Fort Adams is a former river town in Wilkinson County at the southwest corner of Mississippi, near the Louisiana border. I have only been there once and want to return. That might be an interesting day trip, but it is a haul from Vicksburg. These photographs are from a short stopover in 1986. I was on the way to New Orleans and had read about Fort Adams somewhere. Sure enough, it was at the end of the road, at the end of the world.
This blog documents what remains when we abandon our buildings, homes, schools, and factories. These decaying structures represent our impact on the world: where we lived, worked, and built. The blog also shows examples of where decay was averted or reversed with hard work and imagination.
Thursday, August 12, 2021
From the Archives: Small Towns in Mississippi, Fort Adams
Thursday, July 8, 2021
Small Towns in Mississippi: Union Church
I drove into Union Church on a blazing hot and muggy day in early August (2020) while I was on one of my photographic tours. Some handsome old churches, farm houses, and stores caught my eye.
Former church? (Fuji Acros film, Leica IIIC, 50mm ƒ/1.4 Canon lens, green filter, 1/200 ƒ/4.0) |
Old shop (Panatomic-X film, Fuji GW690II camera, minor fill flash) |
Union Church Presbyterian Church (Moto G5 digital file) |
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
The Mississippi Delta 37: Tchula
Former road bridge, Front Street, Tchula (Tri-X 400 film, Fuji GW690II camera, green filter) |
Front yard, Front Street, Tchula |
Background
Tchula is rough, just gruesome. I found a long article in The Guardian. "Poorest town in poorest state: segregation is gone but so are the jobs. In his second dispatch from the US’s most deprived communities, Chris McGreal visits Tchula in Mississippi, where crime is high and opportunities are few".
A 2019 article in The Guardian describes how little help was forthcoming after flooding in that year.
“It was so painful to visit homes today and see what we saw. No one should have to live like this in the richest country on earth,” Barber told the crowd at the Good Samaritan Ecumenical church.
“But there must be, and will be, a movement of people who say, ‘That is wrong, and we can’t stand for that any more.”
Mississippi Today featured a 2019 article on flooding and neglect of the inhabitants, "Living Day to Day: Surrounded by water and ignored by powerful officials, Tchula and its people fight for survival"
A somber 2015 article in The Atlantic, titled "How White Flight Ravaged the Mississippi Delta," describes the horrors of poverty, segregation, racism, and the flight of wealth to other places. Tchula now is the fifth poorest town in the country, according to the 2015 Atlantic article.
2020 Photographs
No more lunches at Speedy's, Tchula |
Main Streeet view west, Tchula (Fuji X-E1 digital file) |
Former gas station, Main Street |
Back lot of former commercial building, Jefferson Street, Tchula |
Juke joint, US 49E, Tchula (Tri-X 400 film) |
US 49E, view north, Tchula, Mississippi (Tri-X 400 film, Fuji GW690II, yellow filter) |
Saturday, December 26, 2020
On the Dixie Overland Highway, Historic US 80 - Girard and Start, Louisiana (LA-06)
4554 US 80 Girard, Louisiana (Fuji X-E1 digital file, 18mm ƒ/2 lens) |
US 80, view east, Start, Louisiana |
Texaco, US 80 view west, Start, Louisiana |
Friday, May 22, 2020
Travels on the Mother Road, Route 66: Part 8d, Budville and Cubero, New Mexico (2019)
Courtesy of 66postcards.com (Thank you!) |
Villa de Cubero De Luxe Tourist Court (expired Kodak Ektar 25 film, Yashica Electro 35CC camera) |
Cuba: tropical breezes, palm trees, beautiful women, lots of booze, and deep sea fishing.
Cubero: desert, not much to do, and booze.
Budville Trading Co. (Moto G5 digital file) |
Budville Trading Post (Tri-X film, Hasselblad 501CM camera, 50mm ƒ/4 Distagon lens) |
That is all the excitement for Cubero. We will continue east on Route 66. Standby for more updates.
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Return to Learned, Mississippi (using film)
It features country-style dining. Share a table and bring your own wine or beer. The proprietors will provide glasses. Wipe your fingers with paper towels. My friends and I ate on the back porch, which was reasonably comfortable despite the humidity.
The back yard has some interesting sheds and bits and pieces from the old days. I did not see these when I visited the shop mid-week in 2014, so it was well worthwhile to eat out on the back porch. While my friends chatted, I walked around with the Hasselblad and tripod.
Back out on Main Street, there are a number of old buildings and one interesting Magnolia tree outlined by the fading light (I warned you readers that I would be taking more "pretty" pictures in the future).
This former country store sits at the corner of Main and Front Streets. I do not know if the building is used today or is just part of the ambience of Learned. It is a nice town and I recommend a visit. Go eat a steak.
The square photographs are from TMax 400 film, taken with a Hasselblad 501CM camera and the 50mm f/4.0 Distagon lens. I had not used 120-size TMax before and was testing a roll. I exposed it at EI=320. The frames from dark locations were underexposed, and I think this film suffers reciprocity failure as low as 1/2 second. TMax is one of the new technology films introduced in the 1980s with so-called tabular silver grains (similar to Ilford's Delta films). The TMax is remarkably fine grain, but I think I prefer Tri-X 400's tonality. Tri-X is more grainy, but with a 54×54mm negative, grain really is not an issue. I scanned the negatives on a Minolta Scan Multi medium format film scanner operated with Silverfast Ai software.
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Coles, Mississippi - Not Much Left
There was an old cottage behind some trees. The porch had some of the old-fashioned outdoor chairs of the type I have seen in New Hampshire and the Adirondacks.
Photographs taken with a Fujifilm X-E1 digital camera, tripod-mounted, with the Fuji 27mm f/2.8 lens (an excellent and compact little optic). Raw files processed with PhotoNinja software.