{"id":14000,"date":"2024-01-30T01:20:17","date_gmt":"2024-01-30T00:20:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/?p=14000"},"modified":"2024-01-30T01:20:17","modified_gmt":"2024-01-30T00:20:17","slug":"why-is-the-mississippi-river","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/why-is-the-mississippi-river\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Is The Mississippi River"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Mississippi River’s Importance in US History<\/h2>\n

The Mississippi River has long been an integral part of American history, playing a vital role in both the exploration and settlement of the interior United States. Stretching from the Great Lakes region of Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi has served as a major commercial and cultural artery for generations of Americans.<\/p>\n

The river was well-known to Native Americans tribes living along its banks, and was used as a trade route well before Europeans arrived in the New World. When Spanish, French, English and other explorers began to settle the area in the early 1600s, they quickly realized the Mississippi’s potential and began to build wealthy trading networks around it. As fortunes were made, cities grew up around the river and it became the hub of America’s first internal trade market.<\/p>\n

Using the river, traders were able to travel thousands of miles inland and exchange goods with farmers and merchants they encountered along the way. This mid-1700s period saw the birth of the “Mississippi Boom”, as settlers moved up and down the river with ease. As the fur trade industry flourished, the US government established a series of forts along the river to protect both traders and Native Americans from hostile raids.<\/p>\n

The Mississippi also played a major role in the US Civil War. Its location near the border between the north and south meant it was hotly contested by both sides. As Union and Confederate forces waged a series of battles along its banks, both armies established defensive positions and fired cannons at each other from the river’s edge. Eventually, after a centuries-long struggle, the US government was able to gain control of the Mississippi and its hundreds of tributaries.<\/p>\n