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Hattiesburg, MS: Live event 54 The Mysterious Medic 2 January 18, 1973: 21 Hattiesburg, MS: Live event [18] 55 Bob Kelly 11 February 8, 1973: 63 Hattiesburg, MS: Live event [19] [20] 56 The Wrestling Pro 1 April 12, 1973: 4 Hattiesburg, MS: Live event [21] [22] 57 Arman Hussein 3 April 16, 1973: 59 Laurel, MS: Live event [15] 58 Rocket Monroe 5 ...
The stadium was originally opened on October 29, 1932 as "Faulkner Field", with a wooden grandstand which held 4,000 spectators at the time. It was named for local businessman L.E. Faulkner, who financed the materials and equipment for the stadium, which was built for free by local unemployed workers during the Great Depression.
The 1904 "Hattiesburg" team was the first minor league team based in Hattiesburg, playing the 1904 season as charter members of the Class D level Delta League. [1] [2] The Delta League began the season with four charter teams, as the Brookhaven, MS (Brookhaven), Clarksdale, MS (Clarksdale), Jackson Senators and the Yazoo City Zoos began league play.
The former two-lane alignment of US 49W between Yazoo City and Silver City became part of MS 149 in 2006. [ 3 ] It is notable that for several years during the 1930s, a second split route existed on US 49 in South Mississippi, similar to but shorter than the split that still exists in the Delta region. [ 4 ]
SoCon champion Tangerine Bowl champion ... Lane Stadium; Blacksburg, VA; L 18–31: 12,000 [9] November 16: at Southern Miss * Faulkner Field; Hattiesburg, MS; W 33 ...
U.S. Route 49 (US 49) is a north–south United States highway.The highway's northern terminus is in Piggott, Arkansas, at an intersection with U.S. Route 62 (US 62). Its southern terminus is in Gulfport, Mississippi, at an intersection with US 90.
Hattiesburg is the 4th most populous city in the U.S. state of Mississippi, located primarily in Forrest County (where it is the county seat and most populous city) [4] and extending west into Lamar County. The city population was 45,989 at the 2010 census, [5] with the population now being 48,730 in 2020. [6]
Until 1987, there were but two major four-lane highways in Mississippi, not counting the Interstates, which were built during the 1960s and 1970s: U.S. Highway 49 (US 49) from Yazoo City to Gulfport and US 82 between Greenville and Winona. Things changed when the state legislature launched the $1.3 billion Four-Lane Highway Program of 1987. [2]