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Timothy Tyson, a childhood friend of Teel's younger son who was living in Oxford during those years, earned a doctorate and became an historian. He published Blood Done Sign My Name (2004) about the killing of Marrow, the trial, and their effects on Oxford, North Carolina and the civil rights movement. It recounted the events of Marrow's ...
John Franklin Sossamon is an American politician. He is a Republican former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives , who represented the 32nd district (including all of Vance County , as well as most of Granville County .) from 2023 to 2025.
John Sossamon, owner of Henderson's Sossamon Funeral Home, bought the two properties in Granville County. As he and his family live in Oxford, an expansion to a nearby area "made sense," he said.
The district encompasses 201 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 2 contributing objects in the central business district and surrounding residential sections of Oxford. It includes buildings dating from the early-19th century through the 1930s and notable examples of Greek Revival and Late Victorian style architecture.
Dozens of people gathered at Roselawn Cemetery for the committal service of a formerly homeless lady who died without any known relatives. Ann Hillman lived in the Cathedral Quarter in central ...
Sydney Sweeney hit back after body shamers piled on one of her Instagram posts, which included videos and photos of her hitting the gym to prepare for her role as boxer Christy Martin.
On 12 May, a memorial service was held at Oxford's University Church of St Mary the Virgin, attended by 400 family and friends, and on 29 May, a funeral service was held at Poulton Methodist Church. In her memory each year St Hilda's College awards the Rachel McLean Prize for students who have "improved college life and/or raised the profile of ...
Despite her deepest fears, Joseph came home from his two combat tours at age 22, physically sound. But the demons of his moral injuries followed close behind and eventually closed in on him. It turned out, she realized too late, that coming home was more dangerous than being at war. “It wasn’t Afghanistan where he died,” she reminded me.