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Tour Idea #1: The Sam Wilhite Transportation Museum in West Point, Mississippi. Sam Wilhite, a former President and Chairman of the Board of the Columbus and Greenville Railroad (also known as the C & G Railroad), lends his name to the West Point ... home, church, historical marker, gravesite and Old Community Store where MS John Hurt played. Balancing the unusual attractions with the general traditional attractions will create a memorable family vacation escape. ...
St. Louis Floods - fautrever.com: Lance and Erin Willett's Outdoor ...
Grant broke up the monotony of his days at the post with visits to the family home of a West Point friend. Though Grant had been raised in an abolitionist family he enjoyed spending time at White Haven, the Dent family plantation. .... In 1882 another flood inundated the Mississippi River Valley, though lucky for the residents of St. Louis they escaped the worst of the damage. Unlike previous floods this one, "The Chocolate Tide" as Mark Twain called it, wreaked havoc on ...
Beloved Friend and Supporter of the Billups-Garth Archives Passes ...
A member of two Lowndes County pioneer families, Mr. Billups was born in Columbus, Mississippi, April 18, 1915, to Thomas Carleton and Lenore Hardy Billups. He was the fourth generation of his family to be born in the antebellum home, Whitehall. ... and Jacqueline Cameron Billups of Washington, D. C.; great-granddaughters, Annabelle Carleton Small and Sarah Margaret Small of Dallas; sister Ida Billups Ward of Columbus; and nephew Rufus Alexander Ward of West Point. ...
Obituaries for Nov. 4, 2009 | Baker City Herald | Baker County ...
Elva worked in nursing homes and restaurants throughout her life. The family moved to Haines in 1950. Elva and Frank traveled all over the country, from the Mississippi River to the West Coast and north to Alaska. ... She seemed to have the belief that it was "easier to apologize later than to ask for permission first," her family members said. Elva was set in her ways, did things the way she wanted and would argue a point to death if she thought she was right. ...
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