Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Subsequently, the naked body of Gray was discovered pushed under a folded-down seat of Loden's van, and her hands and feet were tied up. Itawamba County Coroner Shirley Davis conducted a post-mortem examination of Gray's body and determined the cause of death to be asphyxiation by manual strangulation. [5] [6] [7]
Walter Washington Williams (November 14, 1842 or 1854 – December 19, 1959) was an American man who claimed to have been a forager for Hood's Brigade, which if true made him the last surviving veteran of the American Civil War.
Bates was born on a plantation in Itawamba County, Mississippi, in 1848. [2] He was the ninth of twelve children of planter Henderson Wesley Bates (1807–1869) and Eliza Elvira Jarratt Bourland (1815–1900). Finis Bates studied law in Carrollton, Mississippi, and in the 1870s he and his family moved to Texas, where he met John St. Helen ...
[18] [19] In his 1991 article in Blue and Gray magazine entitled The Great Imposters, William Marvel gave further details, including census records from before his 1932 Confederate pension application, showing Williams's birth as having occurred between October 1854 and April 1855 in Itawamba County, Mississippi. Those records showed he was too ...
Itawamba County is a county located in the U.S. state of Mississippi. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 23,863. [1] Its county seat is Fulton. [2] The county is part of the Tupelo, MS Micropolitan Statistical Area. The county was named for Itawamba, an early 19th-century Chickasaw leader. [3]
People from Fulton, Mississippi (9 P) Pages in category "People from Itawamba County, Mississippi" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
Mississippi portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Itawamba County, Mississippi . The main article for this category is Itawamba County, Mississippi .
Virginia Wynette Pugh was born in Itawamba County, Mississippi, in 1942. [3] The farm where she was born was near the Alabama state line, between Red Bay, Alabama, and Tremont, Mississippi. She later credited both Alabama and Mississippi as her home states. She was the only child born to Mildred Faye Russell and William Hollis Pugh.