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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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After a stint at Texas A&M, Jessica Nelson decided she wanted a challenge, so she enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps.

“The Marines have the reputation of being the ‘baddest’ branch,” Nelson says. “They had the hardest physical fitness test, and I wanted to be part of the best and the boldest.”

While she originally planned to work in intelligence or communications, the Marines instead assigned her to the post of geospatial analyst, which was a surprise to the former psychology major. “I barely knew what Google Maps was,” Nelson says, laughing. “Once I started to learn, though, it turned out to be a cool job.”

Nelson did eventually get to live out her dream of working in communications, as she presently holds a full-time position with the City of Jackson, working with special projects and grants.

“I field questions from constituents who are calling in for the mayor’s office, and I coordinate between citizens and foundations,” Nelson says of her day job, which allows her to unite Mississippi’s capital city with corporations and nonprofit organizations.

The Marine also uses her interpersonal skills at her own nonprofit. Founded in 2020, Grid North aims to help veterans work on interview techniques, resumes and other career-related skills so that they can find civilian work after leaving the armed services.

“It stemmed from my work with the City,” Nelson reflects. “But it’s grown into its own beast.” Nelson largely fronts the workload herself, though she notes that Marlon King, who serves as her supervisor at City Hall, has been helpful in getting the program off the ground.

Lead for America, a nation-wide initiative focused on community service and public engagement, took notice of Nelson’s commitment to her community, and her peers nominated her for a three-year term as a hometown/mobility innovation team fellow, a position she accepted in December 2020.

“I’m focused on alumni operations,” Nelson says. “I try to increase opportunities (for participants) and build partnerships with new schools.” While she has not yet traveled to Washington, D.C., to visit the outpost of this latest position, she hopes to be able to visit once the pandemic ends.

Despite travel restrictions, Nelson has stayed busy on Zoom, moderating a recent webinar for the Warrior-Scholar Project entitled “Celebrating Black Women Veterans in STEM,” which highlighted the lack of women of color in the field.

“There’s still not enough women (in STEM) in general,” Nelson says. “The more opportunities we create for women in general, the more opportunities we’ll have for minority communities.”

MFP Solutions Lab logo

The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippi’s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.

Taylor McKay Hathorn is a two-time alumna of Mississippi College's English program and holds a Master's degree from Louisiana State University. Taylor works in a registrar's office and teaches college writing courses. She makes her home in Jackson's Fondren North -- the most diverse neighborhood in the state -- where she serves on the neighborhood board and at Broadmeadow United Methodist Church. In her free time, she likes to cook, take long walks, plan her next trip, and do the daily Wordle and Connections puzzles.