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Top of the Morning
Sharing news, research, stories, and other material by Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. Research topics include F.F. Bosworth, Ernest Hemingway, Anne Moody, and Natchez, MS. Email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com
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Top of the Morning
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I'm pictured here with Natchez Police Chief Lee Best at Natchez Powwow 2026.
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Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-C.M.Boxley
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| Tommy Wildcat Photo courtesy of Tommy Wildcat (Click on image to enlarge.) |
NATCHEZ, Miss. — Tommy Wildcat, a Cherokee Nation flute player, will perform at the Natchez Powwow on Saturday and Sunday, March 28 and 29, 2026, on the Natchez Bluff. Admission is free and open to the public.
Dr. Chuck Borum, who chairs the Natchez Powwow, said
Wildcat is a great musician, and his performance will be an exciting and
welcome addition to this year’s lineup. “Wildcat is extremely gifted as a
musician and highly respected,” Borum said.
Wildcat, who hails from Tahlequah, Oklahoma, is a
Cherokee Nation “National Treasure,” a title recognizing master artisans and
tradition bearers who preserve Cherokee art, language, and culture. He has
shared his work at cultural events and performances across the country.
Wildcat and his family were featured in the September
2005 issue of National Geographic magazine. In 1995, he appeared in the
American Express “Charge Against Hunger” commercial.
Wildcat is a graduate of Northeastern State University
where he earned a bachelor’s degree in Cherokee Cultural Studies. He won the
2002 Native American Music Award for Flutist of the Year for his album “Pow-Wow
Flutes.”
Wildcat said performing in Natchez is a privilege he
really appreciates. “I’m very grateful and honored to be at the Natchez
Mississippi Powwow this year,” he said.
The Natchez Powwow, held annually since the late 1980s,
celebrates Native American culture through dance, music, crafts, and more. It
is presented as a wholesome family-friendly event for local residents and
visitors.
Program lineup
In addition to Wildcat, this year’s powwow will feature
Eddie Yellowfish, Osage-Otoe-Comanche, of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, who will
serve as the head singer of the Southern Drum.
Others featured include Frank Carson, Otoe-Pawnee, of
Stillwater, Oklahoma, as master of ceremonies; and Darsh DeSilva of Round Rock,
Texas, as arena director; and Free “Bird” Kasler, Otoe, of Chouteau, Oklahoma,
as head man dancer.
The program will include Wonzie Kline Kole, Mescalero
Apache-Comanche of Dallas as the head lady dancer; and James Barton of
Summerville, South Carolina, as the head gourd dancer.
Oscar-nominated songwriter Scott George of Hominy,
Oklahoma, will support Yellowfish on the drums. George composed “Wahzhazhe
(A Song for My People),” that was featured in Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the
Flower Moon.” He and Yellowfish performed the song with the Osage Tribal
Singers at the 96th Academy Awards in March 2024.
Powwow schedule
Saturday March 28, 2026
9 a.m. – Food, Craft, and Farmers’ Market Vendors open;
12:30 p.m. — Gourd Dance; 2 p.m. — Grand Entry and Intertribal Dancing; 4 p.m.
— Camp Feed for Singers, Dancers, and Family/Friends; 6 p.m. — Gourd Dance; 7
p.m. — Grand Entry and Intertribal Dancing; 9 p.m. – Closing
Sunday March 29, 2026
9 a.m. — Food and Craft Vendors open; 12:30 p.m. —
Gourd Dance; 2 p.m. — Grand Entry and Intertribal Dancing
Alcohol is prohibited at the powwow. It is not allowed in
the powwow area or in the trader or food vending area. Attendees are encouraged
to bring lawn chairs for seating.
Borum said the powwow is financially supported by local
Natchez businesses, individuals, and the Natchez Convention Promotion
Commission/Visit Natchez.
For more information, visit https://www.natchezpowwow.com or email Powwow Chairman Dr. Chuck Borum at cborum@hotmail.com.
See more at this link:
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Event set for Silver Street near Mississippi River landing dock
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| Shelia Byrd is the deputy director of the Programs and Communication Division of Mississippi Department of Archives and History and a former Associated Press journalist. (Click on image to enlarge.) |
NATCHEZ, Miss. -- Shelia Byrd, the deputy director of the Programs and Communication Division of Mississippi Department of Archives and History, will serve as guest speaker at a marker dedication ceremony honoring Prince Abdul Rahman Ibrahima (1762-1829).
The ceremony will be held at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, April 8, 2026, at Under-the-Hill on Silver Street near the Mississippi River landing dock. It is free and open to the public. This second marker complements one dedicated in October 2025 near Historic Jefferson College.
Byrd is a former Associated Press journalist who covered civil rights, politics and education.
"It is an honor to be included in a ceremony highlighting Prince Ibrahima, whose story is one of millions woven into Mississippi's history. His story ends in freedom, but only after enslavement, struggle, and loss," Byrd said. "It is fitting the marker unveiling comes while the country is marking the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence."
Byrd was an AP journalist for 17 years, covering stories that included the trial of Klansman Edgar Ray Killen for the 1964 murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner. She also wrote about the FBI's reopening of the Emmett Till murder case. Prior to MDAH, Byrd was the communications director at Mississippi Public Broadcasting, managing editor at the General Motors Story Bureau, and vice president for communications at Hope Enterprise Corporation.
A graduate of Grambling State University with a bachelor’s degree in mass communication, Byrd is a multiple Lantern and Prism award winner, recognized for excellence in writing and integrated communications.
Natchez history
Mayor Dan Gibson said he is looking forward to the ceremony as a meaningful part of Natchez’s history.
“This ceremony is an important step in recognizing and telling the full story of Natchez,” Gibson said. “Prince Abdul Rahman Ibrahima’s journey is both powerful and sobering, and it deserves to be remembered and shared for generations to come. We are proud to commemorate his legacy here in Natchez.”
Lynsey Gilbert, interim director of Visit Natchez, said the ceremony is a celebration of Natchez’s history and a recognition of difficult truths in the nation’s past.
“We value the life history of Prince Ibrahima, and we’re excited to honor him with a new historical marker,” she said. “This marker will commemorate his arrival in Natchez as an enslaved man in 1788 and his departure with his freedom on April 8, 1828.”
The ceremony date was chosen to mark the anniversary of his departure in 1828.
Gilbert said the selected location is ideal for the marker. The area is visited by thousands of people each year, including those who travel on the Mississippi River cruise ships, she said.
The site for the marker was approved by property owner Denton Biglane, who said the marker “will be a much-needed and overdue addition to Natchez and Under-the-Hill.”
Program lineup
In addition to Byrd and Gibson, the program will feature Vickie R. Green, playwright and CEO of Behind the Walls Ministries, as the mistress of ceremonies. The Rev. Dr. Joan Gandy, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Natchez, will offer the invocation, and the Rev. Clifton Marvel Sr., pastor of Greater Macedonia Baptist Church, will offer the benediction.
Tony Fields, soloist and minister of music at Zion Chapel A.M.E. Church, will provide special musical selections for the program. Gibson will deliver the opening remarks, followed by Roscoe Barnes III of Visit Natchez, who will recognize the guests and introduce the guest speaker. Remarks also will be shared by David Dreyer, local historian and genealogist.
Natchez High School students Ainsley Dupre and Halle Stamps will present excerpts from Dr. Terry Alford’s book, “Prince Among Slaves: The True Story of an African Prince Sold into Slavery in the American South” (Oxford University Press, 1977).
Ibrahima was a Muslim prince from Timbo in the Futa Jallon region of present-day Guinea, West Africa. He was captured in battle in 1788 and sold into the transatlantic slave trade. He spent 40 years enslaved on Thomas Foster’s plantation near Natchez before gaining his freedom in 1828 with the help of Andrew Marschalk, the “Father of Mississippi Journalism,” and U.S. Secretary of State Henry Clay in President John Quincy Adams’ administration.
Top of the Morning column published in The Natchez Democrat (Wednesday, April 1, 2026, page 4A) (Click on image to enlarge.) Top of the Morn...