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Marshall County Correctional Facility, Holly Springs, Mississippi Howard Monteville Neal (born September 14, 1953) is an American murderer and self-confessed serial killer . Convicted and sentenced to death for killing his half-brother and two nieces in Arm, Mississippi in 1981, his sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment after it was ...
Kimbrough was born in Hudsonville, Mississippi, [2] and lived in the north Mississippi hill country near Holly Springs. His father, a barber, played the guitar, and Junior picked his guitar as a child. [5] He was apparently influenced by the guitarists Mississippi Fred McDowell and Eli Green. [6]
Graceland Too was located at 200 E. Gholson Avenue in Holly Springs. The two-story home—MacLeod occupying the top floor—was filled with Elvis paraphernalia [1] [8] to the point of being a fire hazard. [5] MacLeod operated Graceland Too 24/7 and would personally give visitors a tour, claiming that his collection was valued at millions of ...
Marshall County Correctional Center (MCCF) is a prison in Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi, operated by the Mississippi Department of Corrections.It was formerly a for-profit prison managed by Management and Training Corporation (MTC) on behalf of MDOC.
Laura Ann Hunt was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi on June 22, 1837. [1] Her family was small and traveled around the southern United States while she was growing up; eventually settling in New Orleans. [1] At the age of 16 in 1853, she married her first husband, 36-year-old William H. Stone, an alcohol dealer from New Orleans.
Residents in Holly Springs, Mississippi, have complained that the city-run electric system keeps losing power without warning. Residents in Holly Springs, Mississippi, have complained that the ...
William Baskerville Hamilton (1908–1972), historian, born in Jackson, taught public school in Holly Springs and Jackson [31] Robert Khayat (born 1938), chancellor of the University of Mississippi ; Rory Lee (born 1949), clergyman, college president ; Mamie Locke (born 1954), political scientist, dean at Hampton University
Wells was born into slavery in Holly Springs, Mississippi. She was freed as an infant under the Emancipation Proclamation, when Union Army troops captured Holly Springs. At the age of 16, [4] she lost both her parents and her infant brother in the 1878 yellow fever epidemic. She got a job teaching and kept the rest of the family together with ...