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Harleston-Boags Funeral Home (CP) Harmon Field/Cannon Street All-Stars (HM) Richard Holloway Houses (CP) Holy Trinity Reformed Episcopal Church (CP) Jackson Street Freedman’s Cottages (CP) Kress Building/Civil Rights Sit-Ins (HM) Lincoln Theatre/Little Jerusalem (HM) Magnolia Place and Gardens (NR) Mt. Zion A.M.E. Church (NR)
Corinth National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery in the city of Corinth, in Alcorn County, Mississippi. Administered by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, it encompasses 20 acres (8.1 ha), and as of the end of 2005, had 7,137 interments. It is managed by the Little Rock National Cemetery.
Braun Colonial Funeral Home, located at 3701 Falling Springs Road, was consolidated with Braun Family Funeral Home in Columbia. The last day of operation for Braun’s Cahokia Heights location was ...
Oak Home, 808 North Fillmore Street, [note 1] which served as Leonidas Polk's headquarters during the Battle of Corinth. It is a one-story, post and timber center hall plan cottage with Greek Revival style, built c. 1857 and expanded c. 1930–35.
The Downtown Corinth Historic District in Corinth, Mississippi is a 31-acre (13 ha) historic district. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993, [1] at which time it included the majority of Corinth's downtown commercial buildings. The street plan of the area was laid out in 1855 by surveyors Houston Mitchell (1824-1877 ...
It was given the name Corinth after the biblical city of Corinth in Greece, which was colonized in 1847 by Germans and Czechs. Prior to the justice of the peace's office being relocated to Buckholts in 1892, Precinct Six's legal center was located in Corinth. The area was depicted on the 1941 county highway map as having a cemetery and a number ...
The Georgia General Assembly incorporated the place in 1839 as the "Town of Corinth". [3] The community's name is a transfer from Ancient Corinth, in Greece. [4] A post office was established at Corinth in 1833, and remained in operation until 1914. [5] Corinth disincorporated on May 1, 2000. [6]
Acrocorinth, looking north towards the Gulf of Corinth. Acrocorinth (Greek: Ακροκόρινθος, lit. 'Upper Corinth' or 'the acropolis of ancient Corinth') is a monolithic rock overlooking the ancient city of Corinth, Greece. In the estimation of George Forrest, "It is the most impressive of the acropolis of mainland Greece." [1]