 28, 2019

The Mississippi Delta 29: Baptist Town, Greenwood (B&W film)

Stevens Avenue, Baptist Town, Greenwood, Mississippi
Shotgun houses, Stevens Avenue, Greenwood, Mississippi
Baptist Town is a historically African-American neighborhood east of downtown Greenwood. According to the Mississippi Blues Trail:
Baptist Town, established in the 1800s in tandem with the growth of the local cotton industry, is one of Greenwood’s oldest African American neighborhoods. Known for its strong sense of community, it is anchored by the McKinney Chapel M.B. Church and a former cotton compress. In blues lore Baptist Town is best known through the reminiscences of David “Honeyboy” Edwards, who identified it as the final residence of Robert Johnson, who died just outside Greenwood in 1938.
I was unaware of this historic neighborhood until a faculty friend at Mississippi Valley State University showed me around.
Baptist Town, from MSBluestrail.org
West Pelican Street, Baptist Town (click any photograph to enlarge)
While my friend chatted with some shopkeeper friends, I wandered around with my Hasselblad and tripod. The residents seem comfortable with tourists, and most waved and said hi. Signs related to the Blues traditions have been erected, like this one about the great artist Robert Johnson, who died in 1938.
214 Young Street, Baptist Town
214 Young Street, Baptist Town, 80mm Planar lens
204 Young Street Baptist Town, 80mm Planar lens
The reception center on Young Street was closed, so I could not check inside.
Shotgun house, Stevens Avenue
Stevens Avenue is a major street through the neighborhood, lined with these little traditional shotgun houses. I have tried to document remaining ones in other towns in Mississippi. Many have disappeared in the last few decades from all around the United States.
301 McCain Street, Baptist Town
Mr. Chow's grocery store is just east of Baptist Town. It is no longer open.
Ditch off Pelican Street, Baptist Town
View west to downtown Greenwood, W. Pelican Street
Baptist Town is an interesting place and an architectural example of early 20th century housing in reasonably authentic condition. I will return some day when the light is softer, maybe with color film.

These photographs were taken on Kodak Panatomic-X film (expired in 1988), exposed at EI=20. I used a Hasselblad 501CM camera with 80mm and 50mm lenses, all tripod-mounted. I scanned the film with a Minolta Scan Multi medium format film scanner controlled by SilverFast Ai software.

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