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Posted on Tue, May. 06, 2008
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U.S. 61 to get state Blues Trail marker

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gov. Haley Barbour on Thursday will unveil a marker designating U.S. 61 as part of the Mississippi Blues Trail.

The ceremony will be held at the Tunica Visitors Center on U.S. 61 in Tunica.

"As the most famed stretch of roadway in Mississippi's storied history, it's only fitting that the highway be permanently and officially designated as the Blues Highway to honor the many talented artists whose travels made it come alive as one of most enduring cultural icons," Barbour said in a statement.

Among the dozens of blues artists who recorded songs about U.S. 61 were Mississippians Sunnyland Slim, James Son Thomas, David Honeyboy Edwards, Big Joe Williams, Joe McCoy, Charlie Musslewhite, Johnny Young, Eddie Burns, Blind Mississippi Morris, and Mississippi Fred McDowell.

U.S. 61 runs from downtown New Orleans to the Canadian border. It was a major route for Southerners migrating to northern cities.

The route roughly follows the Mississippi River and runs through Baton Rouge; Memphis; St. Louis; Davenport, Ohio; and St. Paul, Minn.