Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Parkview was built in 1923 as a 165-room apartment hotel. The building changed ownership several times over the decades. In 1964, it was acquired by Presbyterian Services Inc. and converted into ...
See the article History of Memphis, Tennessee for more information. Walker L. Clapp: 1895–1898 Joseph John "JJ" Williams: 1898–1906 James H. Malone: 1906–1910
James P. Lyke, After the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King in Memphis, TN, Father Lyke requested to be sent to Memphis, where he served for nine years as pastor at St. Thomas Church (now St. Augustine). He was the first African American Catholic priest to serve in the state of Tennessee.
Diane Meredith Belcher (born 1960) — concert organist, teacher, and church musician; Chris Bell (1951–1978) — musician; William Bell (born 1939) — singer; Charles T. Bernard (1927–2015) — businessman and Arkansas politician, died in Memphis in 2015; Big Scarr (born 2000) — rapper; Big Star (formed in 1971) — rock band; Big30 ...
Memphis: 58: First Baptist Church: First Baptist Church: March 15, 2005 : 538 Linden Ave. Memphis: part of the Religious Resources of Memphis, Shelby County, TN MPS 59: First Baptist Church: First Baptist Church
Thirteen years after its founding, St. Mary's became the first Episcopal cathedral in the American South. [2] While the 1866 Journal of the Proceedings of the Diocese of Tennessee's 34th convention and the national Episcopal Church's 1868 Journal of the General Convention both list St. Mary's as a cathedral church, the official transition from parish to "bishop's church" was January 1, 1871.
9200 Owens Chapel Rd; also 5876 Owens Chapel Rd. Springfield: 5876 Owens Chapel represents a boundary increase of April 28, 1995: 28: Thomas Woodard, Jr. Farm: Thomas Woodard, Jr. Farm: April 8, 2008 : 5024 Ogg Rd.
Robert Reed Church Sr. (June 18, 1839 – August 29, 1912) was an American entrepreneur, businessman and landowner in Memphis, Tennessee, who began his rise during the American Civil War. He was the first African-American "millionaire" in the South. [ 1 ]