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Location of Escambia County in Alabama. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Escambia County, Alabama. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Escambia County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided ...
Luverne Wise was born on March 30, 1922, in Atmore, Alabama, to Walter and Ida Wise.She attended Atmore High School (now known as Escambia County High School) there. In 1939, as a high school junior, Wise and some of her friends asked football coach Andy Edington for a tryout, complaining that they didn't have much to do.
The Atmore Advance was founded in 1927 in Atmore, Alabama. [1] It has a circulation of approximately 2,000, and serves Atmore and surrounding Escambia County, Alabama. [2] It is published each Wednesday by Atmore Newspapers, Inc. [3] Through its early history the editorial board was supportive of the Democratic Party.
Emmons was born in 1895 in Alabama to John Davidson Emmons (June 30, 1853 - unknown), and Martha Jane Emmons (March 22, 1865 - unknown). He had 8 siblings. his family moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1905, [2] Where he learned in a public school, and subsequently attended the University of New Mexico
Lynda Cheryle Lyon was born February 8, 1948, in Orlando, Florida, to Francis Stephen "Frank" Lyon and Berylene Elisabeth Owen.Lynda and her sister Denyce (born 1952) lost their father when she was 10, when he died of heart failure.
Daniel Lee Siebert (June 17, 1954 – April 22, 2008) was an American serial killer on Alabama's death row. He was convicted of three murders and confessed to at least five. During questioning he indicated that he was responsible for at least 12 deaths. Siebert died on April 22, 2008, in Holman Prison near Atmore of complications from cancer. [1]
John Louis Evans III (January 4, 1950 – April 22, 1983) was the first inmate to be executed by the state of Alabama after the United States reinstituted the death penalty in 1976.
Atmore was first recorded as a stop called Williams Station [8] on the Mobile and Great Northern Railroad.The town was originally to be named "Carney", in honor of a citizen who owned a sawmill in the town. Mr. Carney's brother had already established a town nearby with the same name, and Mr. Carney was allowed to name the town after his close friend C.P. Atmore, General Passenger Agent of the ...