Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Richland News: Richland: 2018 Monthly Clay Mansell [11] Sea Coast Echo: Bay St. Louis: Semi-weekly Southwest Rankin News: Pearl, Richland, & Florence, MS Monthly Clay Mansell Starkville Daily News: Starkville: Daily Stone County Enterprise: Wiggins: Weekly Sun Herald: Biloxi-Gulfport: Daily McClatchy Company [4] [12] Vicksburg Post: Vicksburg ...
On June 8, 2009, The Commercial Dispatch began publishing The Starkville Dispatch, a daily edition of The Commercial Dispatch that focuses on Starkville, Mississippi. Both papers share the bulk of their content, including all advertising, but the local news pages in The Starkville Dispatch tend to focus on Starkville-specific content.
Starkville is the largest city in the Golden Triangle, which had a population of 175,474 in 2020, and the principal city of the Starkville-Columbus, MS CSA. Founded in 1831, the city was originally known as Boardtown for the local sawmilling operation there, but was renamed in 1837 to honor American Revolutionary War general John Stark. [7]
Sep. 16—OXFORD — A woman who claimed cash flow shortages at her business prompted her to embezzle nearly $3 million from a sorority will spend nearly four years in a federal prison. Betty Jane ...
Mississippi State is a census-designated place in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, United States. [2] It is the official designated name for the area encompassing Mississippi State University, which lies partly in the nearby incorporated municipality of Starkville. [3]
This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: From a US postal abbreviation : This is a redirect from a US postal abbreviation to its associated municipality.
Oktibbeha County is a county in the east central portion of the U.S. state of Mississippi.As of the 2020 census the population was 51,788. [2] The county seat is Starkville.The county's name is derived from a Choctaw word meaning "icy creek". [3]
The Cotton District is a community located in Starkville, Mississippi. It was founded by Dan Camp, who was the developer, owner and property manager of much of the area. [ 1 ] It is significant for its use of traditional architecture and as an example of traditional neighborhood development practices in the 1960s.