On County Highway 700 south of County Highway 725A, on the left when traveling north.
N.E. 3 mi. Organized by Rev. Dan. McKay, 1842. Rev. G. B. Waldrop, Benj. Collins, & Nat. Harbin were first officers. Here M. P. Lowrey was pastor while drafting plans for Blue Mt. College. — — Map (db m171645) HM
On County Highway 700, 0.4 miles north of County Highway 725, on the left when traveling north.
First organized in the 1930s in a small one~room frame building that was replaced with this four~room schoolhouse in 1948. The Antioch Colored School served the African American children of the Orizaba community and consolidated the Ball Nob, Adkins . . . — — Map (db m171647) HM
On Hickory Street at 5th Street, in the median on Hickory Street.
Founded by Gen. M.P. Lowrey in 1873. Named for hill ½ mi. N.W. of this spot. In 1918 Lowrey and Berry families gave college properties to state Baptist Convention. — — Map (db m171642) HM
On County Road 700, 0.4 miles north of County Road 725, on the left when traveling north. Reported unreadable.
(obverse)
In October 1964 the Antioch Missionary Baptist Church was destroyed by fire after a Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party rally there led by Fannie Lou Hamer. On December 22 church members and other volunteers, along with Oberlin . . . — — Map (db m171654) HM
On North Guyton Blvd (State Highway 15) south of East Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
After losing her brother, a doctor, in WWI, Jessie Mauney was inspired to become a doctor. Despite gender discrimination, she persisted and earned a medical degree from Tulane Medical School, practicing from 1927 until 1985. Her clinic was in her . . . — — Map (db m171643) HM
On County Highway 804, 0.8 miles east of County Highway 800, on the right when traveling east.
Organized 1850. Originally located near Old Blue Mountain Cemetery and moved here to the Deentown community in 1885. In the early 1900s and in 1975, the church was destroyed by tornadoes. The first pastor was Rev. Allen Godwin. Mark Lowery, former . . . — — Map (db m171659) HM
On 5th Street at West Main Street, on the left when traveling north on 5th Street.
In 1936, Dr. Charles D. Johnson established a regional festival to foster the exchange of ideas between local amateur and professional writers. Dr. Johnson invited English professors at colleges and universities in Mississippi, Louisiana and . . . — — Map (db m171688) HM
On County Road 601 south of County Road 600, on the left when traveling south.
Established ca. 1848. Present site donated by Blake Rinehart. Named for a church in Bostic. N.C., and located two miles north of this site until 1914. A church school was operated until 1923. Prominent pastors include E.B. Reynolds (1848-49), Prier . . . — — Map (db m219965) HM
On County Highway 713 at County Highway 714, on the left when traveling north on County Highway 713. Reported missing.
E. 1 mi. Organized, July 1842 by Rev. John Wilson as an Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. Sunday school organized same year by Maj. Robt. McBryde. Serves Tippah and Union counties. — — Map (db m171644) HM
On County Highway 264 at Ruckersville Road (County Highway 200), on the right when traveling north on County Highway 264.
Orvil Lucian Cotton (1896~1992), born in Falkner, Mississippi, served in World War I as a member of the 105th Field Signal Battalion. Cotton was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions on the night of November 27, 1918, during a . . . — — Map (db m171564) HM
On North Main Street at Cooper Street, on the left when traveling south on North Main Street.
In the 1870s, the home of John Wesley
Thompson and Sally Murry Falkner
was located here. Author William
Faulkner was their grandson. In 1907,
First Baptist Church bought the house
for its pastorium. The old house was
torn down and elements . . . — — Map (db m219958) HM
On Dumas Road (Mississippi Route 370) at East Walnut Street (Mississippi Route 4), on the right when traveling north on Dumas Road. Reported missing.
Commemorating famed C.S.A. General whose cavalry rode here & elsewhere in Northeast Mississippi harassing Federals in the last years of the Civil War. — — Map (db m171611) HM
On North Main Street at East Jefferson Street, on the right when traveling north on North Main Street.
Originally Chickasaw territory, Tippah County was formed on March 1, 1836. On May 9, 1837, Ripley was named the county seat. The original log courthouse was replaced in 1838 by a brick structure, which was burned by Union troops in 1864. A new . . . — — Map (db m171609) HM
On South Commerce Street north of East Jefferson Street, on the left when traveling north.
(Front) In memory of the Confederate soldiers of Tippah County, our heroic dead and the chivalrous living who wore the gray, 1861-1865.
(Left) On every great battle field of the war, their valor was illustrated. They won . . . — — Map (db m171610) WM
On North Main Street at West Mulberry Street, on the left when traveling north on North Main Street.
Col. William Falkner (1825~1889) moved to Ripley in 1842. A lawyer, soldier, and president of the Ripley Railroad Co., Falkner wrote several books, including The White Rose of Memphis. He is believed to have been the inspiration for his . . . — — Map (db m171567) HM
On Mississippi Route 4, 0.3 miles west of County Road 550/615, on the left when traveling west.
In 1857, Nancy Landers Criswell
(1777-1867) designated a portion of her
property to serve as a community cemetery,
with the intent that no one would ever be
charged for burial here. The earliest
grave, that of Rhoda Shackleford, dates to
1850 . . . — — Map (db m219961) HM