Before Natchez: A Journey Through Humanity’s Deep South

This presentation captures Dr. Tracy “Rev” Collins’s descent into the intricate layers of history–an exploration that blurs the boundaries between myth, memory, and human experience in the Deep South. Before Natchez traces the evolution of humanity in the region now called Mississippi, beginning with the ancient seas that shaped its fertile river basin and the rise of the Mississippian peoples, ancestors of the Yazoo, Biloxi, and Natchez tribes.

From this deep past emerges a story of encounter and exchange. When the French arrived, they called the powerful Natchez people “Indians,” but their world was already one of complex diplomacy, trade, and cultural synthesis. Collins examines how the Natchez engaged with African peoples brought to the region–often through French mediation–and how shared technologies, beliefs, and social structures fostered forms of cooperation that challenge the conventional narrative of slavery.

This presentation invites audiences to reconsider early Mississippi as more than a colonial frontier. It becomes a crucible of humanity itself–a place where cultures met, mingled, and sometimes collided, revealing both the promise and peril at the heart of the American story.

Speakers Expertise:

Rev, as he is affectionately called in the Natchez community, has dedicated his life to the spiritual and social growth of this community. He serves on several boards and organizations and is an avid researcher of Natchez and Mississippi history. He has spent long hours and many months learning his local history and interviewing community members.

Rev.’s presentations are the culmination of his dedicated work learning and studying the history of Natchez.