Tunica Tour Notes
TUNICA COUNTY
Population 9,500
TUNICA (TOWN)
Population 1,300
VISITORS PER DAY
40,000 - 50,000
VISITORS ANNUALLY
10-12 Million
CASINO EMPLOYEES
15,000
INDUSTRIES
Casino Gaming, Hospitality, Agriculture
POPULATION
Tunica County was one of ten counties created in 1836 from Chickasaw Indian territory ceded to the U.S. in 1816. Commerce, now the site of Casino Strip, was the first county seat. Founded in 1834, Commerce was destroyed by the flooding Mississippi River in 1842.
Commerce was located in the province of Quizquiz where Chisca, the Great Chief, ruled when this area was discovered by Tunica's first tourist, Hernando DeSoto in 1541. The next county seat was Austin, which survived being burned by the Federals only to be flooded and destroyed. In 1848, twenty acres of inland property was donated for the new and current county seat of Tunica, Mississippi. To date, the town of Tunica has remained unharmed by the flood waters of the Mighty Mississippi.
America's best gaming odds are yours in the fastest growing adult playground: Tunica, Mississippi.
GAMING
Gaming was legalized in 1991.
Splash was the first casino to open at Mhoon Landing and three others followed at that location.
A $10 boarding fee was charged until the other three casinos opened and competed for the business.
Tunica receives 4% of gross gaming revenues. Of this, 12% goes to schools, 2% to Levee Board, 4% to the Town of Tunica, and the rest to the general fund.
Tunica is one of the largest gaming destinations in the U.S. based on gaming revenues.
Tunica county had 20 hotel rooms in 1993. Currently, there are over 6,000 rooms.
Tunica is home to Blues legends, Robert Johnson and James Cotton. Other famous Blues artists who have called Tunica home are Son House, Willie Brown and Isaiah "Dr." Ross.
In 10 states, it is called Highway 61, the primary route from Minnesota to New Orleans. But in the Mississippi Delta, its the Blues Highway—a hallowed path where gospel and folk merged and Robert Johnson sold his soul in exchange for mastery of the music that made him a legend.
Tunica has a total of five markers across the county. See the first marker at the Tunica Visitor Center on Highway 61, the entrance of America’s Blues Highway. Other markers honoring the blues include James Cotton, Son House, Harold "Hardface" Clanton and the Abbey-Leatherman Plantation.
AGRICULTURAL PROFILE
| CROP | SIZE | ESTIMATED REVENUE |
| Soybeans | 101,000 acres | $12 million |
| Cotton | 30,200 acres | $27 million |
| Rice | 21,000 acres | $14 million |
| Wheat | 40,400 acres | <$1 million |
| Corn | 13,400 acres | <$1 million |
GAMING PROFILE
| | SIZE | ESTIMATED REVENUE |
| Gaming | 13.5 acres | $1.2 billion |
Tunica is booming right on the banks of what the native Indians called "the Father of Waters."
LEVEE
The upper and lower Mississippi Delta is protected from the flooding Mississippi River by the Yazoo Mississippi Delta Levee. This levee begins at the Chickasaw Bluffs just south of Memphis and continues down through Natchez. The Levee Board and the U.S. Corps of Engineers maintain 98 miles of levee and 20 miles of backwater levee.
The creation of the levee district was, in fact, a reaction to the flood of 1882, which has been described as the most destructive flood in the recorded history of Mississippi River overflow. There were 284 crevasses with a combined length of 56.1 miles.
The last crevasse was in 1897 in Tunica County at Flower Lake. This was the first flood that could accurately indicate the maximum high water level following the closing of the St. Francis and White River Basins on the Arkansas side. Estimated guesses could not be made until the Arkansas levees were built.
In 1917, Congress passed legislation which provided that the U.S. Government through the Corps of Engineers would build the levee if local districts would provide one third of the cost and secure rights-of-way.
It was not until 1920, after World War I, that federal participation in levee construction began. Other significant floods were in 1927, 1937, 1950 and 1973.
Earliest levees were approximately three feet in height above ground level and were built by riverfront landowners.
The levee has grown in height from an average of eight feet in 1884 to an average of 40 feet. The base has grown from an average width of 58 feet in 1884 to 350 feet today. The riverside of the levee has a layer of heavy, impervious clay and a berm to prevent passage of seepage through the levee. The entire levee is planted in Bermuda grass to protect the dirt material from erosion.
In the riverside "borrow pits," which provided most of the material for the construction of the levee, natural tree growth is encouraged to protect the levee from wave wash during high water stages.
The levee is controlled and maintained by the Yazoo Mississippi Delta Levee Board made up of elected officials from the ten river counties. They employ a full-time engineer.
Mississippi Tour Notes
Mississippi is the birthplace of Elvis Presley, BB King and the home of Jimmie Rodgers, "The Father of Country Music."
The word "Mississippi" means "Father of Waters," a reference to the great Mississippi River for which the state is named.
65% of all catfish produced in the U.S. comes from Mississippi, where over 95,000 acres are devoted to catfish farms.
The Parent Teachers Association (PTA) was founded in Mississippi in 1909.
The world's first human heart and lung transplants were performed in Mississippi at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.
Mississippi seceded from the Union in 1861. Rejoined the Union in 1870.
Mississippian Jefferson Davis was named president of the Confederate States of America in 1861.
America's first Memorial Day was celebrated in Columbus, Mississippi, April 26, 1866.
According to the Mississippi Department of Transportation, the longest stretch of highway in the U.S. with no horizontal or vertical curves (completely flat) is a 29.8 mile stretch of U.S. Highway 61 beginning just south of Tunica to just north of Clarksdale.
MISSISSIPPI FACTS
State Flower & Tree: Magnolia
State Bird: Mocking Bird
Nickname: Hospitality State
FAMOUS MISSISSIPPIANS
| Entertainers | Athletes | Writers | Musicians |
| James Earl Jones | Archie Manning | Beth Henley | BB King |
| Jerry Clower | Dizzy Dean | Eudora Welty | Bo Diddley |
| Jim Henson | Jeff Brantley | John Grisham | Brandy Norwood |
| Mary Ann Mobley | Jerry Rice | Richard Wright | Brittany Spears |
| Morgan Freeman | Lewis Tillman | Shelby Foote | Charley Pride |
| Louis Lipps | Tennessee Williams | Conway Twitty |
| Sammy Winder | William Faulkner | Dorothy Moore |
| Steve McNair | Willie Morris | Elvis Presley |
| Walter Payton | | Faith Hill |
| | | Howlin Wolf |
| | | Ike Turner |
| | | James Cotton |
| | | Jerry Lee Lewis |
| | | Jimmie Rodgers |
| | | Jimmy Buffet |
| | | John Lee Hooker |
| | | Lance Bass |
| | | LeAnn Rimes |
| | | Leontyne Price |
| | | Marty Stuart |
| | | Muddy Waters |
| | | Paul Overstreet |
| | | Pete Fountain |
| | | Pinetop Perkins |
| | | Robert Johnson |
| | | Rufus Thomas |
| | | Sam Cooke |
| | | Son House |
| | | Sonny Boy Williams |
| | | Tammy Wynette |
| | | WC Handy |