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South Main Street, Grenada Grenada Depot, c. 1910. Grenada was formed in 1836, after federal removal of the Choctaw people who had previously occupied this territory. It was the result of the union of the two adjacent towns (separated by the present-day Line Street) of Pittsburg and Tulahoma (or Tullahoma), founded, respectively, by Franklin Plummer and Hiram Runnels.
Springhill Rd. 33°46′36″N 89°49′11″W / 33.776635°N 89.819641°W / 33.776635; -89.819641 (Confederate Redoubt) Grenada. 3. Evergreen Plantation. Evergreen Plantation. October 18, 1977. (#77000786) 4 miles north of Grenada on Hardy Rd.
UTC−5 (CDT) Congressional district. 2nd. Grenada County is a county located in the U.S. state of Mississippi. [1] As of the 2020 Census, the population was 21,629. [2] Its county seat is Grenada. [3] The county was named for Granada, Spain. [4] Its western half is part of the Mississippi Delta. Cotton cultivation was important to its economy ...
87002307 [1] Added to NRHP. January 20, 1988. The Masonic Temple in Grenada, Mississippi is a Classical Revival building from 1925. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. [1] It was designated a Mississippi Landmark in 2007. [2]
The Grenada, Mississippi tornado of May 7, 1846, killed 21 people, injured 60, and destroyed 60 or 70 buildings in the southern half of Grenada, Yalobusha County, Mississippi [a] in the United States. [1] [2] [3] Other accounts had it that 112 buildings were destroyed, [4] including 17 homes. [5] Property damage was estimated at $65,000 [6] to ...
English: The maps use data from nationalatlas.gov, specifically countyp020.tar.gz on the Raw Data Download page. The maps also use state outline data from statesp020.tar.gz . The Florida maps use hydrogm020.tar.gz to display Lake Okeechobee.
Webster County is a county located in center of the U.S. state of Mississippi, bordered on the south by the Big Black River. As of the 2020 census, the population was 9,926. [1] The county was organized in 1874 during the Reconstruction era; the biracial legislature named it after Massachusetts statesman Daniel Webster.
The Emmanuel Association of Churches is a Methodist denomination in the conservative holiness movement. [A][3][2] The formation of the Emmanuel Association is a part of the history of Methodism in the United States. It was formed in 1937 as a result of a schism in the Pilgrim Holiness Church, led by Ralph Goodrich Finch, the former general ...