The city of Jackson is located in Madison county in western Tennessee. It lies about 80 miles (130 kilometers) northeast of Memphis.
Jackson has several popular tourist spots in the city and in the surrounding area. Casey Jones, the railroad engineer famed for his skill with a locomotive whistle who was killed in a train wreck in 1900, is buried in Jackson’s Mount Calvary Cemetery; his home is now a railroad museum. Pinson Mounds State Archaeological Park, about 10 miles (15 kilometers) south of the city, contains prehistoric Native American mounds. Shiloh National Military Park, the site of one of the bloodiest American Civil War battles (April 6–7, 1862), is about 60 miles (100 kilometers) southeast of Jackson, near the Mississippi border. Chickasaw and Natchez Trace state parks are nearby.
The educational institutions in Jackson include Union University (affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention), which was founded in 1823; University of Memphis Lambuth (United Methodist), which was founded in 1843; and Lane College (Christian Methodist Episcopal), which was founded in 1882. Jackson State Community College opened in 1967.
The city’s modern economy is well diversified, based on agriculture (notably cotton, corn [maize], and soybeans), industry (including the manufacture of lawn and garden equipment, power tools, flooring, appliances, and air compressors), and its educational facilities. Food processing is also important.
The area was settled about 1819 as a port on the Forked Deer River and developed as a cotton depot and railroad junction. First called Alexandria, the community was renamed in 1822 to honor General (later President) Andrew Jackson. The city of Jackson was used as a supply point by both Confederate and Union troops during the American Civil War and was the site of a minor engagement in 1862 led by Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Population (2020 census), city, 68,205; metropolitan area, 180,504.