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funeral director Velma Louise Gaines Hamock (May 25, 1910 – October 3, 2000) was an American funeral home owner in Paducah, Kentucky . In 1949 she inherited the business, at one time the only African-American owned funeral home in the city, after the death of her husband A. Z. Hamock.
The Saffell Funeral Home, located at 4th and Clay Streets in Shelbyville, Kentucky, was built in about 1830. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1] It is or was a two-story, three bay brick side passage plan building which had been stuccoed by 1983. [2]
Charles Henry "Speedy" Atkins (1875–1928) was an American tobacco worker in Paducah, Kentucky.A pauper at his death, he drowned in the Ohio River.The city turned over his body for a pauper's burial to his friend A.Z. Hamock, the only African-American undertaker in town.
Shelbyville: 97: Saffell Funeral Home: September 28, 1984 4th and Clay Sts. ... 0.5 miles north of Kentucky Route 43: Shelbyville: 2: Moesser Farm: December 27, 1988
Kentucky Publishing, Inc. The Advocate-Messenger: Danville: 1940 Tue–Sat Boone Newspapers: Created by merger of The Kentucky Advocate and The Danville Daily–Messenger: The Anderson News: Lawrenceburg: 1877 Weekly Paxton Media Group: The Banner–Republic: Morgantown: 1885 Weekly Jobe Publishing, Inc. Barren County Progress: Glasgow: 1882 ...
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Where did the story of John Burroughs of Paducah, Kentucky, is Elvis Presley come from? Facebook satire page The Somerset Insider made the original post on Monday, July 22. But the original post ...
Shropshire House – Home of Confederate governor of Kentucky, George W. Johnson; built 1814; Thomas Edison House – Home of Thomas Edison from 1866 to 1867; built c. 1850s; Thomas Huey Farm – Gothic Revival style home; built 1865; Ward Hall – Home of Junius and Matilda Viley Ward, built circa 1857