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Columbus High School was formed by the merger of the city's two previous high schools, Stephen D. Lee High School and Caldwell High School; the schools were merged in 1992 and the campuses in 1997. Columbus is also home to the oldest public elementary school in Mississippi, Franklin Academy Elementary, founded in 1821. [citation needed]
Severance Hall, also known as Severance Music Center, [1] is a concert hall in the University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, home to the Cleveland Orchestra. Opened in 1931 to give the orchestra a permanent home, the building is named for patrons John L. Severance and his wife, Elisabeth Huntingdon DeWitt Severance. [ 2 ]
Severance Hall [nb 19] North America Summer 2010 Tour (billed as "An Acoustic Evening with Jon Anderson (The Voice of Yes")) 16 August 2010: Minneapolis: United States: Guthrie Theatre 19 August 2010: Chicago: Park West 21 August 2010: Milwaukee: Milwaukee County Zoo 23 August 2010: Ferndale: Magic Bag 25 August 2010: Millvale: Mr. Small's ...
South Columbus Historic District is a historic district in Columbus, Mississippi that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1] Its 1980 nomination lists 525 structures and sites. [2] According to the nomination:
Lowndes County is a county on the eastern border of the U.S. state of Mississippi. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 58,879. [1] Its county seat is Columbus. [2] The county is named for U.S. Congressman William Jones Lowndes. [3] Lowndes County comprises the Columbus, MS Micropolitan Statistical Area. [4]
Three years after appointing him police chief, city leaders are pushing Freddie Blackmon out. Here are the details.
The cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 and was designated a Mississippi Landmark in 1989. As of 2015, the cemetery contained some 22,000 graves within an area of 70 acres and was still in use. [5] The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science hosts a public event every April at night in the cemetery ...
George Hall, named for James Z. George, Confederate politician and colonel in the Confederate Army, later U. S. Senator. In Ventress Hall there is "an original Tiffany stained glass window [which] depicts a mustering of the University Greys, a company of University of Mississippi students and faculty who fought in the Civil War." [29]