US | Mississippi Mississippi Finally OKs 13th Amendment Banning Slavery ...148 years after it cleared Congress By Rob Quinn Posted Feb 18, 2013 2:46 AM CST Updated Feb 18, 2013 4:23 AM CST Copied Daniel Day-Lewis is seen as Abraham Lincoln, in a scene from "Lincoln." (AP Photo/DreamWorks, Twentieth Century Fox, David James, File) Mississippi has officially ratified the 13th Amendment to the Constitution—a mere 148 years after the amendment outlawing slavery cleared Congress and was sent to state legislatures for approval. Mississippi's legislature voted to ratify the amendment in 1995, but it never became official because the state never notified the United States Archivist, the Clarion-Ledger reports. The oversight was cleared up after a doctor saw the movie Lincoln and did some research into when different states had ratified the slavery ban. The doctor—a recent immigrant from India—and a colleague contacted state officials, who sent in the paperwork to finally make ratification official. The next-to-last state to ratify the 13th Amendment, Kentucky, did so in 1976. "We’re very deliberate in our state. We finally got it right," says state Sen. Hillman Frazier, the Democrat who introduced the resolution to ratify the amendment in 1995. It passed the Mississippi Senate and House unanimously, with some lawmakers abstaining. Read These Next A "horrific" incident killed 3 deputies in East Los Angeles. Trump says Rupert Murdoch will pay for ignoring his demand. Jimmy Kimmel isn't happy to see Stephen Colbert go. You may not want to peek at suggested health insurance rates for 2026. Report an error