Although Jackson's purchase also included all of Tennessee west of the Tennessee River, the term Jackson Purchase is used only to refer to the Kentucky portion of the acquisition; the Tennessee region directly to the south is typically called West Tennessee.
The Purchase, which is primarily alluvial and is geologically part of the Mississippi Delta, is mostly agricultural. The largest city and main economic center, Paducah, has fewer than 30,000 residents. Only two other towns in the region, Murray and Mayfield, have more than 5,000 residents. The region's main educational institution is Murray State University.
Tourism is an important industry in the Purchase, largely focused on the TVA-created Kentucky Lake, which now forms most of the Purchase's eastern border, and Lake Barkley a few miles to the east.
Despite its inland location, the Purchase is in a zone of high earthquake risk. It lies near the New Madrid fault zone, which in 1811 and 1812 experienced three of the most severe quakes recorded in the United States, and also had a major quake in 1895.
Historically, the Purchase was the most heavily Democratic region in Kentucky. For well over a century, it provided such overwhelming margins for Democratic candidates that Kentucky Democrats routinely called it the "Gibraltar of Democracy". In fact, the most widely circulated newspaper and media outlet in the Purchase, The Paducah Sun was once named the Paducah Sun-Democrat. see WPSD-TV
Like much of the South, the Purchase is now a reliably Republican region in national elections. As of 2004, the majority of the region's delegation in the Kentucky General Assembly is now Republican, and the region's two state senators are both Republicans for the first time in history. The purchase is within, but not all of Kentucky's 1st congressional district.
Today's Purchase Democrats are generally more conservative than their party's national leadership (see also Blue Dog Democrats).
Counties in the Purchase:
Geography of Kentucky | History of Kentucky | History of United States expansionism | Andrew Jackson
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"Jackson Purchase".
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