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Tag Archives: Mississippi

Thirteen Unknown Confederates

15 Friday Feb 2019

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Cemeteries, Confederate, Mississippi, Saltillo, Unknown Graves

Thirteen Unknown Confederates

Were they some of Shiloh’s wounded who retreated here in 1862 to die beside the Natchez Trace? Did they serve under the daring General Nathan Forest who passed this way in 1864? Or were they guarding the Tupelo headquarters of J.B. Hood’s Army of Tennessee near the end of the Civil War? We may never know.

Tradition holds that the unknown graves in front of you belong to Confederate soldiers who marched and camped along this stretch of the Old Trace. Perhaps they died of wounds, or the lingering hunger, poverty, and sickness in the army camps. Their simple grave markers face backwards—toward the Trace—so travelers might read and remember.

The original grave markers may have borne names, but they disappeared a long time ago. In 1940 Senator Theodore Bilbo arranged for marble headstones, but they were stolen. The National Park Service erected the headstones now in place.

Located at N 34.36633 W 88.67428 – on the Natchez Trace outside Saltillo, Mississippi.

Old Mormon Cemetery

11 Friday Jan 2019

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Booneville, Cemeteries, historic, LDS Church, Mississippi

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Old Mormon Cemetery

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“The Old Mormon Chapel”

First Latter-Day Saint Building erected in Northeast Mississippi.

Dedicated December 3rd, 1936 by Apostle Reed Smoot, accompanied by Elder LeGrand Richards – Southern States Mission President.   First Booneville Branch Convert, John Ashcraft – Baptized April 18, 1896.

 

Branch Leaders:

  • Bruce Stephenson, B.P.
  • W. Ophas Floyd, B.P.
  • Rocky Lee Floyd, A.B.P.
  • Hyrum Winterton, A.B.P.
  • Luther F. McKissack, B.P.
  • Oscar Weatherbee, B.P.
  • J.C. Morris, B.P.
  • Luther F. McKissack, B.P.

Services moved to new building on George E. Allen Drive, Boonville, MS. in the fall of 1968.

 

Brice’s Crossroads

27 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Markers, Mississippi, Mississippi Historic Markers, Prentiss County

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Brice’s Crossroads

Six miles west of here, on June 10, 1864, General Forrest won his greatest victory, crushing superior Union forces of General Sturgis and driving them back to Memphis.

Guntown, Mississippi

24 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Guntown, Lee County, Mississippi

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Guntown, Mississippi

The community most likely has the name of James Gunn, a pioneer citizen.

Guntown was established in the 1850s, and incorporated as a village in 1867. It was declared a town in 1905 after its population had risen to 330.

Tupelo, Mississippi

11 Tuesday Oct 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Lee County, Mississippi, Neon Signs, Tupelo

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During the Civil War, Union and Confederate forces fought in the area in 1864 in the Battle of Tupelo. Designated the Tupelo National Battlefield, the war site is administered by the National Park Service (NPS). In addition, the Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield, about ten miles north, commemorates another Civil War site.

After the war, a cross-state railroad for northern Mississippi was constructed through the town, which encouraged industry and growth. With expansion, the town changed its name to Tupelo, in honor of the battle. It was incorporated in 1870.

Related: 

  • Battle of Tupelo
  • Elvis Presley Birthplace
  • Thirteen Unknown Confederates
  • Tupelo Hardware
  • 1085 S Thomas St
  • 307 Tedford St
  • 8202234233
  • 8200929233
  • 8202184233
  • ingress_20140320_100450_2
  • ingress_20140320_101805_12

Elvis Presley Birthplace

07 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Lee County, Mississippi, museums, Tupelo

  • 8202224233
  • 2c1a97fe-cb07-45cc-9fed-e8e9fa85fdf5

The Elvis Presley Birthplace is a historic museum site in Tupelo, Mississippi dedicated to the preservation of the birthplace of American musician Elvis Presley, as well as listed on the Mississippi Blues Trail.

The museum site includes the birthplace home of Elvis Presley, a museum, a chapel, and the Assembly of God Church building where the Presley family worshiped. Financially, times were hard on Vernon and Gladys, and they had to move out of the shotgun house when he was only a few years old for lack of payment. Vernon and Gladys worked various jobs while in Tupelo and moved several different times during the thirteen years they resided in Mississippi.

  • 24038_377512414233_1333271_n

Tupelo Hardware Co. ( “Elvis Presley’s First Guitar” )

11 Sunday Sep 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Elvis, historic, Lee County, Mississippi, Music, Tupelo

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As the story is recorded in Forrest L. Bobo’s letter dated October 2, 1979, Gladys Presley brought her son Elvis to Tupelo Hardware in January 1945 to buy him a birthday present. According to Mr. Bobo, Elvis would have preferred a rifle, but his mother succeeded in buying a guitar instead. The boy strummed the new guitar for a while, before his mother paid $7.75 and a 2% sales tax. The rest is history!

***********************************

A Letter Written October 2, 1979
on Tupelo Hardware Company letterhead

* GOOD MORNING –

My name is Forrest L. Bobo from Tupelo, Mississippi. I an 78 years young today, but I can well remember the afternoon when Elvis Presley and his mother came into Tupelo Hardware, where I worked for twenty years. He wanted a 22 cal. rifle and his mother wanted him to buy a guitar. I showed him the rifle first and then I got the guitar for him to look at. I put a wood box behind the showcase and let him play with the guitar for some time. Then he said that he did not have that much money, which was only $7.75 plus 2% sales tax. His mother told him that if he would buy the guitar instead of the rifle, she would pay the difference for him. The papers have said that the guitar cost $12.50 but at that time you could have bought a real nice one that amount. The small amount of money that he had to spend had been earned by running errands and doing small jobs for people.
* I am proud to have a little part in Elvis’ life. I had supper with Elvis the night he left for his first audition. We all wished him a great success, and he sure made a great life for himself and the rest of the world.
* Thank you for your time.

Forrest L. Bobo

 

Mississippi

09 Friday Sep 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Mississippi

  • 227058_8202104233_4491_n
  • Brice’s Crossroads at Baldwyn
  • Fulton
  • Guntown
  • Mormon Springs.
  • New Albany
  • Old Mormon Cemetery near Boonville
  • Saltillo
  • Thirteen Unknown Confederates
  • Tupelo

Mormon Springs

09 Friday Sep 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, LDS, LDS Church, Mississippi, Monroe County, Mormon, Mormon Pioneers, Mormon Springs

  • 80dce6f6-99e0-4edb-bfef-dd42013e09bb
    N 33.82919 W 88.29536

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints was organized April 6th, 1830 and Missionaries first arrived in North Eastern Mississippi in 1839, here at Mormon Springs many converts to the church were baptized, using stones to dam the stream they made a baptismal font just to the east of the ford that crossed the stream…..

From this site the first Mississippi Saints left for their trek west…

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