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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
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Travis Florence, a Jackson native and college student at Springhill College in Mobile, Ala., believes that colleges outside of Mississippi have more opportunities.

When she was younger, Liz Allen, a Baton Rouge native, never pictured herself attending college in Jackson, much less living here. Allen enrolled at Millsaps College by chance instead of by choice. โ€œI wanted to go to a small liberal-arts college,โ€ Allen, 21, says. โ€œMillsaps fit the bill and gave me the largest scholarship, so I came here.โ€

Allenโ€™s decision to attend a college in Jackson was met with surprise from her friends and family members. โ€œLouisiana kind of has this thing of talking about Mississippi,โ€ the rising senior says. โ€œLike, โ€˜Yeah we might be number 49 on this list of horrible things, but at least weโ€™re not Mississippi.โ€™ So, when I decided to go to Millsaps, it was a shock to everyone. My friends would say, โ€˜Mississippi? Why would you want to go to Mississippi? Why would anybody want to go to Mississippi? Why would you want to live there?โ€

Mississippiโ€™s traditionally negative perception is something that has plagued the stateโ€”and the South in generalโ€”due to slavery, Jim Crow laws, a racist constitution and civil-rights violence.

Mississippi has been slower to follow other historically racist southern states like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee as theyโ€™ve replaced their traditionally ignorant image for one that embraces the stateโ€™s culture and history.

โ€œEven before I came to Jackson, I didnโ€™t think I would like it,โ€ Allen says, โ€œI came for school, not for the city. But the city has won me over, and I want to stay here now.โ€

A Little Big City

Jackson is a little big cityโ€”larger than Boston by 17.17 square miles and with a population only 18,542 people fewer than that of fellow capital city Salt Lake City. Jackson has a population of about 175,437 people and nearly 35,000 college students. Approximately 14,404 undergraduate and post-graduate students are enrolled in Jacksonโ€™s four colleges and universities, and another 19,202 students are enrolled at Hinds and Holmes community colleges. About 8,000 students attend Jackson Public Schoolsโ€™ six high schools.

Based on these figures, people between the ages of 14 through 26 make up roughly 24 percent of Jacksonโ€™s population. However, a common sentiment among some people in this age group is that Jackson, and the local colleges, have nothing to offer.

Travis Florence, 19, was born in Jackson and attended Terry High School, graduating in 2013. Unlike the estimated three-fourths of Terry High Schoolโ€™s 2013 graduates who decided to attend college in Mississippi, Florence chose Springhill College in Mobile, Ala., where he is a rising sophomore and a pre-physical therapy major.

โ€œThere was more (scholarship) money outside of the state, and I think that there are more resources (there) than in Jacksonโ€™s local-area colleges,โ€ Florence explains. โ€œI think that professionally, in my field, Jackson offers something to me because of the three main hospitals that are here. But, in other fields, I think that you really have to go out of state to find something.โ€

After matriculating from Springhill College, Travis plans to return to the area, at least temporarily. โ€œI think I am (moving back to Jackson) because I want to do my graduate school at Mississippi College,โ€ he says.

Allen likes the social and community aspects of the city. โ€œYou find a lot of music festivals or things like Fondren After 5 that give you a chance to get out into the community. Jackson is a capital city, so there are other things going on. There just happens to be four universities here.โ€

Jackson has more to offer than smaller college towns, such as Oxford, Starkville or Clinton, Allen says: โ€œ(Jackson) works well as a college town because there are different things going on, and there are a lot of places to learn things outside of the classroom.โ€

Trey Vernaci, a Metairie, La., native who was raised in Pearlington, Miss., is a rising junior at Millsaps College. โ€œThe only reason I came to Jackson was because of Millsaps, but then I realized that Jackson has so much more to offer than just Millsaps,โ€ Vernaci says. He even remains in Jackson during summers โ€œbecause of the opportunities in the area.โ€

As a political science major, living in the state capital is awesome,โ€ Vernaci adds. โ€œI was able to intern for Rep. Cecil Brown (D-Jackson) this past year.โ€

Vernaci, 20, especially appreciates Millsapsโ€™ โ€œChallengeโ€ program for incoming freshmen. โ€œThroughout the week, youโ€™re doing community engagement in the midtown area,โ€ he says. โ€œThat was amazing.โ€

Raeโ€™Jean Spears, a sophomore at Tougaloo College, thinks that Jackson offers whatever you want.

Going through the Challenge program helped Vernaci get a better understanding of the city and how he relates to it. โ€œMidtown is such a unique neighborhood, and it has so much to offer to me, somebody who is into political science,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s made me rethink a lot of things, especially the idea of gentrification.โ€

Though Vernaci may not return to Jackson after he gets a graduate degree elsewhere, he is figuring out how he can positively affect the city. โ€œMoving into these neighborhoods (like midtown) and doing work can hurt the neighborhoods sometimes. You have to really critically think about what youโ€™re doing because thatโ€™s going to determine how the neighborhood reacts to that,โ€ he says.

If You Promote It, They Will Come

Jackson may have more college students than many cities, but it might need more promotion before really claiming the moniker โ€œcollege town.โ€

Dr. Hilliard Lackey, an adjunct professor of urban higher education at Jackson State University and resident of Jackson for more than four decades, believes such promotion is vital to the cityโ€™s future. โ€œWhat can we utilize? We might need more signage and brandage to incorporate our lofty position as having all of these colleges and universities,โ€ he suggests.

Lackey compares the assortment of Jackson colleges and universities to those of Nashville and Atlanta. Instead of attempting to promote one schoolโ€”say, Jackson State over Belhaven University, Tougaloo College over Millsaps Collegeโ€”the city should promote all higher-education options available here.

โ€œWe canโ€™t (promote only one college) here in Jackson because we have several schools,โ€ Lackey says. โ€œWe should put them all in one bag and push them, saying, โ€˜This is a Mecca for higher learning! If you want a good education, come to Jackson!โ€™ We have to accentuate the positive because it is there. If we promote it, they will come.โ€

The sentiment, echoed by two Jackson State professors, two Millsaps students and a Tougaloo student for this articleโ€”is that Jackson fails to appropriately market its opportunities, recreational and professional, to prospective students and teachers.

Dr. Preselfannie McDaniels was born in Arkansas, but moved to Jackson in 1988 to attend JSU as an undergraduate student in the honors college. โ€œWhat makes smaller college towns successful is that they have a functional downtown,โ€ she says. โ€œEven though it might be small, downtown is always a great place to be. Louisiana State University is in Baton Rouge, and once Baton Rougeโ€™s downtown was refurbished, you were only so many blocks away from it. โ€ฆ Once (Jacksonโ€™s) downtown is fully utilized, the image of the university will be so much better.โ€

โ€œI couldnโ€™t have seen myself here 10 years ago,โ€ Raeโ€™Jean Spears, a Virginia native and Tougaloo College sophomore, says. โ€œI didnโ€™t think that (Jackson) was as culturally enriching as it is. I thought it was just another part of Mississippi. But by living here, my eyes have been opened to the fact that whatever you want is here in Jackson.โ€

Though there are several opportunities for internships and other job-related or education-related options in the city of Jackson, there is a disconnect between the opportunities and students hearing about them. โ€œI feel like maybe there should be more advertisement or communication to students because there are so many opportunities out there. Itโ€™s just getting students connected thatโ€™s lacking,โ€ Vernaci says.

The Washington, D.C.-based Newseum Institute found that 33 percent of people get their news from the Internet. A Pew Internet study says 31 percent of Twitter users are 18 to 29 years old, and that non-Hispanic blacks in that age group are more likely to use the site.

I tried to find the City of Jacksonโ€™s Twitter account, but it was difficult. I ultimately found two accounts (@CityofJacksonMS) and (@wearejacksonms). Initially, I assumed that the former account was the cityโ€™s primary Twitter account as it was created in September 2011, but its last coherent tweet was June 25, 2013.

The account began tweeting gibberish on June 26 of this year, so it may have been hacked.

The latter account has a photo of Mayor Tony Yarber as its profile picture and a quote from the mayor in the bio, but itโ€™s unclear whether or not this is Mayor Yarberโ€™s personal Twitter or the cityโ€™s account.

Is Jackson the Answer?

Capital cities are supposed to be seats of government and places where citizens from all over the state are on an equal playing field. Unfortunately, the excessive reporting of โ€œcrime in Jacksonโ€ and other bad media coverage show Jackson as a negative place.

Every weekday at 8 a.m., cars from Rankin, Simpson, Yazoo and Madison counties drive into Jackson to work, and at 5 p.m., these same people leave Jackson to spend their money elsewhere. New businesses and developments often pick Ridgelandโ€™s Northpark Mall and Renaissance at Colony Park, and Flowoodโ€™s Dogwood Promenade, while Jackson is left out of the picture. Taking money out of the city makes it more difficult to fix infrastructure, including the roads that are torn up from the constant influx of traffic from outlying counties and cities.

Vernaci dislikes the constant road construction in Jackson but knows itโ€™s ultimately a positive. โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of roadwork constantly,โ€ he says. โ€œI feel like I havenโ€™t seen a day in Jackson where something isnโ€™t under construction. But, thatโ€™s good! That means Jackson is trying to revitalize the roads and make it a more inviting area. I like that, but my car doesnโ€™t.โ€

Graduates from areas colleges, including the University of Mississippi Medical Center, often get degrees then leave the area, even though there is a shortage of people to fill positions such as teaching and those in the medical field. Jackson Public Schools have open positions for 218 certified teachers, guidance counselors and interventionists, and there is a shortage of primary-care physicians in the city. But many people who were trained in those areas at local colleges and universities are not stepping up to fill these vacancies. โ€œPeople leave because the pay isnโ€™t high,โ€ Vernaci says. โ€œBut with a city thatโ€™s minimally operating on such a low budget, itโ€™s hard to raise that pay.โ€

Lackey thinks that Jacksonโ€™s lack of high-paying jobs is the No. 1 culprit in the cityโ€™s problems with retaining high-school and college graduates. โ€œWe donโ€™t have corporate jobs here, and youโ€™ve got to have competitive, high-level jobs,โ€ he says.

โ€œWe donโ€™t have any jobs where if you major in business, or something like that, you can graduate and step into a $50,000, $60,000 or $70,000 (position) in a year or two with some upward mobility.โ€

There is a light on the horizon. Whole Foods Market (4500 Interstate 55, 601-608-0405) opened a Jackson location this year that hasโ€”so farโ€”been a huge success, and is likely to help Highland Village in northeast Jackson step up its retail game and attract younger customers. Nearby is a new development, The District at Eastover, on the site of the old Mississippi School for the Blind (including retail and a movie theater, which Jackson currently doesnโ€™t have); two museums are being built in downtown Jackson; midtown is on fire with artists and young creatives; and a variety of local restaurants have opened, or soon will, in different parts of the city, including Fondren, downtown and south Jackson.

Vernaci focuses on the cityโ€™s strengths: โ€œJackson is a place that has everything,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s the one city where you can go all the way from working in law firms to working in politics to working in a hospital to doing communication work with Mississippi Public Broadcasting. Jackson offers everything for you.โ€

Keep up with Jackson-area events at jfpevents.com and jfp.ms/musiclistings.

Previous Comments

Hello. I know that Jackson, MS be better soon. Have fun and faith in God.


Lack of affordable housing and the fact that apartment managers and companies steal your deposit even though you hire a professional cleaning crew to clean your apartment when you leave. Also, to be truthful the city has too many people coming here from other parts of Mississippi or other states and begging on our streets outside our shops. Both Madison and Flowood have given rides to people in police cars to the outskirts of Jackson. We have the services, but many have decided they don’t want help. They just want to eat free, sleep in the woods or abandoned houses, and do what they want because “It’s their life-style.” At some point, I think we need to cut them off and tell them to leave. If they don’t leave, then jail or a mental institution or substance abuse facility.